I Was wondering if someone could expolian to me why anglican orders and sacramentos are invalid. Is it grounded in the resección of catholic teaching by the fundamental sources of anglican doctrine, is it that the ordination ceremony is lacking in something, or both? Also, white would be requiered to chance for Anglican priesthood and sacraments to be considered valid. Iveheard many different answers and am very confused
T’is a subject that has been a hobby of mine for around 20 years. Gets a lot of airing around here, or has done in the past. Gives me the chance to post a lot, in such cases.
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It is a long, sad story, involving a mix of history, theology, politics and personalities. I usually deal only in the theology, though I do recommend reading.
Brief answer, as given in
Apostolicae Curae, at the link given above, involved a judgement on two intertwined requirements to confect a valid sacrament, in this case, orders. The judgement was based on a supposed defect in sacramental form, as given in the Edwardine Ordinal, in not specifying a priest’s sacerdotal function of confecting the Eucharist.
That in itself would not necessarily render the form invalid; there are a few Rites that the RCC recognizes as valid in confecting the sacrament of orders (assuming all other factors are valid).
And hence the verdict in
Apostolicae Curae looks at another sacramental factor: sacramental intent. Given the circumstances under which the Edwardine Ordinal was written,
AC assumes that anyone who used the Ordinal did not possess the requisite sacramental intent, in the sacramental action. So, given the intertwined judgements of defective sacramental form and defective sacramental intent, in using that Edwardine Ordinal, Anglican Orders were null and void, post roughly 1559, amen.
Anglicans have a different view of the matter (and the form and the intent).
Recommended reading: Clark ANGLICAN ORDERS AND DEFECT OF INTENTION, for the best exposition of the RCC position; Fr. John Hughes’ ABSOLUTELY NULL AND UTTERLY VOID, for the history of the long sad story, and his STEWARDS OF THE LORD, for a different take on the theology. Fr. Hughes is a very interesting person.This is a brief, hasty account. It is, as I have said, a long, sad, and complicated story, running from around 1891, to the end of the Malines Conversations, in 1927. I might know more.