Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Who ordains CMRI priests?  (Read 48776 times)

0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Matto

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6882
  • Reputation: +3852/-406
  • Gender: Male
  • Love God and Play, Do Good Work and Pray
Who ordains CMRI priests?
« Reply #315 on: November 14, 2014, 09:42:42 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ambrose
    I wonder if Stubborn is honest enough to admit his calumny in falsely accusing the CMRI of schism.   :confused1:

    Let's wait and see.  

    I don't think it is calumny to say something you believe, even if it is not true. It is only calumny if you know you are lying. Anyway, most people would think all of the traditional Catholic groups are in schism because they all operate without the approval of the Church. They just assume that because the Church is in crisis anything goes and they can do what they want.
    R.I.P.
    Please pray for the repose of my soul.

    Offline Mabel

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1893
    • Reputation: +1386/-25
    • Gender: Female
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #316 on: November 14, 2014, 09:59:54 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Ambrose
    I wonder if Stubborn is honest enough to admit his calumny in falsely accusing the CMRI of schism.   :confused1:

    Let's wait and see.  

    I don't think it is calumny to say something you believe, even if it is not true. It is only calumny if you know you are lying. Anyway, most people would think all of the traditional Catholic groups are in schism because they all operate without the approval of the Church. They just assume that because the Church is in crisis anything goes and they can do what they want.


    Did you miss how he said that CMRI and anyone associated with them was a cult and that they punish anyone who questions them?

    He specifically highlighted that fact. Then, he stated when asked how he had suffered that he was being treated uncharitably and called names. That is very subjective. I could say that same about him, he has been saying lots of things about people and won't even bother to contact anyone for clarification.

    So, you think it is true to say that CMRI is a cult that punishes people and the Stubborn has suffered at the hands of this alleged cult and its cult members?

    I'm sorry but that sounds like a lie to me.

    There were several other incidents in this thread. One thing is for certain, this man is not interested in truth.



    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #317 on: November 14, 2014, 10:02:22 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Ambrose
    I wonder if Stubborn is honest enough to admit his calumny in falsely accusing the CMRI of schism.   :confused1:

    Let's wait and see.  

    I don't think it is calumny to say something you believe, even if it is not true. It is only calumny if you know you are lying. Anyway, most people would think all of the traditional Catholic groups are in schism because they all operate without the approval of the Church. They just assume that because the Church is in crisis anything goes and they can do what they want.


    He has been corrected, but keeps trucking along with his narrative.  

    You are not allowed to judge someone as guilty of evil unless you are morally certain of that fact.  His charge of schism against CMRI is based on a falsehood, he has been corrected, and will not own up to this fact.  

    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Matto

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 6882
    • Reputation: +3852/-406
    • Gender: Male
    • Love God and Play, Do Good Work and Pray
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #318 on: November 14, 2014, 10:04:06 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Mabel

    Did you miss how he said that CMRI and anyone associated with them was a cult and that they punish anyone who questions them?
    So, you think it is true to say that CMRI is a cult that punishes people and the Stubborn has suffered at the hands of this alleged cult and its cult members?

    I'm sorry but that sounds like a lie to me.

    There were several other incidents in this thread. One thing is for certain, this man is not interested in truth.


    I think Stubborn believes those things about the CMRI. I don't agree, but I don't think he is lying. Kind of like how Laramie Hirsch would always say things against sedevacantists.
    R.I.P.
    Please pray for the repose of my soul.

    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #319 on: November 14, 2014, 10:08:08 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Mabel

    Did you miss how he said that CMRI and anyone associated with them was a cult and that they punish anyone who questions them?
    So, you think it is true to say that CMRI is a cult that punishes people and the Stubborn has suffered at the hands of this alleged cult and its cult members?

    I'm sorry but that sounds like a lie to me.

    There were several other incidents in this thread. One thing is for certain, this man is not interested in truth.


    I think Stubborn believes those things about the CMRI. I don't agree, but I don't think he is lying. Kind of like how Laramie Hirsch would always say things against sedevacantists.


    Opinions against the good name of others need to be formed according to Catholic moral principles and supported by evidence.  

    Any other method leads to rash suspicions, rash judgment, amd calumny.  
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic


    Offline Nishant

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 2126
    • Reputation: +0/-7
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #320 on: November 14, 2014, 10:21:42 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Ambrose
    I wonder if Stubborn is honest enough to admit his calumny in falsely accusing the CMRI of schism.   :confused1:

    Let's wait and see.  

