G
GKC
Guest
Case in point: it just happened again, right above.I would.![]()
Over and over…
GKC
Case in point: it just happened again, right above.I would.![]()
What???Case in point: it just happened again, right above.
Over and over…
GKC
We must be reading different threads.Years ago my father had a friend who was diabetic. The friend told my father that his diabetes was cured by a miracle at some pentecostal service. He went into a coma and was dead two days later.
Twenty years ago I had a good friend who was diabetic. His church prayed for him to be healed. He was not and the leaders told him the reason for it was his lack of faith. All he had to do to be healed was believe he was healed and claim his miracle and as a statement of faith stop taking insulin. So he stopped taking insulin claiming his miracle. He got sicker and sicker and was dying. The nitwits who told him this finally came to his home at the behest of his frantic wife and told him to take his insulin. He told them he believed he was healed and refused. He went into a coma and was taken to the hospital where his life was saved.
Some years ago I was in a chatroom about the Eastern Church. One contributor was a woman Lutheran minister. For some reason she was attracted to the Eastern Christian spirituality.
She was outraged that Catholics would even question the validity of anyone’s claim of valid orders. She truly believed that at her services she validly confected the Eucharist.
Even Lutherans do not agree among themselves on Holy Orders, but Catholics should recognize hers. She appeared to be very sincere.
The point of all this is that what we believe about reality has no impact on reality. She could no more confect the Eucharist than I could, or Bozo the Clown.
So who does know, who does hold authentic Anglican teaching on Anglican priesthood? No one knows and probably no one does, because there is no authentic teaching. It is all over the board among the various claimants with no recignized voice of authority, no means of establishing authority and authoritative teaching.
This was inevitable.
Post 134, followed by my 137.What???
Got it. thanksPost 134, followed by my 137.
Which is the same historical point I had made a few pages back, with CopticChristian.
GKC
We are indeed, but that is not relevant. Anglicans are not in agreement among themselves. There is no unity there.I assume you missed my exchange with CopticChristian, on the inter-communion agreement with the Utrecht Old Catholics. I suggest reading it over. It’s back up there on p. 7 or so.
This is the sort of thing where it helps to know a little relevant history. As far as I can tell, you don’t.
As to Shori, etc, you and I are in agreement.
GKC
posterus traditus Anglicanus
The thread issue has been abandoned; and the mud slinging has started. You just lost my attention.We are indeed, but that is not relevant. Anglicans are not in agreement among themselves. There is no unity there.
Catholics suffered through the controversy of ordination of women. JPII settled the matter. It did not make those supporting priestesses go away. They are still out there, but there will never be women Catohlic priests. No pope will open the discussion ever again. It would be deliberately creating schism.
Shori is not going away. I’ve read some of her statements. Totally bizarre.
The fact that she was elected by Episcopalian hierarchy says she has tremendous support. Saner Anglicans may realize how far off track she is, but there is no way to get rid of her or silence her. She has a title recognized by probably the majority and they take her seriously.
So back to your question. Seriously, how does anyone know authoritative Anglican teaching?
To whom do you appeal? How confused have things become? Can men marry men?
Soime Anglicans, perhaps the majority, including their bishops say yes and these so called weddings take place. There is no means within the Anglican Communion to resolve any controversy.
You might not like the idea that the bishop or Rome is the visible head of the Church on earth, but there is authority. Catholics who do not like him can not get around the fact that there he is.
I agree with much of this.We are indeed, but that is not relevant. Anglicans are not in agreement among themselves. There is no unity there.
Catholics suffered through the controversy of ordination of women. JPII settled the matter. It did not make those supporting priestesses go away. They are still out there, but there will never be women Catohlic priests. No pope will open the discussion ever again. It would be deliberately creating schism.
Shori is not going away. I’ve read some of her statements. Totally bizarre.
