N
ngoyaemjukuu
Guest
NOTE: In Developing countries.
if stole is forgotten can a priest celebrate Mass?
if stole is forgotten can a priest celebrate Mass?
Not true.Remember, it’s the words not the wardrobe that matters! Peace to you!
And if he does do it, regardless of geography, he is in the wrong.Yes. Even in developed countries.
I’m sure there are circumstances where it would be just fineA stole is required for Mass. There is nothing optional about it. It’s the same answer as the numerous other threads where you ask the same question about other liturgical items.
What is required is required. Only that which the Church defines as optional (such as a Missal stand) are optional. There is nothing optional about the stole.
A priest once forgot his stole and borrowed my Mom’s scarf and used it as a stole.NOTE: In Developing countries.
if stole is forgotten can a priest celebrate Mass?
Was it the correct liturgical colour?A priest once forgot his stole and borrowed my Mom’s scarf and used it as a stole.![]()
Thanks Fr.A stole is required for Mass. There is nothing optional about it. It’s the same answer as the numerous other threads where you ask the same question about other liturgical items.
What is required is required. Only that which the Church defines as optional (such as a Missal stand) are optional. There is nothing optional about the stole.
The Requisites for the Celebration of Mass
IV. Sacred Vestments
In the Church, which is the Body of Christ, not all members have the same function. This diversity of offices is shown outwardly in the celebration of the Eucharist by the diversity of sacred vestments, which must therefore be a sign of the function proper to each minister. Moreover, these same sacred vestments should also contribute to the decoration of the sacred action itself. The vestments worn by Priests and Deacons, as well as the attire worn by lay ministers, are blessed before being put into liturgical use according to the rite described in the Roman Ritual.[136]
- The stole is worn by the Priest around his neck and hanging down in front of his chest, while it is worn by the Deacon over his left shoulder and drawn diagonally across the chest to the right side, where it is fastened.
The stole is the distinctive element of the raiment of the ordained minister and it is always worn in the celebration of the sacraments and sacramentals. It is a strip of material that is embroidered, according to the norm, whose color varies with respect to the liturgical season or feast day.
Of course they were valid (assuming all else).I know it’s an extreme example, but then were the secret Auschwitz Masses of St Kolbe valid - presuming he didn’t have a stole? I wouldn’t have thought a stole affected validity, but given Rome’s concern with “raiment”…
It’s like I mentioned in a similar thread recently:The extreme examples are rarely helpful in discussions. There is a reason the Church Blesses liturgical vestments. Though many fail to appreciate the simple realities – such as having a sacred function in the liturgy.