    I don't think it is calumny to say something you believe, even if it is not true. It is only calumny if you know you are lying. Anyway, most people would think all of the traditional Catholic groups are in schism because they all operate without the approval of the Church. They just assume that because the Church is in crisis anything goes and they can do what they want.


    I did not want to comment on this thread, but one statement in particular made earlier compels me to, since it is an outright attack on the Papacy and the divine constitution the Church has received from Christ Her Lord. Before I go further, let me say, I do not doubt many CMRI laity, in good faith, are trying to do the best they can in a difficult situation in the Church today, may God bless and keep them, and help them to do His will. But I will not excuse the CMRI clergy, if they knowingly mislead their faithful on the reality, or write in such a way as to be so understood, as they have done more than once.

    Quote from: Dom Gueranger
    Today, let us consider the Apostolic See as the sole source of the legitimate power, whereby mankind is rule and governed in all that concerns eternal salvation.

    St.Gregory of Nyssa: “It is through Peter that Christ gave to bishops the keys of their heavenly prerogative." By St. Leo the Great: “If our Lord willed that there should be something common to Peter and  the rest of the princes of His Church, it was only on this condition, that whatsoever He gave to the rest, He gave it to them through Peter.”

    Yes, the episcopate is most sacred, for it comes from the hands of Jesus Christ through Peter and his successors. Such is the unanimous teaching of Catholic Tradition, which is in keeping with the language used by the Roman pontiffs, from the earliest ages, who have always spoken of the dignity of bishops as consisting in their being “called to a share of their own solicitude.”

    All spiritual authority comes from Peter; all comes from the bishop of Rome, in whom  Peter will continue to govern the Church to the end of time. This fundamental principle, which St. Leo the Great has so ably and eloquently developed, this principle, which is taught us by universal Tradition, is laid down with all possible precision in the magnificent letters, still extant, of Pope St. Innocent I., who preceded St. Leo by several years.

    Thus he writes to the Council of Carthage, that “the episcopate, with all its authority, emanates from the Apostolic See”; to the Council of Milevis, that “bishops must look upon Peter as the source whence both their name and their dignity are derived”; to St. Victricius, bishop of Rouen, that “the apostolate and the episcopate both owe their origin to Peter" ... the mission and the institution, which assign the pastor his flock, and the flock its pastor, these are given by Jesus Christ and the Holy Ghost through the ministry of Peter and his successors.

    Rome was, more evidently than ever,the sole source of pastoral power. We, then, both priests and people, have a right to know whence our pastors have received their power. From whose hand have they received the keys?

    If they claim our obedience withouthaving been sent by the bishop of Rome, we must refuse to receive them, for they are not acknowledged by Christ as His ministers. The holy anointing may have conferred on them the sacred character of the episcopate: it matters not; they must be as aliens to us, for they have not been sent, they are not pastors.

    Thus it is that the divine Founder of the Church, who willed that she should be a city seated on a mountain, gave her visibility; it was an essential requisite; for since all were called to enter her pale, all must be able to see her. But He was not satisfied with this. He moreover willed that the spiritual power exercised by her pastors should come from a visible source, so that the faithful might have a sure means of verifying the claims of those who were to guide themin His name.


    If a bishop who did not receive it from Peter claims to have the power of the keys, he sets himself up as Pope and sins in doing so, all Catholics can and should know that, and have no part in it. Jurisdiction is sometimes supplied even to priests without a mission, as envisaged in some circuмstances by canon law, and this is not a habitual power, but is a transient delegation received by operation of the law itself only for the individual act requested by the faithful.

    Quote from: Exposition of Christian doctrine
    #165. Why does it not suffice to be bishop or priest in order to be a lawful pastor?

    Because even if one be a bishop, he must besides be sent into a diocese by the Pope; if a priest, he must be sent into a parish by the bishop. In other words, besides the power of order, one must have also the power of jurisdiction ...

    #167. What is meant by the power of jurisdiction?

    The power of jurisdiction is the power conferred by a superior on a subject, to exercise lawfully a spiritual function ...

    #175. When may one receive the sacraments administered by an intruded pastor?

