No I am not. It is you who are trying to differentiate into ambiguity the excom. In danger of death, even Luther could have gone to confession or administered it, use him for all examples if you want.
Excommunication is a Canonical
PENALTY covering different crimes.
Heresy is a crime but also a sin.
Are you sure Catholics at the time of Luther were even permitted to (licitly) do that?
Qualified? How and by whom?
By making a few basic distinction and proper user of canonical terms and the english language, for starters. By whosoever wants to engage in the debate.
No, I will not look at Eastern CIC, there is no reason to as we are not talking about different rites.
Why? Are they not valid Law? What if they have a different way of dealing with the issue? Are they somehow less Catholic?
If ambiguity is in canon law, then you cannot rightfully argue that OCAC is false.
Yes I can. In fact there is nothing to argue. We KNOW Ocac is false per magisterial decrees. In the face of those, you are using Canon Law of the Latin Rite, of the 20th century, which now you postulate might even be ambiguous, to OPPOSE them.
If you drop the Canon Law (as specified above) OCAC can't be even be argued from any angle no more.
You are the only one bringing licitness into this, the bottom line is that the excom can walk into confession, just like any Catholic and as she always has previous to her exom - and be forgiven. Non-Catholics cannot do this.
Are you serious? The whole OCAC argument as you pose it rest solely on LICITNESS. If you want to use VALIDITY, it's a non argument as EVERYBODY can do that.
Forget about licitness, this is where you are stumbling. Because the Church teaches an excom can go to confession or absolve sins, it is both valid and licit - always.
LICITNESS IS ALL YOU CAN USE!
Everybody can VALIDLY do that.