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FrDavid96
Guest
No, your understanding of the canon is simply wrong.The bishop can give that permission – that’s the whole point of c. 844 §4: “if, in the judgment of the diocesan bishop or conference of bishops, some other grave necessity urges it, Catholic ministers administer these same sacraments licitly also to other Christians not having full communion with the Catholic Church”
The “judgement of the diocesan bishop” is only one of several requirements that must be met. The bishop cannot give such permission unless all of those other requirements are likewise in place; and he cannot dispense from those other requirements.
The phrase “judgement of the bishop” is an alternative for “grave necessity” or “judgement of the conference.” It is not, however, an alternative for the rest of the canon.
I know full well what is meant by the term “dispensation.”I’m not talking about dispensation from the provisions of c. 844 §4; I’m talking about administration of the sacraments in accord with that canon. “No dispensation” doesn’t mean “a bishop cannot give permission according to the canon”; it means “a bishop cannot give permission outside of the provisions of the canon.”
Yes, the situation must be in accord with canon 844. The bishop cannot dispense from the other requirements, nor can he give permission if those other prerequisites have not been met, including the belief in the necessity of a validly ordained priest to consecrate or absolve.
I don’t know who you mean by “we.”We’re working from the presumption that Pope John Paul II acted within the provisions of canon law when he distributed communion to Br. Roger… aren’t we?
As for me, I do not address anecdotal stories. I’m addressing what the law says.
The problem with your interpretation is that you are presenting the situation as if the only requirement to be met is “the judgement of the bishop.” That’s a fairly common misunderstanding, unfortunately.
That criteria is merely the starting-point. Once someone (ie a priest) decides that the first criteria has been met (to address your post) “the judgement of the bishop” then the priest must still be satisfied that all other requirements are met. Another requirement is that it is impossible to approach a minister of the person’s own community—so if the person is Anglican and there’s an Anglican minister in town, then that provision of canon 844 has not been met, and Communion cannot be given.
The Church has been quite clear on this in recent years. This is not a situation of “either or.” It is a situation that all requirements must be be present together.