The fact that she was elected by Episcopalian hierarchy says she has tremendous support. Saner Anglicans may realize how far off track she is, but there is no way to get rid of her or silence her. She has a title recognized by probably the majority and they take her seriously.
So back to your question. Seriously, how does anyone know authoritative Anglican teaching?
To whom do you appeal? How confused have things become? Can men marry men?
Soime Anglicans, perhaps the majority, including their bishops say yes and these so called weddings take place. There is no means within the Anglican Communion to resolve any controversy.
You might not like the idea that the bishop or Rome is the visible head of the Church on earth, but there is authority. Catholics who do not like him can not get around the fact that there he is.
You’re misunderstanding me – the Magisterium certainly has the authority to decide, as they have done, that Anglican orders are invalid. I’m merely saying that to ask why this is so is not a very meaningful question. They are invalid because the Magisterium has so decided, and for no other reason. Beyond this, it is impossible to create a coherent case for why Anglican orders are invalid but Old Catholic orders are valid – many Anglican bishops are consecrated by OC bishops, and vice versa, and the form and intent is indistinguishable. This was not the case when Apostolicae curiae was promulgated, but it is now. Anglican orders are invalid because Apostolicae curiae says they’re invalid, not because of their form or intent.But the magisterium has decided, re: Anglican orders.
Are you of the opinion the magisterium teaches objective error? Or that accepting the teachings, with the appropriate level of theological certainty, is optional? I refer you to *AD TUENDAM FIDEM */ John Paul II, and the Doctrinal Commentary on it.
As to the asserted Papal opinion, I doubt it, absent the citation. It’s the sort of thing I would have heard.
GKC
Anglicanus-Catholicus
I could not say why OC orders, in those groups that are currently laying hands on women, are not questioned for validity of intent. The theological points of intent and form in Apostolicae Curae are not the entire story in that case; personalities, history and politics were also involved, but the theological reasoning is coherent, if not unassailable. But I have often stated that the question of the Dutch Touch would logically mean that (IAW Ott, FUNDAMENTALS OF CATHOLIC DOGMA) valid/illicit episcopal lines would have been infused into Anglicanism regularly, beginning in 1932, long before the OCs began to run off the rails. I also often observe that the RCC has never commented on this, officially, to the best of my knowledge.You’re misunderstanding me – the Magisterium certainly has the authority to decide, as they have done, that Anglican orders are invalid. I’m merely saying that to ask why this is so is not a very meaningful question. They are invalid because the Magisterium has so decided, and for no other reason. Beyond this, it is impossible to create a coherent case for why Anglican orders are invalid but Old Catholic orders are valid – many Anglican bishops are consecrated by OC bishops, and vice versa, and the form and intent is indistinguishable. This was not the case when Apostolicae curiae was promulgated, but it is now. Anglican orders are invalid because Apostolicae curiae says they’re invalid, not because of their form or intent.
Personally I think Rome would be well within their rights to declare Old Catholic orders invalid at this point, as their theology has become essentially identical to Anglican theology, inclusive of ordaining female bishops and other innovations. But, for the time being, they are still valid. As long as this is so, it is simply not possible to answer why Anglican orders are invalid but Old Catholic orders valid other than by answering that Apostolicae curiae so determines.
*AC *doesn’t require a RC to affirm that the Anglican rite for consecration/ordination is invalid, as to form, but that it was invalid as to form, prior to 1662. And hence, combined with the invalid sacramental intent, as revealed, determinatio ex adiunctus, by the use of that form, broke the apostolic succession, 450 (more or less) years ago. Which would be true, (if true) whether the OCs had valid orders or not. The two questions are not related. You may have a point on the OCs (indeed, I’ve wondered, as I said before about the implications of the Dutch Touch, per Ott, and also about the issue of the current status of the OCs). But the question of whether Anglicanism lost apostolic succession is not related to whether the OCs have done so, 90 years later, or, if so, why they are getting a pass. It might speak to a lack of proper assessment of the OCs, or some form of hypocrisy; not for me to say. But it is a separate subject.All I am saying is that today, in terms of form, intent, and theology, Anglican episcopal ordinations and Old Catholic episcopal ordinations are utterly indistinguishable. They are often performed by the same people, even. And yet the position of the Catholic Church, which all Catholics are obligated to affirm, is that Anglican orders are invalid while Old Catholic orders are valid. The reason for this is simply the existence of AC. Arguing about form, intent, and what happened four hundred years ago is pointless. As a Catholic, one is not required to affirm that Anglican ordinations lack valid form, one is merely required to affirm that they are invalid, as per AC.
