|
 |
Joel
Steinberg wrote: |
Hi, guys —
I saw this comment in one of your answers while doing some research on Episcopal Confirmation.
You said:
The result is that the Episcopalian churches
do not have a valid Eucharist, nor can
their ministers absolve their flock of
their sins, because they do not have valid
Holy Orders; one through which Jesus can
act "in the person of Christ" or
(in the place of the priest), and consecrate
the Eucharist in a valid manner.
- Am I to assume that Catholics believe only Roman
Catholic priests have a valid priesthood?
- Also, how do you explain the oxymoron "Roman
Catholic". Catholic means universal.
Once you add the "Roman" to it,
you limit it, thereby rendering it not universal.
I was under the belief, and still am, that
valid Apostolic Succession which can be traced
back to the Holy Apostles is what makes for
a valid [priesthood|ordination]. To suggest
that an Apostolic Succession isn't valid simply
because it isn't Roman is ridiculous, and
besides, the "rule" was created
by man ... not God!
To suggest the Eucharist isn't valid because
it wasn't consecrated from a valid Roman Catholic
priesthood is simply false.
And one final thought . . . It is quite clear
the Pope is fallible, as are all humans. The
conceit of the Roman Catholic Church is humorous.
Respectfully,
Joel N. Joshua Steinberg
|
{ Are
Catholic priests the only priests who have
valid Holy Orders or do other faiths have
them? } |
Mike
replied:
Dear Joel,
Thanks for replying to my post.
You said, quoting me:
The result is
that the Episcopalian churches do
not have a valid Eucharist, nor can
their ministers absolve their flock
of their sins, because they do not
have valid Holy Orders; one through
which Jesus can act "in the
person of Christ" or (in
the place of the priest), and consecrate
the Eucharist in a valid manner.
You replied:
- Am I to assume
that Catholics believe only Roman
Catholic priests have a valid priesthood?
No,
Only priests who have been ordained
by — validly — ordained
bishops who are in union with the
Holy See at the time of ordination have
a valid priesthood.
There are validly
ordained priests that are
not in union with the
Holy See who have valid
Holy Orders. A good example are the
Greek Orthodox who, although the
bishops broke from Rome in around
1054 A.D., still had valid orders
before the break. Priests they ordain,
to this
day, have valid orders.
A sad consequence of the Reformation
is that Thomas Cranmer, under King Henry VIII, changed the form or words
for the sacrament of Holy Orders.
He introduced a Protestant notion
of the Priesthood, one that excluded
the sense of the priest offering
sacrifice to God, a crucial distinction
which would later cause the Catholic
Church to declare that the priestly
orders of the Church of England were "absolutely
null and utterly void". As a
result, the Holy Orders that came
from splinter groups that followed
the Reformation were "null and
void".
From the web site address you sent
me, on the FAQ page it stated:
... the Franciscans of the Holy
Cross (O.F.C.) — In July
2004, the Franciscans of the Holy
Cross (O.F.C.) was established
as a religious order under the
Episcopal protection of Archbishop
Kimo Keawe. |
It's
my understanding that, because Archbishop
Keawe's authority did not come from
the Apostles, but from King Henry VIII (Episcopal), his authority is
false. Episcopalians believe in a
lot of things that contradict even
the Bible e.g. the practice
of homosexuality.
Catholic Note:
Scripture clearly describes homosexual
acts as an abomination. The city
of Sodom (Genesis 18-19) was not
destroyed for its lack of hospitality
to the angels of the Lord. It was
destroyed for its homosexual depravity.
The Church teaches that homosexual
acts are "intrinsically disordered" (Catechism
of the Catholic Church 2357),
yet the Church also calls us to embrace
homosexuals with love and to encourage
them to live life's of chastity.
Regardless of the source of homosexual
inclinations, which the Church says
are "objectively disordered",
the "urges" themselves
are not sinful. For most people,
these urges constitute trails which
must be resisted like any other temptation.