    Only in case of mortal illness, when one cannot have a worthy minister, is it permitted to receive absolution from an intruded pastor; and even then only when it causes no scandal to others


    A priest or bishop who operates without a mission and without ordinary power of jurisdiction but merely foreseeing the supply of jurisdiction for the act requested should take care to say that plainly and should not make statements like this one below, which are misleading at best -

    "This makes him a true representative of Jesus Christ, with the legitimate power and duty to administer the sacraments of the Catholic Church. - See more at: http://www.cmri.org/cmri-priests.shtml#sthash.zkDeuNY2.dpuf" and outright false at worst. This is not the only place they have done that either, they do the same with the passage in Vatican I, that there will be shepherds and teachers in the Church until the end of time, who are sent just as the Apostles were sent. This was traditionally understood to refer to bishops with a mission, as Dom Gueranger explains above, but the CMRI in explaining why they consecrated bishops amazingly do not hesitate to apply this passage of all things to themselves, thus allowing the uninformed reader who comes to them and trusts them to teach him or her to be left with the misleading impression that they have a mission from Peter and the power of the keys.

    A person like Ambrose knows and believes the reality, that they do not, and has said it clearly on this thread and elsewhere. But if Myrna, for example, made a statement earlier like "Just because Bp. Pivarunas doesn't go around claiming jurisdiction doesn't mean he doesn't have it", it's because the CMRI has more than once made misleading statements like the above. And that is wrong, and an offense against the Papacy. No Christian can possibly be ignorant, that Christ gave the Keys to St. Peter, and only from thence did it devolve to the Apostles and bishops, as Sacred Scripture plainly says, and all Tradition teaches.

    Offline Mabel

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1893
    • Reputation: +1386/-25
    • Gender: Female
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #321 on: November 14, 2014, 11:04:46 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Mabel

    Did you miss how he said that CMRI and anyone associated with them was a cult and that they punish anyone who questions them?
    So, you think it is true to say that CMRI is a cult that punishes people and the Stubborn has suffered at the hands of this alleged cult and its cult members?

    I'm sorry but that sounds like a lie to me.

    There were several other incidents in this thread. One thing is for certain, this man is not interested in truth.


    I think Stubborn believes those things about the CMRI. I don't agree, but I don't think he is lying. Kind of like how Laramie Hirsch would always say things against sedevacantists.


    I know you don't agree, forgive me if I have written in such a way that has caused you to think so.

    But it is really weird when you have every traditionalist tangled up in some kind of error or inconsistency to hyper focus on one group. I'm not talking about heresy or doctrinal error. I'm referring to the way those groups at run and actions that occurred in the past, many with people that are long dead.

    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #322 on: November 15, 2014, 01:29:36 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Edit
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic


    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #323 on: November 15, 2014, 01:31:01 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Nishant wrote:
    Quote
    I did not want to comment on this thread, but one statement in particular made earlier compels me to, since it is an outright attack on the Papacy and the divine constitution the Church has received from Christ Her Lord. Before I go further, let me say, I do not doubt many CMRI laity, in good faith, are trying to do the best they can in a difficult situation in the Church today, may God bless and keep them, and help them to do His will. But I will not excuse the CMRI clergy, if they knowingly mislead their faithful on the reality, or write in such a way as to be so understood, as they have done more than once.


    Nishant, you should know that there are no such thing as "CMRI laity," juse as there is no such thing as "SSPX laity."

    Now, are you aware that your statement is not an accusation, so what is it?  You qualify your statement with "if," so do you think CMRI has "mislead their faithful on the reality, or write in such a way as to be so understood, as they have done more than once."  

    Also, what is this way that CMRI has misled or written this way in the past?  You state this vague unsupported allegation, and do not specify.  If you are going to accuse, especially publicly, you owe the accused a specific supported allegation.

    Nishant wrote:
    Quote
    A :soapbox: priest or bishop who operates without a mission and without ordinary power of jurisdiction but merely foreseeing the supply of jurisdiction for the act requested should take care to say that plainly and should not make statements like this one below, which are misleading at best -


    Bp. Pivarunas has been clear in denying jurisdiction, so all statements that could potentially be understood otherwise should be understood with this in mind.  With this in mind, the statement below can easily be read as orthodox.  If you think otherwise, why not ask CMRI what they meant by the statement in question?