I’m not arguing against this conclusion (although I would be happy if the Vatican decided to reinvestigate the issue of Old Catholic orders), but I am saying that there is no way to logically separate the question of Anglican orders from the question of Old Catholic orders by talking about form and intent. The form and intent are the same, but one is valid and the other not.
(I should clarify that I’m talking exclusively about the Anglican Communion here, since I see that you are a member of a continuing Anglican church outside the Communion. I don’t even know exactly what Rome’s position towards the orders in these churches is, other than that the continuing Anglicans themselves don’t all agree about whether or not they have valid orders or if that’s even an important question.)
Of course we agree. You and I and the pope agree on all the particular issues I would bet. No, men can not marry men, etc., absolutely not. We are traditionalists in that sense.I agree with much of this.
As to Anglican teaching, it will depend on whom you ask. Ask a traditionalist Anglican such as I’m, and you’ll get responses like Scripture, Tradition, the Creeds, and a varying number of Ecumenical Councils. And reason.
Ask some other Anglicans, and you may be told that yes, men can marry men.
To address the Anglican Communion, you need to speak with someone who is a member of it.
I am speaking to members of the Anglican Communion. The answers to questions depends on who is asked. I agree with your answers. You are the one with the right answers and so is Anna S. It does not matter that you or we have the right answers. The pope agrees with you. God agrees with you. It does not matter. The only option is more division, divorce, rending and helplessness to stop it.posterus traditus Anglicanus.
Truly you mischaracterize my intent. Although it is understandable that someone might fail to distinguish between mud slinging and ranting, please note they are not the same.The thread issue has been abandoned; and the mud slinging has started. You just lost my attention.
Then I’ll sign off with a comment or two on this post. Threads can certainly outlive their usefulness…My Dear Anna , The mud slinging started I believe when you accused me of bait and switch but I accept your apology because as you said I can take the thread where I would like since I started it.
My grasp of the English language is quite good thank you and I would say that the destruction of the unity of the Church ( body of Christ, the oneness of which after all is what JESUS prayed for ) IS in fact THE plot…do you not agree? My reading recommendation is Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis for starters.
To those who say that to answer my OP in truth requires a date, I suppose the way I worded it would mean yes , my apologies the intent was as posters like GKC read it ; at what point , who made the decision and why.
One of the recent posters in the last few pages ( I was unable to multi quote for some reason) made a very valid point and that was that the Pope had declared the form invalid rather than the succession per se. This makes sense since it is possible for a Catholic mass to be invalid if the correct form is not used.
My point about the ‘peace prize’ still stands , clearly the answer depends on which side one stands but ultimately GKC as a Catholic ( if you notice my journey started as a Lutheran, I was Baptised - in England I might add at the Royal Academy Sandhurst Memorial chapel when I was 21 and I entered the fulness of the faith officially 3 years ago after MUCH soul searching) I suppose I DO have MY answer thank you. This question was never an ‘issue’ for me and was never a reason for my coming home it has just - as my OP stated- been on the back of my mind and was a curiosity.
I am with Edmunds however and I respectfully request that those who would like to continue this new line of discussion to please start your own thread so that this discussion can remain up for others to read and benefit from because there is alot of good information here especially earlier on.
Perhaps I need to know how to close the discussion so that it does not get removed.
Thanks to all for your contributions.![]()