K
KjetilK
Guest
Why could no new bishops be validly ordained? And why does that not apply to, say, the Polish National Catholic Church, which is a Western Church?I do it because I have never seen said documents, and because my understanding of the separation is that no new Bishops could be validly ordained, and therefore, all priestly ordinations are not considered valid.
Why would you read about that from Vatican sources? They are not the official medium of the Church of Sweden.I would like to see the specific sections of the Church of Sweden and the regaining succession for the Church of Norway from official Vatican sources.
My point is this: Since the Roman Catholic Church recognises the validity of post-reformational orders in the Church of Sweden, and since we have Swedish bishops who have ordained Norwegian bishops, then we have succession in the Church of Norway. The Roman Catholic Church claims to follow an Augustinian view of validity, over and above a ‘Cyprianic.’ The ‘Cyprianic’ view goes back to St. Cyprian of Carthage, and is largely followed by the Eastern Orthodox Churches. He maintained that the validity of apostolic succession had to do not only with who ordained you, but with whom you were in communion. St. Cyprian held, therefore, that if you broke out, you lost the succession. The Eastern Orthodox, ‘Cypriarian’ theory, has been taken so far by some Orthodox that they do not even recognise non-Orthodox baptisms. I don’t think that applies to the most, but I think it does in (at last parts of) Russia and (at least parts of) the ROCOR churches.
In the Roman Catholic church, and in Western theology in general, the focus has been on St. Augustine’s theory, that the validity of apostolic succession had to do with who ordained you, and nothing more. The relevant distinction here is between validity and licitity (if that is even a word). On the technical question of validity, then, the Augustinian idea wholly ignores the opinion of the individual priest or bishop or whether or not he is in communion with other validly ordained bishops, including the Roman Pontiff, and asks: Are they validly ordained/consecrated? If yes, then whoever they ordains (if they are bishops) will have apostolic succession. A Catholic might say that they got it or exercises it illicitly, but that they have it validly. That some aren’t coherently applying that principle is not my problem.
To read more, respectively from a Lutheran and a Roman Catholic point of view, see William C. Weinrich, “Cyprian, Donatism, Augustine, and Augustana VIII: Remarks on the Church and the Validity of Sacraments” (Concordia Theological Quarterly 55:4, 1991): 267-296; and Geoffrey D. Dunn, “Validity of Baptism and Ordination in the African Response to the “Rebaptism” Crisis: Cyprian of Carthage’s Synod of Spring 256” (Theological Studies 67, 2006): 257-274. The latter is unfortunately not freely available outside academic subscriptions.
There was a break between the Church of Norway and the Roman Catholic Church, which is not equivalent with ‘the Catholic faith.’Which will be irrrelevant, since he does not seem to recognize that there was a hard break between the Catholic faith and the Norway Church at the time of the Reformation.
If so, then my point stands.It seems to me that Peter was either given the gift by Christ to feed and care for the flock, or not. If he was given it, then passed it to his successor, and so on, then the jurisdiction over the Church existed from the time Christ gave it.
And so will everyone else, including the Orthodox, the Old Catholics, etc. The debate here is not whether or not schism is good, but whether or not there is validity in some Lutheran orders, and whether or not there exists a ‘gap.’Still, the Protestants of Norway will still be separated if they are not in communion.