The Universal Church

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You didn’t previously qualify that it is receiving in the Catholic Church

AND

If one receives the Eucharist in mortal sin (for example) THAT is illicit
@steve-b stated “illicit” not invalid as per your post. Invalid does not mean it’s illicit and vice versa. Strictly speaking, if something is illicit, it’s against the law. Invalid means that it is not true.

Example: If I dressed up in Father’s vestments (perish the thought! 😱), and said the words of consecration over a piece of bread and a cup of wine, it would be illicit, i.e. against the law (and Scripture as well as the teaching of the Church) AND invalid, i.e. the bread would remain bread and the wine would remain wine because I am not an ordained priest (Deo Gratias).
Paul clarifies Jesus teaching because there are ALREADY those abusing the sacrament with their corrupt thinking and actions
St. Paul was converted by Our Lord Himself on the road to Damascus (Acts 9). So WHY would he contradict Our Lord?

Also, Our Lord told a saint (sorry, I forget the name) that there is no punishment on earth that can suffice to erase one unworthy Holy Communion. Think about it.
 
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Augustine puts Holy Orders as one of the 7 sacraments. Without that sacrament, there is no valid ordinations.
Well, it is presumption then in applying 4/5 th century circumstances to say a milennia later.

For example, would Augustine’s writings make an Orthodox Eucharist equal to a Catholic one, or Anglican one, or a Baptist one?

Does Augustine specifically state foundation for also making non Roman Catholic ordination unequal to Catholic?

It is also the weakest argument to state Augustine was Catholic, therefore would have followed any future Catholic teaching. Even Aquinas says “argument from authority” is limited or weak.
 
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Schism, makes there sacrament illicit, not invalid.
I’ve always wondered where Roman Catholics get this idea. As a former Roman Catholic, now Orthodox, I never believed this, even when I was neck deep in RC apologetics and saw myself as an “amateur RC apologist.” In documents since VII I don’t see anything hinting that Orthodox Sacraments are “illicit,” unless I’m missing something, but again, I’m Orthodox, and the Church of Rome can say whatever she wishes.

The Orthodox Church does not need the permission of the Church of Rome, or the Pope for that matter, to participate in the Holy Mysteries. We Orthodox have our own authority to follow the will of God. This authority is the same as it is in the Church of Rome.

The Pope of Rome is an important link to this Apostolic authority as it is also true that the collegitive authority that resides in the Eastern Orthodox Church as well as the Oriental Orthodox Church and the Assyrian Church of the East is another important link to this Apostolic foundation.

ZP
 
That being said, as a former RC to BC now home in the EO Church, who has almost my whole family in the RC Church, I believe that the Church of Rome is Apostolic and is able to teach and preach according to her Tradition. The issue, or schism, has to do with upper management.

ZP
 
Also, Our Lord told a saint (sorry, I forget the name) that there is no punishment on earth that can suffice to erase one unworthy Holy Communion. Think about it.
I know and agree with what you mean, for Paul speaks of it in an epistle. Yet I am also reminded of what some say before participating, " Lord, I am unworthy…"
 
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Otherwise it would be idolatry to have exposition (worship) of the sacred host… exposed on the altar
Did they worship the Monstrance, or even have one during that time (Augustine’s time)? Did they have Eucharist adoration, processions ? Did they have a “tabernacle” for consecrated elements, even have any leftovers.? Did they genuflect while passing the altar ?
 
Also, Our Lord told a saint (sorry, I forget the name) that there is no punishment on earth that can suffice to erase one unworthy Holy Communion. Think about it.
Excerpt from Life and Worship:

When we say that we are “unworthy” (sic), we do not always mean the same thing. Sometimes unworthiness comes from a serious sin that turns the guilty one away from God. This unworthiness can be destroyed only by repentance, confession and the forgiveness of God. At other times we feel unworthy because of our weakness and imperfection or simply because the creature must stand in awe before the great holiness of God. This unworthiness is eliminated simply because God “deems,” or, by His word, makes us worthy.

Source: Life and Worship: The Mystery of Christ Among Us. 1986, McKees Rocks, PA: God With Us Publications, p. 10. Quotations in original; boldface and italics added by me.

