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YoungApologist3
Guest
As some of you may know, I am a seminary applicant. One of the (many, many) questions that is on the application is whether you have any Eastern Catholic relatives. Presumably, this is to ensure that you aren’t Eastern Catholic without actually knowing it, making it so that you can’t serve the diocese if you one day realized it. This got me thinking. What would happen if my great-great-great-…-great grandfather on my father’s fathers … father’s side was Eastern Catholic? This would make me, and possibly hundreds of other people, belong to an Eastern rite without even knowing it. This would then invalidate every marriage in the family that took place since then (since it would have taken place in a Latin church, by a Latin priest), and have other consequences as well.
My question is this: Is there a per se statute of limitations regarding what rite one is? For example, if a family forgets they belong to a certain rite, and begin practicing another one, after 3 generations their family belongs to the rite they associate themselves with?
My question is this: Is there a per se statute of limitations regarding what rite one is? For example, if a family forgets they belong to a certain rite, and begin practicing another one, after 3 generations their family belongs to the rite they associate themselves with?