Picture this scenario: a priest is celebrating Mass and has completed the words of consecration of the Body of Christ. He has a medical emergency, whether fatal or not, that renders him unable to continue. The EMTs come and get the priest and take him to the hospital. Assuming there is no other priest to take over, the Mass stops. The rectory contacts another priest and tells him that the Mass needs to be continued. The priest cannot get there until the next day, but he does come. Does he literally continue the Mass from the point at which the first priest was incapacitated, consecrate the Precious Blood, and then finish the Mass?
Don’t dismiss this as an idle hypothetical. Recently a priest was assaulted during Mass at a church in Quebec. Presumably another priest continued the Mass, either immediately or as soon as he could get to the church.
I really don’t want to get into the question of whether the faithful attending the Mass, assuming it was a Sunday Mass, would have fulfilled their obligation or not. If others wish to split that hair, that is their prerogative.
Don’t dismiss this as an idle hypothetical. Recently a priest was assaulted during Mass at a church in Quebec. Presumably another priest continued the Mass, either immediately or as soon as he could get to the church.
I really don’t want to get into the question of whether the faithful attending the Mass, assuming it was a Sunday Mass, would have fulfilled their obligation or not. If others wish to split that hair, that is their prerogative.