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DL82
Guest
In a previous thread (which sadly got derailed by uncharitable posts) there was an ignored post in which someone pointed to places in the world where Catholics and Orthodox already do share communion. I believe the examples were the Assyrians and Chaldeans, who are invited to fulfil their Sunday worship in one anothers’ churches where they cannot find a church of their own communion, and are also, I believe, invited to communion there. There may be other examples in parts of the world where Catholic and/or Orthodox churches are rare.
There is also the widely accepted practice of Catholic and Orthodox priests administering final Sacraments (confession, communion, anointing) to members of eachothers’ communions in danger of death. Surely such a practice is acknowledgement by both communions that believers in either communion can posess sufficient grace to have true contrition, and thus enter into their final communion with God.
Would this be a possible first step to dialogue - not a formal reunion, but an understanding (in Eastern terms in terms of oekonomia, in Latin terms, as an indulgence for the remission of venial sin) that, where it is impossible for someone to attend Mass/DL in their own communion, they should be encouraged to fulfil their Sunday obligation in one anothers’ churches, and while there allowed, not only when in immediate danger of death, but all the time, to receive confession and communion. So long as this was understood as a concession, not a reunification, and was subject to local bishops’ agreements in places where such a situation is likely (I am thinking in particular of our persecuted bretheren in the Middle East, suffering a shortage of priests and an exodus of believers in all communions). As I understand it, this already happens among the Assyrians and Catholics in Iran/Iraq. Might it be a solution with a wider applicability for the Catholic and Orthodox churches?
Of course, I can see how it would be open to abuses, with people turning to their local Orthodox Church to avoid a Catholic parish where the music was not to their taste, or priests proselytizing from the pulpit in areas where they had a ‘mixed’ congregation. Provided it was handled well, however, could this be a practical step to dialogue?
There is also the widely accepted practice of Catholic and Orthodox priests administering final Sacraments (confession, communion, anointing) to members of eachothers’ communions in danger of death. Surely such a practice is acknowledgement by both communions that believers in either communion can posess sufficient grace to have true contrition, and thus enter into their final communion with God.
Would this be a possible first step to dialogue - not a formal reunion, but an understanding (in Eastern terms in terms of oekonomia, in Latin terms, as an indulgence for the remission of venial sin) that, where it is impossible for someone to attend Mass/DL in their own communion, they should be encouraged to fulfil their Sunday obligation in one anothers’ churches, and while there allowed, not only when in immediate danger of death, but all the time, to receive confession and communion. So long as this was understood as a concession, not a reunification, and was subject to local bishops’ agreements in places where such a situation is likely (I am thinking in particular of our persecuted bretheren in the Middle East, suffering a shortage of priests and an exodus of believers in all communions). As I understand it, this already happens among the Assyrians and Catholics in Iran/Iraq. Might it be a solution with a wider applicability for the Catholic and Orthodox churches?
Of course, I can see how it would be open to abuses, with people turning to their local Orthodox Church to avoid a Catholic parish where the music was not to their taste, or priests proselytizing from the pulpit in areas where they had a ‘mixed’ congregation. Provided it was handled well, however, could this be a practical step to dialogue?