J
JReducation
Guest
There are many examples from the left, but none of them have become churches or ecclesial communities. All breakaway Churches (ie. Orthodox) and ecclesial communities (ie. Anglicans and Lutherans) came from the right.I’d be hesitant to make the claim in bold above, for two reasons.
- The “Right” and the “Left” are only a couple hundred years old, dating to the French Revolution 18 centuries after Christ. The idea that monothelitism or docetism or Arianism are “right-wing” heresies is anachronistic.
- Over the last couple hundred years the Church has been assailed with heresies from both the “left” and the “right”. SSPX and other “rad-trad” groups are examples of breakaway movements from the right, but certainly there are examples from the “left” as well Nuns on the Bus, Unitarianism, and Modernism (perhaps the heresy of the last 2 centuries) come to mind.
Yes, we do use such terms as left and right in Church history . . . for those who are wondering. We use them all the way back to the Council of Jerusalem.
On another note.
If a Catholic is excommunicated, he or she is no longer a member of the physical Church as evidenced by:
- He may not receive the sacraments until he is reconciled with the Church
- He may not receive a Catholic burial or be buried in a Catholic cemetery
- He may not be considered for beatification or canonization unless it is proven that he or she was invalidly excommunicated (ie. Joan of Arc).
- If he is a cleric, he may not celebrate the sacraments. If he does so, he only complicates his spiritual state, because he is abusing the Sacrament of Holy Orders. No ordained man has a right to exercise the ministry without permission from a canonical authority. Only diocesan bishops and male religious superiors are canonical authorities. The SSPX does not have canonical superiors, because they have no canonical status. This is not light matter. Some people think that “It’s only an illicit mass, ordination, etc, but it’s valid”. In Church law and theology, there is no such thing as “only illicit”. Illicit means illegal. The degree of gravity depends of the subject at hand. The actual celebration of the sacrament, forget how it’s celebrated for a moment, the actual celebration without permission to do so, is very serious moral matter.
- As we know, the ordination of bishops without a papal mandate implies an automatic excommunication of those who ordain and the candidate who is ordained. The pope can extend the excommunication to include those who support the action. This has been done in the past. It was done to the Franciscans in the 13th century. The superior general was excommunicated for disagreeing with St. Francis and everyone who lent support, even though they did not actually act contrary to the rule, was also excommunicated. To be fair, I have to insert here that the pope was a Conventual Franciscan Friar. He blew his tiara. He has the power to do so. Forget tiara. Franciscan popes do not wear tiaras. LOL But you get the idea.
If I understood my professors correctly, it’s like one who studies medicine and loses his license for violating the law. He does not cease to be a Doctor of Medicine, but he is no longer a physician. He cannot make use of the MD until he rectifies his situation with the state and the medical board. He is no longer part of the medical community.
It is not the Doctor of Medicine that gives him the right to practice medicine, but the State.
In this case, it’s not Baptism that gives a person the right to participate in Church life, but the law of the Church. If it were only Baptism, then every Christian could participate in the life of the Church since there is only one Baptism. There is no such thing as a Catholic, Protestant or Orthodox Baptism. Those are Christian communities, not different baptisms.
An excommunication is a form of exclusion. The exclusion is a penalty, with the intent of causing the person to reconsider and seek forgiveness.