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Edmundus1581
Guest
Thankyou again, Father, for your response, and for taking the time to explain it so thoroughly.
I had previously thought that the priest’s authority comes from “jurisdiction” (because the words “jurisdiction” and “judge” are related), but you have made clear that it comes from “faculties”.
I appreciate the following summary:
Thankyou, also, to you and all our priests for your wonderful service in this sacrament!
I had previously thought that the priest’s authority comes from “jurisdiction” (because the words “jurisdiction” and “judge” are related), but you have made clear that it comes from “faculties”.
I appreciate the following summary:
To make it more concrete, if a priest-confessor says “what you have confessed is sufficient” then his judgement in that particular confession is what prevails. At that moment, this isn’t about jurisdiction, it’s about having faculties to hear confessions. It doesn’t matter what canonical office that priest (sacerdos) holds. He has faculties to absolve, he is hearing a confession, therefore he is the judge at that moment.
The first sentence, particularly, seems to be relevant to some concerns we have about our own confessions.All that is just explanation of what “jurisdiction” and “faculties to absolve” mean. The relevant point, the bottom line, is that the priest who hears a particular confession is indeed the judge (in persona Christi) of that particular penitent at that moment.
Thankyou, also, to you and all our priests for your wonderful service in this sacrament!