S
steve_b
Guest
in support of what Fr David said, I offer the followingFather David,
Is Jesus to be found in Protestant Communion? We cannot say “Yes” with any certainty … but it is not possible to say no with the same certitude.
We know with certainty that Jesus in present in the Eucharist because of the ministerial priesthood and the promises and command of Christ at the institution of the Priesthood and the Eucharist at the Last Supper. As a Catholic I believe this to the core of my being and have experienced the True Presence of Christ in the Eucharist in my life. I attend Mass to be fed, to join with my faith family in the Eucharistic Feast, to worship our Lord and Savior, to be strengthened for the journey.
However, truly it is not possible to say with the same certainty that Christ is not present in any non-Catholic Communion on any given day because the God - Father, Son and Holy Spirit can be present anywhere and in any form they choose … even in the Methodist [or any other denomination] down the Street … I would not seek Christ in the Eucharist there because of their lack of the apostolic Church and apostolic ministerial priesthood and their very beliefs regarding Communion - but I have no doubt that if Jesus desires to feed and nourish that faith community with His Body and Blood in their Communion - He - by the power of the Holy Spirit - unaided by a validly ordained priest can make that a reality …
Christ instituted the Church - The Church has to operate according to God’s will - The Church cannot teach other then the Good News
However, God can and does what He wills - unconstrained by the Church or any man - whether ordained priest or lay -
(All emphasis mine))
Excerpt
…A Mother who gives us the faith, a Mother who gives us an identity. But the Christian identity is not an identity card: Christian identity is belonging to the Church, because all of these belonged to the Church, the Mother Church. Because it is not possible to find Jesus outside the Church. The great Paul VI said: “Wanting to live with Jesus without the Church, following Jesus outside of the Church, loving Jesus without the Church is an absurd dichotomy.” And the Mother Church that gives us Jesus gives us our identity that is not only a seal, it is a belonging. Identity means belonging. This belonging to the Church is beautiful………Think of this Mother Church that grows, grows with new children to whom She gives the identity of the faith, because you cannot believe in Jesus without the Church. Jesus Himself says in the Gospel: " But you do not believe, because you are not among my sheep." If we are not “sheep of Jesus,” faith does not come to us. It is a rosewater faith, a faith without substance. And let us think of the consolation that Barnabas felt, which is “the sweet and comforting joy of evangelizing.” And let us ask the Lord for this “parresia”, this apostolic fervor that impels us to move forward, as brothers, all of us forward! Forward, bringing the name of Jesus in the bosom of Holy Mother Church, and, as St. Ignatius said, “hierarchical and Catholic.” So be it.
news.va/en/news/pope-mass-on-feast-of-st-george-full-text
(see all links bottom of page)
in addition, then Card Ratzinger head of the doctrine of faith under JPII wrote
Excerpt
“…to be a Church the community must be “legitimate”; they are legitimate when they are “united with their pastors”. What does this mean? In the first place, no one can make a Church by himself. A group cannot simply get together, read the New Testament and declare: “At present we are the Church because the Lord is present wherever two or three are gathered in His name”.The element of “receiving” belongs essentially to the Church, just as faith comes from “hearing” and is not the result of one’s decision or reflection. Faith is a converging with something I could neither imagine nor produce on my own; faith has to come to meet me. We call the structure of this encounter, a “Sacrament”. It is part of the fundamental form of a sacrament that it be received and not self-administered. No one can baptize himself. No one can ordain himself. No one can forgive his own sins. Perfect repentance cannot remain something interior—of its essence it demands the form of encounter of the Sacrament. This too is a result of a sacrament’s fundamental structure as an encounter [with Christ]…”
from ewtn.com/library/CURIA/CDFECCV2.HTM
Jesus never contradicted Himself. He never said it is okay to break with Peter. His will is John 17:20-23
We can’t ignore all the condemnations in scripture against those who divide or who choose to remain divided from Our Lord’s Church.