In short, the Church teaches us to
hate the sin of homosexual acts,
but to love the sinners who engage
in those acts. You can read more
about the Church's teachings in the
Catechism of the Catholic Church
here — Nos. 2357
to 2359.
- Genesis 1 - complementarily of
sexes reflects God's inner unity.
- Genesis 2 - transmission of
life through total self donation
where the two become one flesh.
- Genesis 19 - God destroys Sodom
for its homosexual perversions.
- Leviticus 18:22 - You shall
not lie with a male as with a
woman.
- Leviticus 18:29 - For whoever
shall do any of these abominations,
the persons that do them shall
be cut off from among their people.
- Leviticus 20:13 - If man lies
with a man, they shall be put
to death for their abominable
deed.
- Romans 1:24-27 - "... handed
them over to impurity ... mutual
degradation of their bodies ...
female exchange natural relations
for unnatural ... males did shameful
things with males."
- 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 - "neither
... boy prostitutes nor sodomites
... will inherit the kingdom".
(active homosexuals won't inherit
the kingdom of God)
- 1 Timothy 1:10 - those who engage
in such acts called "sinners" ...
are opposed to sound teaching."
In your list of beliefs from your
web site you state:
- That all offices of holy
orders (deacons, priests and bishops)
are open to both men and women,
regardless of marital status and
sexual orientation/personal affection.
but it also
states:
- That we have true and full Apostolic Succession, which means
the Bishops authority derives
from the first apostles.
We have a contradiction in beliefs
here. The first Apostles, including
St. Paul, would never condone homosexual
activity, yet your sacred offices
seem to allow people to practice
this activity.
Apostolic Succession means that one's
religious superior can trace his
roots all the way back to the Apostles.
The problem: The Apostles and the
Scriptures teach that homosexual
activity is an abomination, yet you
seem to allow it.
You said:
Also, how do you explain the oxymoron "Roman
Catholic". "Catholic" means universal.
Once you add the "Roman" to it,
you limit it, thereby rendering it not universal.
You are correct, the word Catholic
does mean universal. The Catholic
Church is universal because Jesus'
saving Church is for all
mankind throughout the
world. It is also universal
because all practicing Catholics
believe all the same teachings all
around the world, and with some variations,
worship the exactly same
way worldwide . . . when celebrating
the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
The word "Catholic" also means "in its totality". So the Catholic faith is the Christian faith ? in its totality. (We don't "pick and choose" what we believe; we believe everything Jesus' Church teaches us from 33 A.D. going forward.)
In our worship, we enter into the
one sacrifice of
Calvary with our prayers, works,
joys, sufferings, petitions
and our very self's.
We are Roman Catholic
due to the fact that St. Peter established
the headquarters of the Church in
Rome. I am not Roman Catholic
in any sense of Roman citizenship.
I am a practicing Catholic in America
who is in communion with that Church
which has its center in Rome.
I'm a Catholic first, and an American
second.
I was listening to an audio tape
by a fellow Roman Catholic apologist
and he made the following comment:
Never be ashamed to use the word Roman when
describing your religious affiliation.
So many early Church fathers and
saints had their blood shed in
Rome so the Catholic Christian
faith could be spread to every
part of the world. |
Radio priests in the 1950 were asked
the following question:
What is the difference between
a Catholic and a Roman Catholic?
The same as between a Britisher
and an Englishman, or if you wish,
as that between the Jewish and
the Mosaic religions. There is
no real difference. The words
Roman Catholic does not mean that
there are other kinds of Catholics,
but only that all true Catholics
belong to that one great Church
which has its centre in Rome. [Note: there are other Rites within
the Church, but these rites are
all in union with the Holy See
in Rome.] There are no Catholics
apart from that one universal
Church. Those who leave that Church
cease to be Catholic. You can't
leave the Church and belong to
it at the same time. The only
way one can be Catholic is to
return to the Church of your forefathers,
e.g. King Henry VIII, should never
have left. |
My analogy: If you
refer to a large fruit that is round
and orange in color, you can't call
it a banana. Experiential knowledge
will tell you it is an orange.
