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Don_Ruggero
Guest
There is a great deal of supposition and speculation in this thread, which is actually entirely incorrectIts true there’s no guarantee. This apostolate does seem to receive things from the monastery of the Saint though. Also there is a seal.
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I thought a Catholic website asking for a donation is different and isnt selling, but I guess there may be misinformation out there and owners of the websites may have been told its ok. I need to go with what my priest said though and I believe him. In the future if I want a relic I’d only write to a monastery maybe and ask for one for free, or travel and make my own third class relics lolI thought it was ok.to get them for donations from Catholic apostolate’s but I guess with this you never know, I just want to obtain them without donations now that I learned all this. I’ll ask my priest about what happens if they ask for a donation ONLY for shipping
There is also even a failure to use correctly the most basic vocabulary and that only further compounds the muddling of the issues
For that, then, to be put on a website called “Catholic Answers” where the post remains archived and forever searchable by internet search engines is a gross disservice
- In your first post, you speak of “a donation to cover the cost of the reliquary for example”. The reliquary is to a relic what the ostensorium is to exposition of the Blessed Sacrament…one purchases a reliquary just as one purchases a monstrance. Even the theca, which is the case in which the relic is sealed under wax imprint, is an item manufactured that is bought and sold like a chalice or ciborium. One can have theca made of more or less precious metals and various artistic effort, more or less simple. As for the reliquary which displays the theca, these can range from less than a hundred dollars to thousands of dollars
- The article you cite is, at best, poorly written. It manages to confuse more than it clarifies with its reference, for example, to a canonist who offers a thought before saying the matter really rests with moral theologians (!) I do not see it as my task here to critique the article beyond saying that if you are endeavouring to use it as any sort of a guide, you will end up poorly served indeed
- It seems to be that your methodology for a “bit of research” is very ill considered. If you have an issue with whatever this apostolate is, which we don’t know and therefore can offer no constructive comment, why do you not seek counsel of the chancery of the diocese where the apostolate is based, for example? That would be a proper way of proceeding
- In the 1990s, the Holy See expressed that first class relics should not, normally, be in the possession of the laity for the reason that you are manifesting – is one accepts this great entrustment of the Church of possessing a relic, one needs understand the nature of the responsibility…and all that surrounds it
- In your post #`14, you speak of obtained relics without any donation. Over the decades of my priesthood, especially when I was in one assignment, I assisted many times with the procurement of relics for, typically, a parish. This could involve either the Roman Vicariato or the Curia Generalizia of one of the Orders or Congregations. There was always a donation
Do you not know and do you not understand that the relics, as they are presented to the faithful in churches and shrines for their devotion or as they are contained in the altars where Masses are said, are largely the work of cloistered nuns who have been given that work by the Holy See? It is part of their livelihood as well as their mission
Bishops (and priests), who are recipients of donations, understand that in turn this work, made possible by these Religious, relies upon donations to sustain the Religious. If one is going to the place where the relic is to be assembled, one could bring one’s own theca, for example. Otherwise, the Religious, who have themselves bought it/them, would supply it. That expense, in justice, has to be reimbursed to them.
For bishops and priests who have been involved with this, it is not seen as a commercial transaction anymore than we receive a Mass stipend as though the person were buying or paying for a Mass. I am frankly horrified therefore by the attitude you evidence
Finally, as a priest, I have to ask how anyone can say they were guilty of simony (which you were not) on the one hand and then instantly turn around and say this: ***and ask for one for free, or travel and make my own third class relics lol
Since your emoticons and whatever you call these abbreviations in English shows laughing and hilarity, I consider such an impertinent attitude to be truly disturbing