E
Episcopalian
Guest
My Catholic friends attended my Episcopal Church’s Sunday Eucharist service.
I gave them fair warning that the Communion was different, it doesn’t transubstantiate, they shouldn’t eat it, and that they should attend a Saturday Vigil or Sunday Mass before/after the one they attended with me, to stay in good standing and get a valid Communion.
They planned on going after, but then they ended up receiving Episcopal communion anyway and told me after, since the consecration words were the same, the priests referenced Mary and the saints, the liturgy surrounding the consecration was the same… they were ok to receive it since they believed all the “ingredients” were there and they firmly believed it actually changed, regardless of it being a non-Catholic denomination.
Anyway, my ultimate question is: if a Catholic firmly believes they received a valid Communion, does it become valid once they ingest it? Or is it considered non-sinful, but still invalid?
I gave them fair warning that the Communion was different, it doesn’t transubstantiate, they shouldn’t eat it, and that they should attend a Saturday Vigil or Sunday Mass before/after the one they attended with me, to stay in good standing and get a valid Communion.
They planned on going after, but then they ended up receiving Episcopal communion anyway and told me after, since the consecration words were the same, the priests referenced Mary and the saints, the liturgy surrounding the consecration was the same… they were ok to receive it since they believed all the “ingredients” were there and they firmly believed it actually changed, regardless of it being a non-Catholic denomination.
Anyway, my ultimate question is: if a Catholic firmly believes they received a valid Communion, does it become valid once they ingest it? Or is it considered non-sinful, but still invalid?