People can call themselves Catholic
all they want, including dissenting
Catholics that are Catholic in
name only. Unless you practice
what the Catholic Church teaches
and believe in the Teachings of the
Church Jesus established on St. Peter
and his successors, you are not Catholic.
You said:
I was under the
belief, and still am, that valid
Apostolic Succession which can be
traced back to the Holy Apostles
is what makes for a valid [priesthood|ordination].
Yes, you are correct, but Archbishop
Keawe's authority did not come from
the Apostles, but from King Henry
VIII, a man who had no authority
to permit Thomas Cranmer to change
what he changed, as
explained above.
On your FAQ page it states:
Our tradition
dates back to the late 19th century,
with the formation of the Old Catholic
Church in Utrecht.
To my knowledge this is a schismatic
group that broke from Rome. I'm unsure
whether they have valid Holy Orders
or not. Maybe one of my colleagues
can pitch in their two cents.
You said:
To suggest the
Eucharist isn't valid because it
wasn't consecrated from a valid Roman
Catholic priesthood is simply false.
I'm not saying, what you claim I'm
saying. There are priests, who are
not Catholic, who have valid Holy
Orders.
- The Holy Orders of a Catholic
priest date back to 33 A.D.
- The Holy Orders of an Orthodox
priest date back to validly ordained
bishops who broke with Rome in
1054 A.D.
(Bishops administer
the sacrament of Holy Orders)
- The Holy Orders of a Protestant
minister date back to the Reformation
and are invalid.
33 A.D.
|
Valid
Orders |
Valid Eucharist |
1054 A.D. |
Valid
Orders |
Valid Eucharist |
Reformation/
Martin Luther |
Invalid Orders |
Invalid
Eucharist |
On your FAQ page it states:
This church
also does not require celibacy for
clergy.
Side note: Celibacy is a discipline in
the Catholic Church and not
a doctrine. This could change
even within the Roman Rite, but the
Roman Rite has good reasons to keep
the discipline of celibacy. Nevertheless,
in Eastern Rite churches, celibacy is not
mandatory and even in the Roman Rite,
married Protestant ministers, who
wish to convert, have been allowed
to, under certain circumstances and
conditions, to become priests.
You said:
And one final
thought ... It is quite clear the
Pope is fallible, as are all humans.
The conceit of the Roman Catholic
Church is humorous.
Some definitions:
- Impeccability (ihm-pehk-uh-BIHL-ih-tee):
The impossibility of sinning.
(We believe the Pope is not Impeccable.)
- Infallibility (ihn-FAL-lih-BIHL-uh-tee):
The inability to err when teaching
on issues of faith and
morals.
(We believe the Pope is Infallible.)
|
Although over the history of the
Church — from 33 A.D. to the
present day — we have many
sinners, even in high places in the
Church, we can always trust the Divine
Teachings will be protected and safeguarded
from falling into Satan's hands.
Jesus promised this in Matthew
16:13-19 and 1 Timothy 3:15.
If you are interested in what faithful Catholics believe, consider buying a cheap copy of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Hope this answers your questions.
Peace and Good Blessings back!
Mike
|
John
replied:
Mike,
This needs to be clarified a bit.
The Church, and I'm sure Mike concurs,
believes that one can receive a valid
Eucharist in Orthodox Churches and
other ancient Churches that maintained Apostolic Succession. A Catholic
may receive the Blessed Sacrament
at those churches, if there is no
Catholic Church available or in close
proximity.
During the Reformation, the Church
of England interrupted that Apostolic
Succession. While the priests and
bishops who were "carry overs", for
lack of a better term, or were validly
ordained, the situation got cloudy.
Some of the subsequent "bishops",
ordained in the Anglican Church,
were not ordained according to:
In other words, the form may have
changed, or the intent to ordain
a "priest", as Christ himself
ordained priests, was different.
Eventually, the vast majority of
Anglican "bishops" came
from an interrupted line as opposed
to an uninterrupted line. Thus, it
is now impossible to determine if
the Eucharist celebrated in the Church
of England, or any sister churches
in the Anglican Communion, is valid.
