Holy Orders is a single sacrament, not 3. Each order has its own ministry (or job description, if you will). Unless each order is a separate sacrament the Church is free to modify the job description, which it has done in the past. Priests can confirm in certain circumstances, for example). The current discipline of the Church is to restrict the Sacrament of the Sick to priests…and the argument for keeping it that way is not unreasonable…but the U.S. Bishops are perfectly correct theologically in asking that this be changed. I am simply agreeing with the Bishops…
Correct, there is a single Sacrament, but, as Aquinas noted, there are powers distinct to each facet of the Sacrament.
A Deacon could never validly consecrate the Eucharist, for example, or be given faculties to absolve. The character of their reception of the Sacrment is such that they cannot ontologolically perform that function.
The function of consecration is only possible when the character of the Sacrerdotals Orders is imparted upon the soul. This is character is distinct from being a seperate sacrament, but rather from a single Sacrament that includes three distinct characters. THe character imparted to the recipient is contingent upon the specific prayers and intent of the Minister of the Sacrament.
Father, this is basic Aquinas. You should have covered that in your Sacramentology classes.
in addition, Father, I would like to see confirmation that the bishops of the US have not accepted the letter on the subject that then Cardinal Ratzinger sent to the bishops of the world in 2005.
My spirtual advisor is the secretary to Archbishop Vigneron. He seemed to be unaware of any request that the US bishops have send to Rome on the subject in the last several years.
So do you have any references on this request from the US bishops?