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Kevin
Terry
wrote:
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Hi, guys —
- Why does the Church say that Protestant preachers are not properly
ordained or whatever so they cannot consecrate the
Eucharist or administer the Sacraments?
- Also, why can't non-Catholics can't receive the Eucharist,
but the Catholic Church will accept the Baptisms performed
by these Protestant ministers?
Kevin
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{
Why does the Church accept the Baptisms of Protestant preachers but not their ordination? }
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Mike replied:
Hi Kevin,
One of the sad effects of the Reformation is that King Henry VIII, when he broke from
Rome, changed the form or words for the sacrament of Holy Orders. This is the sacrament
Jesus established that makes a man a priest.
Using an invalid form for the sacrament of Holy Orders has resulted in invalid ordinations
for all ministers who followed in the steps of the Reformation.
I know this sounds cruel, but if any minister has not received his ordination from
a valid successor to the [Apostles/bishops] his ordination is invalid.
Non-Catholics can't received the Eucharist from the Catholic Church
because they do not believe what the Church believes:
That they are
receiving the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Jesus Himself.
If a Protestant does believe what the Church believes, they should
seriously discern whether they are being called to join and be in full communion
with the Church.
Although a Protestant may believe they
would be receiving the Body and Blood of Christ if they were allowed to receive Holy Communion, this belief does not give them a permission to receive the Eucharist.
When we, in the Church receive the Eucharist and say Amen to
the priest; we are not only saying Amen, that we believe
we are receiving Our Blessed Lord in the Eucharist, we are saying Amen, I believe all that the Catholic Church teaches.
For example, just because a man and a woman may be drawn to a life time
commitment of sharing their bodies for life, as husband and wife,
this doesn't give them permission to have pre-marital sex before
the marriage covenant is sealed with the Heavenly Krazy Glue (or sacrament grace) contained
in this sacrament.
If someone is interested in all the Church teaches, most if it can be found by reading the Catechism
of the Catholic Church.
Some Protestants can and do receive communion from their own
Protestant church. Though they don't receive the Body and Blood of
Our Lord, they do receive graces from their celebration of their
Eucharist, but it is not the same as the graces we receive.
We receive the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ, Himself. A minister from a Christian congregation that has its roots from the Reformation, has an invalid, non-sacrificial priesthood so he can't validly consecrate the Bread and Wine into the Body and Blood of Our Lord.
In regards to some ones Baptism, the Church does acknowledge, some, but not all, Baptisms of our separated brethren, if they use the correct Trinitarian form for Baptism. If there is any uncertainty as to whether the correct form and matter
for Baptism was used, the priest will perform a conditional Baptism:
"[Kevin], if you are not yet baptized, I baptize you in the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen"
Plus remember, anyone can validly baptize if they have the same intent
as the Church while using the correct form and matter.
Even an atheist
can baptize!
Mike
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Eric replied:
Hi Kevin,
The more fundamental reason for this is simple:
They don't believe what we believe about the Eucharist,
so we believe they can't confect the Eucharist we believe
in.
As far as I know we recognize the orders of every church
that believes precisely what we believe about the Eucharist.
Now in reality it is more complex than that — they have
to have believed from the beginning what we believe,
since it's a succession. If, in one generation, they
wavered in their belief in a formal way, their ordinations
would ipso facto be invalid, and the chain of Apostolic
Succession would be lost, even if subsequent generations
recovered the belief.
This is why Thomas Cranmer (I believe it was Cranmer and not
Henry VIII) changing the words
for Holy Orders was relevant:
He did not view the Eucharist as a sacrifice, and changed
the ordination rite to reflect this, thus fundamentally
changing Holy Orders such that priests no longer intended
to do what the Church intended to do and no longer confected the
Eucharist that the Church confects.
The reason we don't allow intercommunion is because
intercommunion has always been the fundamental sign of
ecclesial unity. If Eucharist is freely shared and mutually
recognized between two churches, then they are in
communion with one another, meaning they are united
as one.
It's a bit like being close friends — a (mi casa est
su casa or my house is your house) sort of thing. Excommunication conversely
has been the sign that two churches (or an individual
and a church) are separated from one another.
Baptism, on the other hand, pertains to salvation; to
refuse to recognize someone's baptism is to refuse to
recognize that, in the formal sense, they are saved or
that they are Christian.
The recognition of the baptism
of heretics goes back to the Donatist controversy in
the 4th and 5th centuries.
Also baptism can be administered by anyone, even an atheist,
not just priests, so there is no Apostolic Succession issue.
Eric
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Mary
Ann replied:
Hi Kevin,
Though the Pope did
say Protestants were defective as churches, since they are lacking
essential elements of Christ's Church, mainly succession from Christ
and the Apostles, he did affirm the graces and the action of
Christ's Spirit in them.
The power to act in persona Christi in the sacraments are really extensions of Christ's
actions, and are really Him [Jesus] acting in the priest. This is a power conferred by the
laying on of hands from a successor of the Apostles. Scripture attests to the importance
of the succession in passing on the office of Christ's priesthood, and to the laying
on of hands.
Fortunately, the properly ordained celebrant of the Eucharist must only
intend what the Church intends, in order for the Eucharist to be present. He does
not have to believe — thank goodness, or we would never have sacraments when a priest
is having faith problems. Nor does he have to be without sin. He can be a heretic
and a terrible sinner, and Christ still acts in him — faithful to His promise, if
he agrees and intends to do what the Church intends.
As for Baptism, the command to baptize was given to all the disciples assembled at
the Ascension. It was realized early on that the necessity of Baptism for salvation
made it good that all could baptize, though the normal minister is the priest or
deacon. The deacon is also shown in Scripture as a baptizer.
Valid baptism can be
administered by anyone, even a non-Catholic, non-Christian, or non-believer! One
must only intend whatever the Church means by Baptism, and use the form given by
Christ, baptizing in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
Mary Ann
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