C
ckasa
Guest
Hello all, so I was debating something with a friend and we wondered about the properness of the actions in this scenario.
For the sake of the argument, lets say a seminarian that has been in formation for a few years is in a parish where the priest is either unavailable one night or is away on vacation and a family calls requesting the sacrament of the sick for a person that is definitely in their final hours of life. The Seminarian knows that he cannot validly confer it because of his lack of ordination and contacts every parish in the surrounding area and even retired priests but alas, none are available or willing to do it. The seminarian does not want the person to die without feeling some comfort and goes to be by the persons bedside. In so doing the seminarian declares to everyone there that he cannot confer any of the sacraments but offers to share some readings from scripture and brings the Eucharist (viaticum), in addition he offers a prayer by the persons bedside asking the Lord to bestow his mercy and peace upon the individual dying.
At no point does he hear a confession, nor anoint the person with oil.
So the question I have is this, would this be an acceptable pastoral action in light of the canon law mentioning that no person may perform an act reserved to someone that is ordained or is this over stepping the bounds?
The scenario was inspired by a story in the book “To Save a Thousand Souls” by Fr. Brett Brannen where a seminarian does an action reserved to a priest and his Bishop tells him he could not have conferred the sacrament due to his lack of Holy Orders.
For the sake of the argument, lets say a seminarian that has been in formation for a few years is in a parish where the priest is either unavailable one night or is away on vacation and a family calls requesting the sacrament of the sick for a person that is definitely in their final hours of life. The Seminarian knows that he cannot validly confer it because of his lack of ordination and contacts every parish in the surrounding area and even retired priests but alas, none are available or willing to do it. The seminarian does not want the person to die without feeling some comfort and goes to be by the persons bedside. In so doing the seminarian declares to everyone there that he cannot confer any of the sacraments but offers to share some readings from scripture and brings the Eucharist (viaticum), in addition he offers a prayer by the persons bedside asking the Lord to bestow his mercy and peace upon the individual dying.
At no point does he hear a confession, nor anoint the person with oil.
So the question I have is this, would this be an acceptable pastoral action in light of the canon law mentioning that no person may perform an act reserved to someone that is ordained or is this over stepping the bounds?
The scenario was inspired by a story in the book “To Save a Thousand Souls” by Fr. Brett Brannen where a seminarian does an action reserved to a priest and his Bishop tells him he could not have conferred the sacrament due to his lack of Holy Orders.