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FrDavid96
Guest
Generally, yes. But there’s more to it than that.Simulating a sacrament is sacrilegious, no?
Sacrilege requires intent or at least for the act to be so objectively offensive that merely doing it is enough.
I do not think that a priest who wrongly administers Anointing is intending any offense. He might (and I say might) be at fault for something else, but I would absolutely not call it a sacrilege.
It’s not that simple. Canon Law and Liturgical Law are equal to each other in the mind of the Church. The Church seeks harmony among the various forms of law.I’ll trust the canon law of the Eastern Churches on this matter.
The way that you personally read the Eastern Code might not be the same way the Eastern bishops read it. There is also the element that the Eastern Law is not always authentically Eastern. A good example of this is that it took from 1990 to about 2 years ago for the Eastern Code to finally be revised to accurately reflect Eastern theology that the priest (not the couple) is the minister of Marriage. Oddly enough, this comment was made in the “Instruction” that accompanied the Code, but poorly written in the Code itself. The vast majority of the Eastern Code is (in reality, like it or not) a cut-and-paste from the 1983 Latin Code, with some changes with regard to the Patriarchs and Synods, and with much of the liturgical canons of the West omitted.
My point here is not to say ONLY “I trust the Eastern Code” but to trust all of the Laws of the Eastern Churches, and that includes their liturgical laws.
The Anointing during Holy Week in the Eastern Churches simply does not “fit” into the Western understanding of Anointing. It’s part of the legitimate Eastern patrimony and their liturgical heritage. Latin Catholics need to respect that—even if it means that a Latin person might avoid participating in such a service if he finds it personally uncomfortable.
The Eastern Synods do have the authority to govern their own liturgical practices. Latin Catholics might not always understand them, but we do need to respect them. They are no less legitimate than those of the West.
Again, this is where we need to let the Eastern Churches speak for themselves.Interesting. But since the Sacrament of Anointing can only be administered to the seriously ill, as a matter of sacramental theology… and canon law …, this must be a sacramental, not the Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick (just as the use of chrism in priestly and episcopal ordinations is not confirmation).
Suffice to say that there is a variety of theology on this matter, varying not only from one person to another, but among the Eastern Churches themselves.
So long as the priest is following the duly approved liturgical texts approved by his own Synod, we can be certain that the service is legitimate. Latins might not always understand it, but the bishops of those Synods do understand it and they have every authority (not just canonically but spiritually speaking) to approve their own Rites.