S
Shea96
Guest
Under the old rite/EF, are Deacons authorized to bless wedding rings? I know they are limited, to I think rosaries and other religious objects, but not sure about everything else.
Thanks!
Thanks!
There was, for better or worse, a surfeit of priests for some years in the pre-cinciliar era, so the fact that deacons were rarely used as ministers of Holy Communion is quite understandable.Not challenging anything that has been said, but I am pointing out that the understanding of diaconal functioning has changed somewhat as a result of the restoration of the permanent diaconate. Deacons are now ordinary ministers of holy communion, but in the pre-V2 era, deacons were listed as extraordinary ministers of holy communion. Granted, because there was no permanent diaconate, there were not as many deacons. However, they were only used to distribute communion in very rare circumstances, unlike today, when this is routine.
In regards to blessings of only “rosaries and other religious objects” (especially outside the Mass) The EF and the OF are merely forms of the Mass of the same Roman Rite. While the Form of the Mass may vary, we are still One Holy, catholic, and apostolic Church…there is no EF Catechism, EF Canon Law, EF bible, etc.Under the old rite/EF, are Deacons authorized to bless wedding rings? I know they are limited, to I think rosaries and other religious objects, but not sure about everything else.
Thanks!
No. That’s not the case.In regards to blessings of only “rosaries and other religious objects” (especially outside the Mass) The EF and the OF are merely forms of the Mass of the same Roman Rite. While the Form of the Mass may vary, we are still One Holy, catholic, and apostolic Church…there is no EF Catechism, EF Canon Law, EF bible, etc.
Therefore, a Deacon can bless any sacramental object, as any other ordained member of the Holy Orders could, outside the liturgical setting.
This is what I was thinking…and why I askedNo. That’s not the case.
The Extraordinary Form is not just a form of the Mass. The form also includes other sacraments and sacramentals. There are EF forms for baptism, confession, ordination, confirmation, funerals, (yes, weddings, the topic of the thread), etc.
When following the Extraordinary form (with regard to the other sacraments and sacramentals) the rubrics and liturgical norms of that form apply–just as when Mass is celebrated in the EF, the EF rubrics apply.
There is an EF ritual book for blessings The Roman Ritual and it is distinct from the OF ritual book for blessings, the Book of Blessings.
Further, deacons cannot bless “any sacramental object.” Deacons can only perform those blessings specifically permitted to them.
Baptism is very particular. In the EF, even a priest must use specifically the Baptismal Water, which has its own unique blessing–he cannot use the “everyday” (so to speak) Holy Water. Of course, that doesn’t apply in an emergency.OF vs EF matters sometimes. For example, when a deacon baptizes according to the rites in the EF, he doesn’t have the priestly authority to exorcise water and salt, so the water and salt he uses has to be blessed and exorcized by a priest prior. Since holy water according to the current blessing doesn’t have the exorcism or use exorcised salt so a deacon can bless water according to the current blessing.