C
ChristMyLife
Guest
Come again?I’ve read this site for what, 10 years. And this thread pops every week without fail.
It’s advertising folks.
Come again?I’ve read this site for what, 10 years. And this thread pops every week without fail.
It’s advertising folks.
What @goout is saying is that we regularly have new users come in and post a thread along the lines of “Hey, I just learned about the SSPX; they sound cool; what do you think?” And then we have the same conversation we always have. Some of those new users disingenuously act like it’s an honest question, but they are actually just trying to promote SSPX here.Come again?
True (I’ve been here 14 years), but new user @ChristMyLife actually brings a genuine and fresh perspective on it. Most of the regular commenters on this topic post the same positions over and over. The OP’s dual strong opposition/support based on status is not a perspective I’ve seen illustrated here before (at least with this degree of strenuousness). In that sense, I’m not finding this to be the same old tired SSPX conversation that we always have.I’ve read this site for what, 10 years. And this thread pops every week without fail.
You’ve sensed wisely and correctly.thread pops every week without fail.
I in no way support the SSPX in their current situation. I think a lot of what they say is disgraceful and divisive.
I do however, sympathize with their cause, especially with regard to liturgical reform.
I am saddened by their absence in the Church, because I believe their tradition minded voice needs to be speaking in the Church. But it frustrates me because instead of being a force for good in the Church, they sit at her gates as a voice of dissension.
I think I made my position very clear in OP and subsequent comments I made.
Indeed, Pope Benedict removed SSPX excommunication and Pope Francis permitted SSPX to hear confession and give marriages so yes SSPX not in schism and according to that Canon, refusing to submit to Pope Benedict and Pope Francis is schismatic.According to Canon 751 of the Catholic Church’s Code of Canon Law and paragraph 2089 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, “schism is the refusal of submission to the Supreme Pontiff or of communion with the members of the Church subject to him.”
That’s an impressive example of mental gymnastics…not in schism and according to that Canon, refusing to submit to Pope Benedict and Pope Francis is schismatic.
you wouldn’t catch me dead in an SSPX Chapel - I wouldn’t even go on an SSPX website or order a book from SSPX publisher
No.leaving many communities several miles from the nearest Catholic Church, would it be possible that an SSPX Church would be an acceptable replacement for the Diocesan “management”?
I don’t think that’s quite correct. If we can attend an Orthodox service and have that satisfy our obligation to attend Mass, I would expect the same would go for the SSPX. In fact, I would attend an SSPX Mass before going to an Orthodox service.In that case, you would be released of your obligation to attend Mass.
Who told you an Orthodox Liturgy satisfies your obligation? It doesn’t.don’t think that’s quite correct. If we can attend an Orthodox service and have that satisfy our obligation to attend Mass
Then why all this confusion?As Card. Castrillon himself stated, the SSPX has never been in Schism.
Okay…No, Pope Francis granted them right to hear confession:
Who told you an Orthodox Liturgy satisfies your obligation? It doesn’t.
Perhaps I should have been more specific in my post and said I was referring to an extreme circumstance where a Catholic parish in good standing was not available, but since you were discussing the possibility of attending an SSPX parish to satisfy one’s obligation when a parish in good standing wasn’t available, I figured I didn’t need to.“So does this mean that Catholics can never attend Orthodox liturgy and have it “count” as Sunday Mass, and can never receive any of the sacraments in an Orthodox parish church? Not so fast. There are specific, out-of-the-ordinary situations in which this may take place—and these are addressed in canon 844.2. A Catholic may lawfully receive the sacraments of penance, the Eucharist, and anointing of the sick from non-Catholic ministers in whose Churches these sacraments are valid, if (1) it is impossible for the Catholic to approach a Catholic cleric for these sacraments; (2) the danger of error or indifferentism is avoided; and (3) there is a genuine necessity or spiritual advantage to be gained from it.”
I have changed the emphasis in this quote to highlight a mistake people have made here, like Bobby87:Pope Francis: For the Jubilee Year I had also granted that those faithful who, for various reasons, attend churches officiated by the priests of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X, can validly and licitly receive the sacramental absolution of their sins . For the pastoral benefit of these faithful, and trusting in the good will of their priests to strive with God’s help for the recovery of full communion with the Catholic Church, I have personally decided to extend this faculty beyond the Jubilee Year, until further provisions are made, lest anyone ever be deprived of the sacramental sign of reconciliation through the Church’s pardon."
Pope Francis does not have the same difficulty saying that they may hear confessions while not being in full communion. In fact, the faculty to hear confessions is dependent on their commitment to recovering full communion. It is not a concession that can be made to Catholic priests in regular situations.They have canonical faculties to hear confessions. They are Catholic and members of the Church. You are either a Catholic or you are not. You can’t have it both ways.