J
JKirkLVNV
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Gottle of Geer said:## OTOH, can a practice not become a sacrilege, if there is a ruling by an authority in the Church with sufficient competence to legislate on such things, to this effect ? Can’t something be a sacrilege in one part or time of the Church Universal, and not another ?
After all, something can acquire the character of a mortal sin. An example - appealing from the Pope to a General Council is a crime and a sin: and it is both, because that is what particular canons say it is; because a legislator (in this case, the Pope) has ruled that it is.
It used to be a mortal sin to eat certain foods at particular times in the Church’s year - but that has changed. So it was mortally sinful to eat a steak in Lent in 1950 - but not in 2000. Which means there were opportunities for damnation available in 1950, that are available no longer: which does seem pretty odd![]()
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If that can happen - why can’t something not sacrilegious, acquire a sacrilegious character ?
ISTM that this excessively canonical approach is what one gets if one relies on laws as a motive for Christians to act - a legal approach doesn’t show why what it legislates for is important; it has no ability to emphasise the gracious & mysterious character of revelation in Christ. So it too readily gets worried over trivia. Law needs a sense of proprtion in those who apply it - without that, it becomes tyrannical, or silly, or inhumane.##
You could substitute “tradition” (with a small t) for “laws” in the above and it would be equally true.
I doubt the Church could officially say that reception in the hand was a sacriledge, simply because there is an precedent for it. She may deem it inadviseable, or prohibit it for a time, but she normally doesn’t anathematize entirely what that for which there is a precedent (hence, people who persist in kneeling during communion cannot be denied It, though they are encouraged to stand).