At this point, trying to find a validly
ordained priest or bishop in the
Anglican union is a bit like trying
to find a needle in a hay stack.
The recent decision of the Anglican
Community to start ordaining women "priests" and
then women "bishops" further
complicated the lineage.
Theoretically, one of the remaining
validly ordained Anglican bishops,
might have "ordained" a
woman as "bishop"; and
that would be definitely invalid.
Thus some in that lineage could be
validly ordained, while others in
a different lineage definitely are
not.
That is not to take away from the
personal holiness or devotion of:
- Anglicans
- their priests
- their bishops, or
- their ministers.
The issue at hand just deals with
a sacramental reality.
These problems don't exist in the
Orthodox Churches of the East.
I hope this clarifies Holy Mother
Church's position.
John DiMascio
|
Joel
replied:
Hi Mike,
Seeing that our correspondence deals
with the validity of Episcopalian
Holy Orders and of
the
Holy Communion in our church. Do
you have a comment on the definition
below:
Apostolic Succession (linked article has been updated)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Apostolic succession)
Roman Catholics recognize the
validity of the apostolic successions
of the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental
Orthodox, Assyrian, Old Catholic,
and some Independent Catholic
Churches (such recognition is
not reciprocated by the Eastern
Orthodox, who do not separate "valid" from "licit").
Pope Leo XIII clarified, in his
1896 bull [Apostolicae
Curae] that the Roman Catholic
church believes that the Anglican
Church's ordinations are invalid
because of changes made to the
rite of ordination under Edward
VI, thus denying that Anglicans
participate in the Apostolic Succession; the Church of Sweden's apostolic
succession is seen as having been
maintained, and following the establishment
of the Porvoo Communion an increasing
number of Anglicans will also
be able to trace their succession
through Swedish bishops as well
as Old Catholic bishops, whose
holy orders are recognized as
valid by Rome and who, at least
those of the Union of Utrecht,
are in full communion with Canterbury
since the Bonn Agreement of 1931. It
should also be noted that since
the issuance of Apostolicae
Curae, many Anglican jurisdictions
have revised their ordinals, bringing
them more in line with ordinals
emanating from the early Church.
Joel
|
Mike
e-mailed Richard and Eric:
Hi, Eric —
Hi, Rich —
In response to mine and John's reply
above, Joel, the questioner, sent
me the above reply.
He wanted me to particularly note what
he bolded.
- Do you have a comment on this
issue?
Mike
|
Eric
replied:
Well,
I can't vouch for all of it
without exception, but insofar as
it pertains to the question about
whether Old Catholics have valid
orders, that much is true, but they
aren't Anglicans.
Anglican ordinations are absolutely
null and utterly void but it is common
among the Anglicans to have Old Catholics
participate in their ordination in
order to get a more sympathetic treatment
from Rome. Also, I think some of
them have been cleaning up their
ordination rites to remove the invalidating
elements, but of course it's hard
to prove that your rites of ordination
were valid.
Eric
|
Richard
replied:
Hi, Mike —
1. On Anglican orders:
The position of the Catholic Church
on the validity of Anglican orders
has not changed since Pope Leo XIII wrote that they were null and
void in 1896. Since then, some
(European) Old Catholic bishops
(who do possess valid orders)
have participated in Anglican
ordinations.
To the best of my knowledge, the
Church has not accepted any Anglican
bishop's or priest's ordination
as valid, in cases when the bishop
or priest has come into union
with the Church. Those convert
clergy who have entered the priesthood
have received ordination just
as any Catholic layman who enters
the priesthood would receive it.
The Church has not conferred the
sacrament "conditionally",
since the Church has not granted
even the possibility that their
previous ordination was sacramentally
valid.
Even as a matter of speculation,
an Old Catholic bishop's participation
in an Anglican consecration would
not guarantee its validity. One
also would have to consider any
defects in the rite that were
followed.