So as you can see, the two types of unworthiness are radically different. One comes from serious/mortal sin (e.g. adultery); the other comes out of reverence and filial fear of God.
 
Also see this thread:
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The Eucharist and Mortal Sin do not mix --an article in a Catholic newspaper Spirituality
see The Eucharist and Mortal Sin do not mix | Rhode Island Catholic “St. Paul connects the unworthy reception of Holy Communion to a sick spiritual life that eventually leads to a dead spiritual life. The unworthy reception of the Eucharist begins to sicken the person.” “A person in the state of mortal sin should not receive Holy Communion until making a good confession.”
 
Steve-b

I have wondered and believe I may have asked this question some time back but I do not recall an answer.

Do you have a CAF database on your computer with many many saved documents relating to certain topics and whenever you get a question/statement/whatever you go “there” and post what you have saved there? I ask this because of the monotonous responses I see from you .

This is not a theological question so I prefer to see something new in your response. I am just asking?
😆

AND

The same could be asked of your rersponses.

I have to think,

Paul was addressing this same point with Bishop Titus when he said

Titus 3:10-11 “As for a man who is factious αἱρετικὸν , after admonishing him once or twice, have nothing more to do with him, 11 knowing that such a person is perverted ἐξέστραπται and sinful; he is self-condemned αὐτοκατάκριτος .”

IOW

Paul is talking to a Catholic bishop in the Catholic Church. The Church Jesus wants everyone to be perfectly one in. Jn 17:20-23

SO

Paul didn’t waste time with a factious αἱρετικὸν person. And he was saying the same to Bp Titus. 2 responses was enough and that’s it. He’s done and obviously so is the factious αἱρετικὸν person

AND

CA addresses THEM Great Heresies

Since

millions of people read this forum, but don’t participate in this forum, conversations don’t just happen between 2 people. Millions of people at any one time might be reading any particular question or answer.

AND

THEY potentially learn from these dialogues.

AND

as Paul says, people who are factious αἱρετικὸν have a chance to change. Not an unlimited chance, but a chance to change.

SO

factious αἱρετικὸν people, reading what Paul said, see what scripture says about their condition.
 
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So as you can see, the two types of unworthiness are radically different. One comes from serious/mortal sin (e.g. adultery); the other comes out of reverence and filial fear of God.
Yes, thank you…i think both types are healed by His Word, which we confess before receiving…generally speaking anyone who admits their unworthiness is not destitute to His
grace and call of repenting of any grievous offense, and that before receiving any communion.
 
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steve-b:
You didn’t previously qualify that it is receiving in the Catholic Church

AND

If one receives the Eucharist in mortal sin (for example) THAT is illicit
Jesus didn’t give any example of when the Eucharist would be invalid. Remember everything Jesus says is true and here He made an unequitable statement that whoever eats His flesh and drinks His blood has eternal life.
Taking this in steps

Jesus never said ANYONE could make the Eucharist happen.

THEREFORE

If the Eucharist doesn’t happen, it is invalid.

Who has the power to make the Eucharist happen? The one’s Jesus ordains

At the Last Supper
Lk 22:19
Jesus said to His apostles when He instituted the Eucharist
do this……. ποιεῖτε …Do what?

Definition:
to be the author of a thing, (to cause, bring about,) point to an actual result,
(a) make, manufacture, construct, (b) do, act, cause, to appoint or ordain one, to change one thing into another,

The apostles have the power to do what Jesus ordained them to do.

The apostles ordained others to do what they could do, …preach teach ordain etc.

Example:

apostolic succession

As far as apostolic teaching on specific matters

Through the HS, who Jesus sends, Jn 16

Even though Jesus might not have had EVERY teaching He ever gave specifically written down in the Gospels , Jesus makes His points through the HS to His apostles.

