Except that the article you linked is incorrect about the intention of the priest in question. The intent involved with the Sacrament of the Eucharist is the intend to do as the church does… not the intent to transubstantiate bread and wine into Body and Blood.
That’s a distinction without a difference
Even from the article you post
"1. AN INTENTION IS REQUIRED, as the Council of Trent defined in the
place already cited: “If anyone says that there is not required in the
ministers, while they confect and confer the sacraments, an intention at
least of doing what the Church does, let him be anathema.”
promethian_rule:
If that were the case, any priest who did not believe in transubstantiation would be feeding an invalid Eucharist to his flock! There are other prerequisites for valid intent as well, that it be classified appropriately as
here
Now, if a priest intends to transubstantiate as a part of what they believe the church does in offering the Eucharistic rite, then that works… but an anglican minister who was a priest intending to change bread and wine into Body and Blood but NOT intending to do what the church does (aka, I want to consubstantiate, not as the Catholic church intends, but as the Anglican church does), then the intent is incorrect, and the Eucharist is not valid.
All that is highly complex though, and fairly nuanced since it relies on the priest in question believing that whatever they are doing is what the Catholic church intends to do.
FrDavid96:
The priest must have the intent to “do as the Church does” or “intend what the Church intends.”
That’s not the same thing as saying that he must specifically intend "transubstantiation" in the sense of having that specific word in his own mind.
For example, the Eastern Churches do not use the word “transubstantiation” yet their consecrations are still valid.
“Transubstantiation” is an explanation as to how the Real Presence comes about. … As a general rule
Eastern Orthodox Christians are not comfortable with the term, … …
Among Eastern Catholics, although we do not disagree with transubstantiation, we generally do not use the term…
Ultimately what matters is not what philosophical language is used to describe the change, but that one believes in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist." From
Dr. Anthony Dragani, theologian and Byzantine Catholic
FrDavid96:
That’s why this is not a “distinction without a difference.”
Dr Anthomy’s point… even if transubstantiation is not the word used,
E Catholics have no disagreement, with the term because we know as Catholics what the Church intends.