The answer to this objection - which seems to have been a source of confusion for quite a few people who have studied this problem - would be that we must distinguish carefully between the intention of those who use the Anglican Ordinal in ordaining men to the Anglican ministry, and the intention of the authors of the Ordinal when they were composing it. **What Pope Leo teaches is that the latter intention - an anti-sacrificial and anti-Catholic one - is written into the Anglican rite, and "sticks" or "clings" to it, so to speak, for ever afterwards.** That anti-sacrificial intention is thus the objective and perduring meaning of the rite, and "infects," as it were, the words "priest" and "bishop" in the essential prayers in such a way that those prayers are an invalid form of the sacrament. In other words, according to Leo's teaching, it is not good enough for an Anglo-Catholic bishop to come along at a later date (even assuming he has been validly consecrated) and say, "When I use the Anglican Ordinal, I am using the words "priest" (or "bishop") to mean exactly what the Roman Catholic Church means. Therefore the form is quite valid when I use it, and since my intentions are also Catholic, my ordinations convey true priestly powers." Not good enough, says Leo - the reason being that the words in the rite mean only what the original Anglican authors intended them to mean. They cannot have that meaning "flushed out" by some well-intentioned individual who wants to inject into them a Catholic meaning of his own choosing. When the Pope says that the defect of intention is a distinct and secondary defect, however, he is not talking about the intention written into the Ordinal by its authors. Rather, he is referring to the presumed intentions of the original users of the Anglican Ordinal - some of whom, of course, were the same persons who had a hand in composing it. At that time, long before there was a definite Anglo-Catholic party which had recovered a Catholic understanding of the Eucharist and Priesthood, **those who knowingly chose to use a rite from which essential Catholic doctrines had been "deliberately stripped" must be presumed, says Pope Leo, to have had an un-Catholic intention. And this would be a further reason for the invalidity of their ordinations, over and above the fact that they used a defective form of the sacrament.**