That gets into schism which is condemned behavior, and law, which gets into other behaviors which is and which is NOT licit…agreed?
/…/
Because there is schism, and therefore, communion is NOT there, and NOT free of extraordinary measures being met to receive from the Orthodox, thereby Catholics aren’t free to just walk up and receive the Eucharist from the Orthodox regardless of stripe, that suggests to me there’s licit vs not licit behavior being spoken of here. If a Catholic can only receive from an Orthodox in extraordinary circumstances, and once those circumstances are removed, then a Catholic can’t receive. That focuses exactly on what is licit vs illicit behavior.
The problem with this picture is schism.
If schism wasn’t there would we be having this particular discussion?
Would you agree with this statement, that while a sacrament can be valid, there is ALSO a legal element here i.e. licity impacted by, and a side effect, of schism.
The CIC is the body of law for Latin Rite Catholics. The CCEO is the body of law for Eastern Catholics.
These codes, and other legislative texts, govern what is lawful/licit for those for whom they were legislated and whom they govern – Latin Rite Catholics and Eastern Catholics respectively.
The question, 160 posts ago, was: “Orthodox Eucharist valid but illicit?”
The Holy See, in the law she promulgates, does not address the circumstances that render a celebration of the Eucharist illicit where the celebrant of the Eucharist is a cleric of a non Catholic Church.
As a Catholic priest, subject to Catholic canon law, it would be illicit for me to concelebrate the Eucharist celebrated by a non Catholic minister. It would be illicit for me to admit to my celebration of the Eucharist, as a concelebrant, a non Catholic minister – because I am bound to Catholic canon law. I am free to welcome him to be present, to pray at my Mass and to exchange the sign of peace with him at the appropriate moment.
But the question of the liceity of a non Catholic minister presiding at the Eucharist in his own church…our canon law does not legislate.
If you want to know what would be illicit for an Orthodox priest regarding the celebration of the Eucharist in an Orthodox church, then you must ask the Orthodox. It COULD be an issue for the Holy See if the bond of governance were healed – although that which would heal it would specify the Petrine ministry in such circumstance.
I can say that a Catholic priest or a Catholic bishop assuredly should not be present at an illicit Mass celebrated by a Catholic priest who, for example, had been laicised; the laicised priest would illicitly, albeit validly, celebrate Mass. He has violated canon law and presence at it would be illicit for a Catholic.
When the Eucharist is celebrated, for example on June 29 for the Feast of Ss. Peter & Paul by the Pope, a delegation from the Ecumenical Patriarch comes to Rome and is present in celebration of the Apostolic Foundation of the Church in Rome: Ss. Peter and Paul.
Similarly, on November 30th, a delegation from the Holy See (and in 2014 the Holy Father himself) goes for the celebration of the Eucharist by the Ecumenical Patriarch in celebration of the Apostolic Foundation of the Church of Constantinople: St. Andrew.
In place of concelebration and communion, the sign of peace is exchanged at these Masses/Divine Liturgies as a gesture of the very real but impaired
communio in sacris that exists between Catholics and Orthodox. Neither delegation shun the divine liturgy, as we would do for an illicit celebration rather each recognises that the head of each Church is celebrating according to their norms and traditions and we see and recognize that truly Mass is being offered by the successors of Peter and of Andrew.
Just as there is no bond of excommunication levied one against the other, there is no effort to impose law beyond where the bond of governance reaches its limits.
Catholics and Orthodox legislate for their own communicants. Beyond that, we work together to resolve issues where the respective laws do create tensions…this is most especially felt regarding the sacrament of marriage (West)/the mystery of crowning (East) when one party is Latin Rite Catholic and the other is Orthodox; care must be taken to respect the CIC binding the Catholic party and the legislation of the Orthodox that governs the Orthodox party of the marriage.
The question keeps being reformulated, I have to believe, in order to arrive at a predetermined answer by certain ones. I have answered the question…and others have articulated essentially the same response and have done so essentially the correct process of linear thought.
It’s a very precise answer because we are not where we were in Catholic Orthodox relations in 1963 or any other age. “After many centuries of silence” (Common Declaration of Pope Francis & Patriarch Bartholomew I) that dramatically changed and a dialogue was begun that has borne much progress in more than 50 years. The way that we interact with each other reflects that progress and is not locked in an epoch that, properly, belongs in a past we have left behind.
Presently, the communion between Catholics and Orthodox is real though imperfect. That is the declaration of five popes since 1964.
Both Catholics and Orthodox look forward to the future moment when the communion will be complete such as to find expression in the common celebration of the Eucharist. It is nearer than it was 52 years ago but it is not yet here.
I think it is fruitless to continue responding to this carousel. Those who read this thread and are sincere in their search can profit from reading the work of The Joint International Commission for Theological Dialogue Between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church and where Catholics and Orthodox actually are in our journey together.