F
FrDavid96
Guest
He “must not.” If he does, the ordination would be valid, but illicit.By this, do you mean literally “cannot,” or “must not?” Does the validity of the sacrament depend on the rite of the man?
He “must not.” If he does, the ordination would be valid, but illicit.By this, do you mean literally “cannot,” or “must not?” Does the validity of the sacrament depend on the rite of the man?
Yes.Would it actually be possible for this to happen if only one father’s father’s… father did not tell his family that he belonged to x church sui iuris? Wouldn’t it actually require both my great-great-…grandparents on both my parents’ sides to not tell their child that they belonged to a different church sui iuris, (edit: actually, I think it would take an entire generation)
No.since, if even one parent belonged to the Roman church, if both my parents agreed that I would belong to the Roman church, then I would belong to the Roman church?
Oh, ok. Good to know. Thank you very much for your time and responses, Father.No.
It’s not enough that they agree.
They must make their intentions known formally and those intentions must be recorded in the baptismal register. Unless it was done formally, it did not happen.
Father, isn’t it normally the case outside North America that the local bishop has jurisdiction over all rites & churches, with the obligation to provide them for the faithful of all rites? In the US, we ended up with first a couple of floating eastern bishops to serve us all, and then the various hierarchies–but this only happened because we were abused but he Latin bishops.A Latin bishop cannot ordain a member of an Eastern Church (except in the now extremely rare case where that Latin bishop has jurisdiction over the Eastern Catholics living in his diocese—again, extremely rare).
Not any more. In the last 20+ years since the Eastern Code took effect, there’s been a trend toward appointing Eastern bishops outside of their traditional territory (even if they might be exarchs rather than eparchs). From the perspective of most of the members here (since the forum is in the English language) it’s more unlikely to find that situation of Eastern Catholics under the pastoral care of a Latin bishop.Father, …
I don’t really think it can be said that we have “floating” bishops. We have bishops with well-defined, very large territories that overlap with the territories of Latin-rite bishops. This situation exists mostly anywhere that there are significant numbers of Eastern Catholics, not just in the US. It is more noticeable in the US because we have so many different jurisdictions.Father, isn’t it normally the case outside North America that the local bishop has jurisdiction over all rites & churches, with the obligation to provide them for the faithful of all rites? In the US, we ended up with first a couple of floating eastern bishops to serve us all, and then the various hierarchies–but this only happened because we were abused but he Latin bishops.
Today, no. But after that pig-headed bishop I refuse to name caused two schisms, but before the raising of eastern parches, these were used. There were, of course, conflicts between some of these and different eastern groups :headbang:I don’t really think it can be said that we have “floating” bishops.
They were not “floating” whatever that might mean. They had (as babochka said) very large, but still defined territory (such as “the entire United States”).babochka:![]()
Today, no. But after that pig-headed bishop I refuse to name caused two schisms, but before the raising of eastern parches, these were used. There were, of course, conflicts between some of these and different eastern groups :headbang:I don’t really think it can be said that we have “floating” bishops.
hawk