C
carefullytread
Guest
As I understand it, the Catholic Church allows an Orthodox to take Catholic Communion if the Orthodox requests it on his own and is properly disposed. There is the separate question of whether the Orthodox’s own Church allows him to take the Communion, but I’m just interested in the requirements from the Catholic side.
What does it mean for an Orthodox to be properly disposed? The Orthodox Churches differ from the Catholic one is some important points of moral doctrine. For example, as I understand it, an Orthodox is allowed to be divorced after their sacramental marriage and enter a second penitential marriage. Some of the Orthodox Churches allow hormonal contraception under some circumstances. And of course, all of them encourage their followers to reject the doctrine of papal infallibility.
So an Orthodox who is in a penitential marriage, using hormonal contraception, and rejects papal infallibility could be perfectly disposed to take Communion in an Orthodox Church. Does that mean he’s properly disposed to take Communion from a Catholic priest, or does the rule mean that the Orthodox must follow Catholic rules vis a vis being in a state of grace?
If the latter, that’s pretty interesting, because a Catholic must accept papal infallibility to be properly disposed for Communion, but I would think an Orthodox almost by definition can’t accept it and still be an Orthodox.
What does it mean for an Orthodox to be properly disposed? The Orthodox Churches differ from the Catholic one is some important points of moral doctrine. For example, as I understand it, an Orthodox is allowed to be divorced after their sacramental marriage and enter a second penitential marriage. Some of the Orthodox Churches allow hormonal contraception under some circumstances. And of course, all of them encourage their followers to reject the doctrine of papal infallibility.
So an Orthodox who is in a penitential marriage, using hormonal contraception, and rejects papal infallibility could be perfectly disposed to take Communion in an Orthodox Church. Does that mean he’s properly disposed to take Communion from a Catholic priest, or does the rule mean that the Orthodox must follow Catholic rules vis a vis being in a state of grace?
If the latter, that’s pretty interesting, because a Catholic must accept papal infallibility to be properly disposed for Communion, but I would think an Orthodox almost by definition can’t accept it and still be an Orthodox.