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. Some fringe groups that split off after Vatican II I would label extremely late Protestants, even if they have the word “Catholic” in their title. If you’re going to label the PNCC as Catholic, why not Baptists? They are on the same side of an important line.Code:I would say the PNCC are simply late Protestants, who accept Catholic tradition until well into the 1800s.
Well, the PNCC is a peculiar situation.
I think it is important for us to follow the lead of our Bishops on this matter:
USCCB
Joint Declaration on Unity
With thankfulness to God, the members of the Roman Catholic-Polish National Catholic dialogue in the United States look back on twenty-two years of theological and canonical reflection concerning the nature of our division and the possibility of reaching full communion…
Later, in 1980, His Holiness Pope John Paul II of blessed memory expressed the desire that the conference of bishops of the United States examine the relationship that exists with the Polish National Catholic Church and explore the possibility of dialogue.
… This was the result of the particularly painful history of our relationship and the circumstances of the origins of the Polish National Catholic Church among ethnic Polish and other Roman Catholics in the United States at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. The disputes of that time, we now realize, were more concerned with matters of church governance than points of doctrine.
… Leaders of our two churches, including Cardinal Edward I. Cassidy (President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity) …pledged to work to overcome our divisions definitively.
Our dialogue has achieved much. For example, in a 1989 report summarizing the first five years of the dialogue’s progress, we affirmed our agreement on the seven sacraments of the Church, … “we have thus far discovered no doctrinal obstacle that would impede the further growth of our churches toward that unity which we believe is Christ’s will.”
In view of this progress, concrete steps have been taken. In response to an inquiry from the Archbishop of Baltimore, His Excellency William Keeler, then President of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, His Eminence Edward Cardinal Cassidy, President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, stated in 1993 that **members of the Polish National Catholic Church in the United States and Canada may receive the sacraments of Penance, Holy Communion and Anointing of the Sick from Roman Catholic priests **if they ask for them on their own, are properly disposed and not otherwise excluded from the sacraments…
…** Polish National Catholics may receive the aforementioned sacraments in the Roman Catholic Church.** … Canon 844 §2 of The Code of Canon Law also specifies conditions under which Roman Catholics may receive the sacraments in the Polish National Catholic Church.
… Furthermore, we recognize each other’s ecclesial character and sacraments, allow a certain amount of sacramental sharing, and maintain many of the same traditions. These facts bear witness to how much we have rediscovered as our common heritage. …