G
GerardP
Guest
Objectively certain circumstances exist in which the Church Herself supplies jurisdiction for the validity of specific sacraments and priestly functions.Are you suggesting that the Church grants the SSPX faculties to hear confession outside of Canon Law, the Hierarchy, etc.? It would seem you are suggestion that God bypasses his agents to directly grant them faculties?
There is a code of Canon law that describes those circumstances.
Either the circumstances exist and the Church supplies the jurisdiction or not.
The Pope decides what goes in the record books.
The Pope gives his opinion/judgement of what happened in those circumstances.
Either he is right or he is wrong. The books will just record his judgement.
The circumstances still exist and the jurisdiction exists if the circumstances warrant it.
The Pope does not change the circumstances or the supplied jurisdiction with his ruling.
The Pope or his successor can correct the incorrect judgement of the Pope that made the original ruling.
The validity never changed. It was always either valid or invalid.
If a Pope is deliberately playing Catch 22 with his rulings. He is providing no service to the Church and he is damaging his own office and his capacity to serve.
Since he is Pope, no one can overule him except himself or his equal.
But the case can be appealed again and again ad infinitum till the correct ruling is given.
Outside of ex cathedra teaching the Pope has no monopoly on recognizing the truth. And the truth is unbending to any human law. If the Pope is against the truth, the Pope must bend.
No. I’m saying that the agency didn’t tell the truth.Since the agency appointed by the Head of the Church–chief Legislator, Executive, and Judge–has stated that they do not have faculties to hear confessions, that would seem to be the thing you’re driving at.
Yes. But not everything in that Church is controlled by the Pope or his agents.Else, what is “the Church” you are referring to? The one not headed by the Pope on earth?
It’s the same Church that supplies jurisdiction. It’s “the Church” not “the Pope” that supplies jurisdiction in irrregular circumstances. The Pope is normal granter of jurisdiction, from him to the bishops, to the priests. When circumstances prevent it, Holy Mother Church supplies what the normal cannot or in this case will not.You will say the Church is headed by Christ. Very good, that’s true. Are you suggesting that Christ directly grants them faculties to absolve sin?
That’s not true. The laws are there. The circumstances fit the laws. The Church supplies the jurisdiction. Whether a Pope or an agency of the Pope wants to admit it or not is their problem.One thing is for sure. You have no basis in canon law for arguing that the SSPX can validly hear confessions in their current irregular standing, with suspended priests.
I remember in a sculpture class in college, a girl asked one of the assistant instructors in the woodshop. “Okay and after that I decide the angles that I need to cut the wood at?” He answered, “No. You don’t decide the angles. You calculate the angles.” The wood and design dictates the angles that the wood must be cut at.The PCED has stated that the Church grants faculties in situations of true emergency (don’t forget the Pope decides what can be interpreted as an emergency and what can’t, according to Canon Law of the Latin Rite of the Church) and in cases of ignorance.
When you have an emergency, the emergency is a thing outside of the Pope. It is incumbent on him to recognize the emergency, not “decide” if it is an emergency or not.
Actually, I go to diocesan priests most of the time because of convenience and my efforts to find priests that actually believe the faith. I go to SSPX priests when it is for a just spiritual reason such as needing their counsel on how to increase in sanctity or shake recitivism in sins.If you confess to an SSPX Priest I would urge you to run to a diocesan or religious priest who has a regular standing with Rome. In all seriousness, this would be a grave situation. Don’t take your soul into your hands.
Multiple diocesan and religious priests have actually told me to continue with SSPX priests because the SSPX does such a good job of formation and they are not prevented from giving solid Catholic advice.
One priest questioned me deeply for fear of schism and then concluded that I wasn’t schismatic and that the SSPX were doing better in terms of loyalty to the faith and the Pope than the local parishes.
Other diocesan priests sneak down to the SSPX chapel and learn the mass, hear confessions and obtain other helps.
One local priest who wanted to implement Summorum Pontificum was quickly transferred.
No state of necessity here!
This whole issue of invalid sacraments is a buggaboo issued to try and frighten people away from the SSPX. It’s just a political salvo in a multi-faceted attack. Church politics differ very little from secular politics.