In recent years, the acceptance
of women as candidates for priesthood
and the episcopacy in certain
Anglican Communions and Old Catholic
churches has raised a new obstacle.
From the Catholic Church's point
of view, an Anglican or Old Catholic
bishop who believes that ordination
can be conferred on women does
not hold the Catholic doctrine
on the sacrament of Holy Orders.
Additional questions arise as
well:
- Is this error severe enough
as to make all his subsequent
ordinations invalid due to
a defect of intention?
- Will the Catholic Church declare
Old Catholic orders null and
void after the current generation
of Old Catholic bishops dies
out?
|
2. I've gotta clarify a term:
From Mike's original answer to John Ring where he said:
The result is
that the Episcopalian churches do
not have a valid Eucharist, nor can
their ministers absolve their flock
of their sins, because they do not
have valid Holy Orders; one through
which Jesus can act "in
the person of Christ" or
(in the place of the priest), and
consecrate the Eucharist in a valid
manner.
The priest consecrating the Eucharist
acts "in the person of Christ"
(Latin: 'in persona Christi').
This is a neat expression: this
word "persona" means
'person' but originally it's a
word that comes from ancient drama,
and it refers to the character-masks
that actors wore in Greek or Roman
drama. An actor spoke through
the mask he put on, and the word
'per-sonare' is 'to
speak through'. So the
priest celebrating Mass is taking
on the role of Christ, and of
course we believe that the priest's
actions, in this role, are efficacious. |
3. I don't understand why Joel asks
this:
- Am I to assume that
Catholics believe only Roman
Catholic Priests have a valid priesthood?
I don't know where he got that idea
from, as Mike's remarks do not express
a negative judgment on the sacraments
in all other Christian communities;
he was writing specifically about
the Anglican Communion, and not,
e.g., about the various Orthodox
Churches, which we Catholics acknowledge
as sharing all the sacraments. |
— RC
|
Mario,
a visitor who read this posting, replied:
Hi, Mike —
I was reading your back and forth
about Anglican priesthood and homosexuality.
I am a life long Roman Catholic;
my grandmother was Byzantine Catholic.
(There are more then just Roman Catholics.
Yes, in union with the Pope but with
the other lung of the Church.)
Can I suggest, in charity, not all
that the reformers did was bad or
just "anti-the-true-Church".
I think they, in many instances,
where sincere in reforming a very
messed up hierarchy. I think we can
identify it today. I, however, believe
in change from within.
I guess what I am saying is instead
of telling Episcopalians that they
have priests who are pretending or
acting but don't have authority etc.,
we would do better to say,
"See how your liturgy and
what we do sound so similar. Our
understanding of it is unique,
because we maintain our relationship
with Peter on earth through Pope
Benedict. This connection gives
authority that makes a difference." |
Lead to the positive; it attracts
more. Isn't that what we want:
"That all may be one." (John 17:21)?
Truth does not get abandoned when
we are kind.
- Also, on a more personal note,
who are we to know for a fact
that some of those bishops through
the laying on of hands were not
able to confer as well, so then
can confect?
Yes, Rome has said, No, but who are
we to know God's mind. On the mere
chance, it could lead to reverence
of the Blessed Sacrament in the Anglican
Church.
- Wouldn't this be advisable?
Always remember, we were first called
Christians and identified by the
pagans by the quote:
"See how they love one another."
(Tertullian noted in (Apology [39.6]) in the third century,
as spoken by some of the
Pagans of the time.)
That should always be our lead, for
if we love, we attract and truth
manifests itself.
May the Peace of Christ be with you
and His joy in you become complete.
Mario
|
Mike
replied:
Hi Mario,
You said:
Can I suggest,
in charity, not all that the reformers
did was bad or just "anti-the-true-Church".
I think they, in many instances,
where sincere in reforming a very
messed up hierarchy. I think we can
identify it today. I, however, believe
in change from within.
I agree with you. I would say that
at the time the Church did need reform from
within, but instead of
a true, internal reformation, the
reformers decided on a revolution.
If the reformers had your attitude,
I think we never would have had a
Protestant Reformation.
