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frjohnmorris
Guest
I agree that Baptisms administered outside of the Church are defective. However, that does not mean that they are null and void. At the very least the Faith professed by the Baptism is salvic. St. Paul wrote, “Therefore I want you to understand that no one speaking by the Spirit of God ever says “Jesus be cursed!” and no one can say “Jesus is Lord” except by the Holy Spirit. “ One has to be very careful when attempting to interpret the canons. One must first study the way that the Church has applied the canon historically. One must also consider the original intent of the council or Father who wrote the canon. In the case of canon 1 of St. Basil, if you read his works, you will find that St. Basil has a very narrowly defined definition who heresy. He defines an heretic as someone who believes in a different God. If you look at the list of groups defined in the canon, you will find that most of them are various forms of Gnosticism, which did not believe in the Christian God. In the case of Roman Catholics the prayer that has historically been used when a Roman Catholic is received by Chrismation is the prayer used to reconcile someone who has left the Church but has returned, not the prayer used in the Baptism service to complete a Baptism as is the case with Protestants. The Russian Orthodox Church has received Roman Catholics by profession of faith for centuries. Most contemporary Orthodox theologians argue that even economy cannot make something valid that is null and void. The theology is that Baptism outside the Church is lacking. We do not define precisely what is lacking, but leave that to God. Whatever is lacking is perfected by Chrismation.Fr. bless,
None of those canons or proclamations teach that the baptisms of those outside of the Church are salvific, which was my original point of contention (and frankly I would also argue that they never teach that those outside of the Church perform the same baptism that the Church does). Not even St. Augustine, who recognized validity of the sacraments performed by those outside of the Church believed that their sacraments were salvific (because they could not, in his understanding, confer sanctifying grace), and indeed, the Eastern Fathers accordingly referred to baptisms performed outside of the Church as pollutions, and St. Basil the Great rejects the baptisms of heretics outright for the reason that they are completely cut off from the Church, with the exception of cases where another rule has been passed down for the sake of economy (this can clearly seen in canons 1, 20, and 47 of Basil, which were approved by the Council of Trullo). It would be no exaggeration, I think, to say that the Catholic doctrine of the Fathers is that baptisms performed by those outside of the Church are in some sense defective (be it lacking the grace of the Holy Spirit, in the thought of Ss. Firmilian, Cyprian, and Basil, or lacking sanctifying grace in the thought of St. Augustine), but that they have some some sacramental characteristic to them (when performed with proper form), which is why we can receive by economy those baptized outside of the Church.
Archpriest John W. Morris