B
batteddy
Guest
Let’s just imagine our Mr. Jean Meslier sitting in his box and liseing to the confessions of his flock. Of course, he doesn#t absolve them earnestly - because in his diary he especially mocked and laughed at the “superstitious” sacraments - so he mocks you(the penitent), and secretly(though not overtly) laughs at you, and secretely laughs when absolving you, laughing secretly at you because you are so dull to belive that when he absolves you you are absolved of your sins.
Jean Mesliers sounds like one of the rare cases in history of a priest so evil and deranged that they do preform the outward rite while delibrately withholding internal intention to do what the Church does out of their own hatred for the Church.Well, I think Leo X condemned this. And, therefore, I get the idea that Jean Mesliers penitents died in their mortal sins.
Leo’s condemnation is perfectly true: a person merely intending to RECIEVE a sacrament is not enough to actually recieve it. The other qualifications must be met. So if Jean Mesliers penitents wanted to be absolved but were not, this was not enough. They were, indeed, no more absolved than if I went into the confessional and pretended to be a priest and give them absolution. Because of this, some may have died in their mortal sins…however, we can hope that they went to other priests too, or that their intent to confess was in some elevated to a Perfect Contrition.
This condemnation is also true, and in no way contradicts what Aquinas or I have said. If a person delibrately and consciously decides “I dont intend to do what the church does” that baptism is definitely invalid. But unbelief in what the church believes is not the same as not intending to do what she does. You can personally esteem it to be nothing, but if you are preforming the ritual because you know the Church believes in it (even if you yourself dont) you are intending to do what the Church does unless you positively exclude this.Alexander VIII condmned by a decree of the Holy Office this error of the Jansenists:
“Baptism is valid if it is done by a person who observes the wohle external rite and form of baptism, but secretly decides in his heart: I don’t intent to do what the church does.”
Also true. It is absolutely undoubtable that a priest who preforms the correct ritual, with correct matter, correct form, correct intent, AND correct belief preforms a true sacrament. If a priest does not have correct belief, there may be some doubt, but the sacrament may still be true. He may still preform a correct sacrament, but his unbelief MAY (but not necessarily) effect his intent. So a priest who simply doesnt believe in transubstantiation but doesnt morally oppose the Church still preforms a proper sacrament. But a priest who delibrately excludes the intent of the Church because his conscience tells him it is no longer morally right to submit to the Catholic Church will not preform the sacrament.Insofar as the substance of bread remains the same, it isn’t allowed to doubt the least, that after the presaid words of the consecration of the body[this is my body], which are spoken by the priest with THE INTENT TO TRANSFORM[the bread into the body of Christ], the bread is substantially transformed into the true body of Christ. (Denzinger-Hünermann 1352)