Now RE: the Eucharist

Example: Through Paul

1 Cor 11:27-31

AND

The Catholic Church who is THERE, tells us through scripture, apostolic succession /Tradition, and the consistent teaching of the magisterium, what is also illicit and what is invalid
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SyCarl:
Paul would not be clarifying Jesus statement, he would be contradicting it. Jesus said that whoever eats and drinks has eternal life…
you should open links given
 
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steve-b:
Otherwise it would be idolatry to have exposition (worship) of the sacred host… exposed on the altar
Did they worship the Monstrance, or even have one during that time (Augustine’s time)? Did they have Eucharist adoration, processions ? Did they have a “tabernacle” for consecrated elements, even have any leftovers.? Did they genuflect while passing the altar ?
He, They, We, worship the host (the Eucharist) NOT the container, but content, what the container holds.
 
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Jesus never said ANYONE could make the Eucharist happen.
Jesus does not say who could do the Eucharist.
Who has the power to make the Eucharist happen? The one’s Jesus ordains

At the Last Supper
Lk 22:19
Jesus said to His apostles when He instituted the Eucharist
do this……. ποιεῖτε …Do what?

Definition:
to be the author of a thing, (to cause, bring about ,) point to an actual result,
(a) make, manufacture, construct, (b) do, act, cause , to appoint or ordain one , to change one thing into another,

The apostles have the power to do what Jesus ordained them to do.

The apostles ordained others to do what they could do, …preach teach ordain etc
Jesus is not ordaining the apostles here. Ordain is one of many possible meanings of the Greek word ‘do’ used here. Even if ‘ordain’ is the intended meaning here, it relates to the pronoun ‘this’, not the apostles. ‘This’ relates to the last supper but says nothing about anything that is actually done to the bread.

The apostles did not ordain men to do what they could do. The article by Jimmy Atkin you link to recognizes this. For example apostles were given the power to perform miracles. Atkin agrees this was not passed on to others. It is convenient that everything purportedly passed on by apostolic involves things that cannot be objectively verified.
The Catholic Church who is THERE, tells us through scripture, apostolic succession /Tradition, and the consistent teaching of the magisterium, what is also illicit and what is invalid
Your statement assumds something that has not been proved, ie, that the Catholic Church is the same as the original church. While it is part of that original church, there is nothing that makes being part of the church exclusive to the present Catholic Church except its own say so.

The triple legged stool of scripture, Tradition and the magisterium really means something is true simply the Catholic Church says so. This follows from the assertions that only the Catholic Church can correctly interpret scripture, that only it know what the correct Tradition is and the magisterium is the voice of the Catholic Church.
you should open links given
I do open the links. However nothing in them deals with my point. In John 6 Jesus says whoever eats His flesh and drinks His blood has eternal life. Jesus puts no restrictions on the whoever. Since Catholic teaching is everyone who receives the Eucharist in a Catholic Church, licitly or not, eats Jesus’ flesh and drinks His blood, it would follow that everyone who receives has eternal life. Any restriction would mean that not everyone who receives has eternal life. This is contrary to what Jesus says. Clarification cannot change whoever to not whoever and still have Jesus speaking the truth.

If what Jesus says in John 6 is not literal a contradiction does not arise. For example if He means eating and drinking is to believe in Him there is no contradiction.
 
On the contrary, Jesus DID ordain the Apostles at the Last Supper. That is dogmatically de fide et divina Catholicam.
 
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steve-b:
Augustine puts Holy Orders as one of the 7 sacraments. Without that sacrament, there is no valid ordinations.
Well, it is presumption then in applying 4/5 th century circumstances to say a milennia later.

For example, would Augustine’s writings make an Orthodox Eucharist equal to a Catholic one, or Anglican one, or a Baptist one?

Does Augustine specifically state foundation for also making non Roman Catholic ordination unequal to Catholic?
Augustine believed in Holy Orders as a sacrament.

Therefore he believed in all that the Catholic Church teaches on the sacrament.

The Orthodox, even though in schism, have maintained valid Holy Orders. Therefore, their consecrations of the Eucharist are valid but because of their schism from the Catholic Church , their Eucharist is illicit.

Re: Anglican orders: Declared Null and Void
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mcq72:
It is also the weakest argument to state Augustine was Catholic, therefore would have followed any future Catholic teaching. Even Aquinas says “argument from authority” is limited or weak.
AND You’re

trying to impose on a faithful Catholic bishop, who is saint and doctor of the Church, heretical ideas he wouldn’t accept
 
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