You said:
I guess what
I am saying is instead of telling
Episcopalians that they have priests
who are pretending or acting but
don't have authority etc.
When I said:
It's my understanding
that, because Archbishop Keawe's
authority did not come from the Apostles,
but from King Henry VIII (Episcopal),
his authority is false.
I am talking about his authority
to preach Catholic Christian teachings
and administer valid sacraments.
I don't doubt there are many sincere
Anglican and Episcopalian ministers
who believe their Holy Orders are
valid.
Nevertheless, just because they sincerely
believe that, doesn't make it true.
As I stated in my reply to John Ring's question:
A sad result of the Protestant
Reformation was that Cranmer, under King Henry VIII, re-wrote what
was a valid form
(or words) for Holy Orders. These
are important words used in the
sacrament that make
a man a priest. |
As a defender of Catholic teaching
neither you nor I should deny this.
Because it is the truth.
A sincere
Anglican or Episcopalian minister
who reads this posting will be open
to doing
historical research on this issue,
from an open-minded "Catholic
viewpoint" in order to determine
whether their Holy Orders are
valid or not.
And as I recommended to you earlier, if an Anglican or Episcopalian
minister is also interested, they should consider buying a cheap copy of the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
I use to run a free program that sent Catechisms to seeking Protestants and non-Christians but no longer have the financial or operational means to do this anymore.
I would never deny the pastoral blessing
that many Anglican and Episcopalian
ministers have been to their parishioners.
Nevertheless, if an Anglican or Episcopalian
minister wants what is pastorally
best for their flock, they'll become
Catholic. It is what Our Lord's calling
for in
John 17:21, "that they all may
be one." not " that they all may be 30,000+".
You said:
I guess what I am saying is instead
of telling Episcopalians that they
have priests who are pretending or
acting but don't have authority etc.,
we would do better to say,
"See how your liturgy and
what we do sound so similar. Our
understanding of it is unique,
because we maintain our relationship
with Peter on earth through Pope
Benedict. This connection gives
authority that makes a difference." |
If you just say that, you are assuming,
in the dialogue, that their Holy
Orders are valid by omission of the
issue.
You said:
Lead to the positive,
it attracts more. Isn't that what
we want, "That all may be one"?
Truth does not get abandoned when
we are kind.
I agree that we should always lead
to the positive when possible, but
in this specific case,
Truth gets
abandoned because we are
implying Anglican and Episcopalian
ministers have valid Orders, when
they don't. Practicing Catholics
should never play politics with the
truth.
You end up saying: If it looks
similar, it
is equal.
The most charitable thing a Catholic
can do is to preach what the Magisterium
of the Church teaches or as Cardinal
Law put it when he was bishop of
Missouri:
The most ecumenical thing a Catholic
can do is be unmistakably Catholic.
You said:
- Also, on
a more personal note, who are
we to know for a fact that
some of those bishops through
the laying on of hands were
not able to confer as well,
so then can confect?
Yes, Rome has
said, No, but who are we to know
God's mind. On the mere chance,
it could lead to reverence of
the Blessed Sacrament in the Anglican
Church.
- Wouldn't
this be advisable?
Because those bishops cannot trace
their succession back to the Apostles, but
only back to a bishop who was "ordained" by
Cranmer's invalid form, it would not lead
to reverence of the Blessed Sacrament
in the Anglican church, because their
Eucharist is not valid. It is not
the true Body,
Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus,
as it is in our Church.
You said:
Always remember,
we were first called Christians and
identified by the pagans by the quote:
"See how they
love one another."
(the words Tertullian noted (Apology [39.6] in the Third Century,
as spoken by some of the Pagans
of the time.)
That should always
be our lead, for if we love, we attract
and truth manifests itself.
I agree, but the implication of
what you are saying is that truth
and love can't go together.
- Jesus Is Truth.
- Jesus Is Love.
- All in One Divine Person.
We shouldn't be ashamed of Him or
His Teachings.
We should share the teachings in
a charitable manner.
In Christ,
Mike
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