chevalier:
You are dodging my arguments, plain as it is. You just fail to agree with the Catechism and the Canon Law on the matter of Holy Orders…
No. You are inventing a most improbable scenario (perhaps Cu Chullain jumping over the wall and killing all bishops at a single stroke, leaving everyone else unhamred.)
The Apostolic Succession is for the real world, not for this imaginary world. But if such a thing WERE to occur, the Church would not die.
chevalier:
What gap there? We had eleven bishops at that time…
The official “birthday” of the Church is Penecost.
If the Protestant concept of a “gap” matters, then the one between the Crucifixion and Resurrection is the key gap.
chevalier:
That’s completely wrong. Old Catholic churches aren’t in communion with Rome and don’t have the Magisterium. But they have valid orders and their bishops can ordain further. The Eastern Churches don’t agree with us on matters of governance and even on some matters of faith, but their sacraments are still valid. That’s because their orders are valid. If their orders were invalid, even believing what we believe wouldn’t help them…
Whoa! Are you saying the Anglicans, Lutherans and Presbyterians have the Magesterium?
Are you saying that Anglican, Lutheran and Presbyterial orders are valid?
chevalier:
Your fundamental mistake here is confusing the validity of Holy Orders with keeping the teaching.
Funny, I was about to say the same thing about you.
chevalier:
Sure, but we have never had lost all bishops and we have never had bishops or priests ordained by non-bishops…
And that’s the only situation where the so-called “gap” could occur.
chevalier:
If we lost all bishops, Holy Spirit would provide. But if some of our bishops or priests actually have broken lines of succession, they have invalid orders. In our Church, only bishops with unbroken chain of succession from an apostle to themselves have valid orders and only priests and deacons ordained by such bishops have valid orders. This is not to say that God can’t choose to grace people through a priest or bishop who doesn’t know he has invalid orders, but the sacraments aren’t valid so far as the church discipline goes and this is actually the Magisterium that you call to your support. Apostolic succession and Holy Orders being valid only with unbroken chain of succession is a part of the Magisterium. According to the Magisterium, there is no valid bishop without an unbroken chain of succession back to an apostle and no valid priest or deacon save one ordained by such a bishop. God could always Himself ordain such an invalidly ordained person, but we can’t make such an assumption. We have to consider the persons invalidly ordained and the sacraments by them ministered to be invalid if the validity had been conditional upon the validity of their holy orders…
Which is to say in the current universe there is no “gap.”
At the same time, we recoginze that even if Cu Chullain does jump the wall and kill the Bishops, it doesn’t matter. The Holy Spirit will provide and the Church will not perish.
chevalier:
Holy Spirit is with the Church and the Church is promised not to err. The Church is who makes Canon Law and the Magisterium. The teaching on Holy Orders is a part of the Magisterium…
And in this alternate univese, where Cu Chullain jumps the wall and kills all the Bishops, the Holy Spirit will provide. In such a universe, Canon Law as we have it would be like the Mosaic dietary laws – no longer suitable or required.
chevalier:
So you would have the authority to do so if our bishops didn’t do the job?..
Are all the bishops dead? Has the Holy Spirit descended on me?
chevalier:
And if apostolic succession doesn’t matter, then ordination isn’t a sacrament. It would be laymen making other laymen clergymen (logical nonsense) or acting clergymen but still laymen, which means no priestly estate and no sacrificing priesthood but just pastors. We have sacrificing priesthood. We do trace apostolic lines back to the apostles and the Lord Himself.
You’re confusing the Apostolic Succession with the Protestent concept of a “gap.”
Since the time of Christ, we have always had Apostles, who commissioned their successors, bishops. The fact that a seat may be vacant for a while until a successor is ordained is immaterial.
chevalier:
Doesn’t relate to the question of the validity of orders in our priests and bishops who are actually alive.
You’ll have to explain this concept of yours that Anglicans, Lutherans and Presbyterials have valid orders.