OTM:
Not correct. I can fulfil my obligation by attending Mass (or sacred Mysteries) in any church in union with Rome.
OTM,
I believe David meant by RCC, those (including the Eastern and Oriental Catholic and Chaldean Catholic) Churches in communion with Rome.
loyola rambler:
According to both Cardinals Bernadin and George, you fulfill your obligation by attending mass in any church in communion with Rome. Because the mutual excommunications were lifted between the Church of Rome and the Orthodox sister churches, you fulfill your obligation when you attend their masses, too…even if they won’t give you Communion.
Loyola,
Despite the lifting of the mutual excommunications, the Orthodox are
not in communion with Rome.
A Catholic who is unable to attend Mass or the Divine Liturgy is dispensed without recourse to clergy for a formal dispensation, as impossibility relieves one of the obligation.
Attendance by a Latin Catholic at the Divine Liturgy offered in a church of any of the Eastern or Oriental Orthodox Churches or the Assyrian (Ancient) Church of the East or at a Mass offered in a parish of the Polish National Catholic Church (the latter only in the US parishes of that body) is a laudable act in the presence of impossibility of attendance at a Catholic church, but does not fulfill any obligation for attendance, as that obligation is obviated by the impossibility to attend at a Catholic church, as already explained.
The reception of sacraments by a Latin Catholic in any of those Churches is a matter addressed by Canon Law.
§2 Whenever necessity requires or a genuine spiritual advantage commends it, and provided the danger of error or indifferentism is avoided, Christ’s faithful for whom it is physically or morally impossible to approach a catholic minister, 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. .
As a practical matter, however, most clergy of the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches and the Assyrian Church will not afford the Holy Mysteries to a Catholic (a few will make an exception
in extremis,
i.e., a Catholic who is dying or in immediate danger of death). Priests of the PNCC will generally commune a Catholic or administer either of the other Sacraments.
As David suggested, there are separate circumstances applicable in the case of Eastern, Oriental, and Chaldean Catholics as regards attendance at the Divine Liturgy in the Churches which are the counterparts/Sisters to their own, although they will ordinarily be barred from the Holy Mysteries as well.
An exception to that bar lies in specific pastoral provisions enacted between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox and Assyrian Churches (and between the Melkite Catholic and Antiochian Orthodox Churches only in the Middle East) to accomodate circumstances in which the faithful of either Church are without the services of their own clergy. The scope of those is beyond the purpose of this thread. If anyone needs or wants added info on those, click on my nick and then on “View all posts by Irish Melkite” - I posted at length regarding this matter on a thread within the past week and it should be easy to find.
Many years,
Neil