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batteddy
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Ah. But the same Catholic encyclopedia says in its article on Absolution:The theological way to know that the words “this is my” are necessary is because the Priest consecrates in Persona Christi, just as he absolves in Persona Christi. At the consecration and at the time of absolution, the priest does not pray that Christ will consecration, or that Christ will forgive. No, the Priest himself forgives in the Person of Christ. “This is my…” shows that he is acting in the Person of Christ, just as “I absolve thee…” shows that he is acting in the Person of Christ.
“Surely all the [ancient] sacramentaries assert that the form was deprecatory, and it is only in the eleventh century that we find a tendency to pass to indicative and personal formulæ (Duchesne, loc. cit.).”
“Is the indicative form necessary? Many learned Catholics seem to hold that the indicative form as used at present in the Roman Church is necessary even for the validity of the Sacrament of Penance. The great Doctor of the Sacrament, St. Alphonsus (De Sac. Pœnit., n. 430), declares that no matter what may be the verdict from the point of view of history, it is of faith since the Council of Trent that the indicative form is essential. St. Thomas and Suarez also declare that the indicative form is necessary. **Others equally learned, and perhaps better versed in history, hold that in the light of the Divine institution the deprecative form must not be excluded, and that the Council of Trent in its decree did not intend to make final pronouncement in the premises. **They point out with Morinus (De Pœnit., Lib. VIII) that up to the twelfth century the deprecatory form was employed both in the East and in the West: that it is still in use among the Greeks and among Orientals generally. In the light, therefore, of history and of theological opinion it is perfectly safe to conclude that the deprecatory form is certainly not invalid, if it exclude not the idea of judicial pronouncement (Palmieri, Parergon, 127; Hurter, de Pœnit.; Duchesne, loc. cit.; Soto, Vasquez, Estius, et al.). Theologians, however, have questioned whether or not the deprecatory form would be valid to-day in the Latin Church, and they point out that Clement VIII and Benedict XIV have prescribed that Greek [Eastern Catholics] priests should use the indicative form whensoever they absolve penitents belonging to the Latin Rite. But this is merely a matter of discipline, and such decrees do not give final decision to the theological question, for in matters of administration of the Sacraments those in authority simply follow the safest and most conservative opinions. Morinus is followed by Tournely in asserting that only the indicative form is to-day valid in the Latin Church (Morinus, De pœnit., Lib. VIII; Tournely, ibid., do absolutionis formâ); but many hold that if the deprecatory form exclude not the judicial pronouncement of the priest, and consequently be really equivalent to the ego te absolvo, it is surely not invalid, though all are agreed that it would be illicit as contravening the present law and discipline of the Roman Church.”
I love Aquinas, but he is not the end all of everything. The rigid “forms” of the scholastics were only one school of thought. There are variations acceptable as long they convey the essence of the sacrament. Aquinas imagined, sometimes rather naively, that things had always been done they way he saw them done. But the testimony of the East (including eastern Catholics) and the testimony of history shows that other forms have been used since the beginning…and if they’re invalid, then 11-centuries of catholics have not been being absolved, etc…
If I were Pope, I’d probably abrogate the decision just to be sure (one does not gamble with such grave matters…the anaphora may somehow be valid…but we know for sure that the institution narrative is)Yes, John Paul II’s decision is not infallible, but it remains in force until abrogated by a Pontiff or Council.