Katholikos:
You believe, then, that every layman has the power to confect the Eucharist?
I don’t think it’s a matter of “power,” and I’m not sure the Eucharist is rightly spoken of as something that human beings “confect.” (I don’t have huge objections to the term, but if you’re basing an argument on that way of phrasing it, I need to note my queasiness with this kind of language.) The Eucharist is a covenantal gift of Christ to the Church. This gift is given to the
whole Church. The holy Sacrifice is rightly offered by priests in apostolic succession. But where for whatever reason the historic succession has been lost, I don’t question that Christ is truly present however irregular the form of presidency.
Without apostolic succession, i.e., without the authority of the Apostles, anyone can ordain anyone else at will.
First of all, I’d say that apostolic succession in the strict sense is a subset of apostolic authority. The Church as a whole carries on the authority of the Apostles. Bishops and the presbyters they ordain are the proper organs to carry that authority within the Church as a whole. To depart from this right order without extremely grave cause is sinful. The Reformers believed that they did have grave cause, and furthermore they adopted an ecclesiology that value institutional embodiments of ecclesiastical authority far too lightly (just as medieval Catholicism had come to rate such things far too highly). So most Protestant churches were left without episcopal succession (I do not of course accept Apostolicae Curae as correct in its judgment regarding Anglicans). That was a very bad thing. However, I don’t believe that the Church ceases to exist within those bodies as a result.
Katholikos:
St. Ignatius of Antioch, student of St. John the Apostle, writes in 110 A.D.: “You must all follow the lead of the bishop, as Jesus Christ followed that of the father; follow the presbytery as you would the Apostles; reverence the deacons as you would God’s commandment. Let no one do anything touching the Church, apart from the bishop. Let that celebration of the Eucharist be considered valid which is held under the bishop or anyone to whom he has committed it. Where the bishop appears, there let the people be, just as where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church. It is not permitted without authorization from the bishop either to baptize or to hold an agape; but whatever he approves is also pleasing to God. Thus everything you do will be* proof against danger and valid*.”
I seem to recall checking the Greek of this in a previous argument (probably not with you, though it may have been) and concluding that “valid” was not necessarily the correct translation of the Greek word. If I remember rightly the word means something like “firm,” but my memory may be playing tricks on me (I’ve almost persuaded myself that the word is “bebaios,” which I know does mean firm–but I’m probably wrong on that one). At any rate, given that Ignatius’s point is to prevent schism within a local church, I think this doesn’t really make your point, and if anything it
contradicts the Catholic view that schismatic Eucharists (i.e., of the Orthodox) can be valid. “Without the bishop” in context does not mean so much “without someone on whose head properly authorized hands have been laid” but “without the properly appointed head of the unified local community.” He’s attacking schism, not a pipeline failure. As far as I know, the concept of apostolic succession isn’t articulated until Irenaeus, and even then it refers only to sees actually established by apostles, not to the idea that all bishops are in apostolic succession through the laying on of hands. As any well-informed Baptist can point out, there’s nothing in Ignatius to distinguish the “bishop” from a local pastor in a Protestant church today (nothing in terms of polity and authority, I mean–I’m not talking about the specific doctrinal content of course). Except the fact that in Ignatius’s view he’s the
sole valid leader of the Church in that place. Which, again, is the point in the passage you’re quoting. You’re using it anachronistically and out of context.
In Christ,
Edwin