    Nishant wrote:
    Quote
    "This makes him a true representative of Jesus Christ, with the legitimate power and duty to administer the sacraments of the Catholic Church. - See more at: http://www.cmri.org/cmri-priests.shtml#sthash.zkDeuNY2.dpuf" and outright false at worst. This is not the only place they have done that either, they do the same with the passage in Vatican I, that there will be shepherds and teachers in the Church until the end of time, who are sent just as the Apostles were sent. This was traditionally understood to refer to bishops with a mission, as Dom Gueranger explains above, but the CMRI in explaining why they consecrated bishops amazingly do not hesitate to apply this passage of all things to themselves, thus allowing the uninformed reader who comes to them and trusts them to teach him or her to be left with the misleading impression that they have a mission from Peter and the power of the keys.


    All priests who lawfully say Mass, hear confessions, etc., are representatives of Christ.  Do you disagree with this?  Do you believe with the "home-aloners" that all sacraments of the traditional priests are illicit and must be avoided?  Either the sacraments of the traditional priests are legitimate through epikeia, supplied jurisdiction, and the relevant canons, or they are not.  If you don't believe that they are legitimate, then this topic goes far beyond CMRI, and pertains to all traditional priests.  

    The statement you have quoted by CMRI above only refers to the sacramental power of the priesthood, not the mission, and certainly not the power to govern the flock.

    Nishant wrote:
    Quote
    A person like Ambrose knows and believes the reality, that they do not, and has said it clearly on this thread and elsewhere. But if Myrna, for example, made a statement earlier like "Just because Bp. Pivarunas doesn't go around claiming jurisdiction doesn't mean he doesn't have it", it's because the CMRI has more than once made misleading statements like the above. And that is wrong, and an offense against the Papacy. No Christian can possibly be ignorant, that Christ gave the Keys to St. Peter, and only from thence did it devolve to the Apostles and bishops, as Sacred Scripture plainly says, and all Tradition teaches.


    You are right that I know the correct position, and I am certain that CMRI knows and believes the correct position.  I believe that Myrna like most "traditional" Catholics innocently does not understand this very complex and little understood area of theology.  I have news for you, many Catholics, whether those who go to SSPX, SSPV, or independent priests think their priests are the same as the pre-Vatican II "sent" priests, and that traditional bishops are successors of the Apostles.

    How many in the SSPX refer to their priests as pastors?  How many call their chapels "parishes"?  How many call the SSPX bishops "successors of the Apostles?"  So, if you want to question Myrna or where her ideas on this subject come from, you need to in fairness wonder where most of traditional Catholics have formed their ideas on these matters.

    In my opinion, I highly doubt that Myrna was told this by CMRI.  It is an underlying assumption of many "traditional" Catholics who think this way, and is based on a misunderstanding of who the traditional priests are, and what their role is by many of the laity.  
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Stubborn

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 14719
    • Reputation: +6061/-905
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #324 on: November 15, 2014, 03:57:08 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Nado
    Quote from: Ambrose
    Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Ambrose
    I wonder if Stubborn is honest enough to admit his calumny in falsely accusing the CMRI of schism.   :confused1:

    Let's wait and see.  

    I don't think it is calumny to say something you believe, even if it is not true. It is only calumny if you know you are lying. Anyway, most people would think all of the traditional Catholic groups are in schism because they all operate without the approval of the Church. They just assume that because the Church is in crisis anything goes and they can do what they want.


    He has been corrected, but keeps trucking along with his narrative.  

    You are not allowed to judge someone as guilty of evil unless you are morally certain of that fact.  His charge of schism against CMRI is based on a falsehood, he has been corrected, and will not own up to this fact.  



    I disagree. Just because he has been corrected, doesn't mean he understands the correction. People do have screwy and illogical thinking today, and charity requires no such thing as moral certainty of grievous sin in the face of that very likelihood. He is as wrong as he can be, but let's just keep this described as a false and grave accusation and leave off the judgment of his will.


    The screwy part is that all I've done is point out those things that CMRI has on their own website - so how am I "as wrong as he can be"?

    I did not make anything up.

    You OTOH are satisfied that one could have attended their schismatic seminary and emerged some years later as being unaffected due to the fact that there are no official statistics stating that 99% of those who go to schismatic seminaries never return to the faith.

    What exactly is it that you are defending anyway?

    As all can see, the CMRI supporters have no defense against historical facts which are recorded on the CMRI website and have been presented, so they continue to side track the issue by offering excuses against facts and attempt using ad hominems as a defense - nothing but side tracking.

     
    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline Stubborn

    • Supporter
    • *****
    • Posts: 14719
    • Reputation: +6061/-905
    • Gender: Male
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #325 on: November 15, 2014, 04:48:53 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ambrose
    Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Ambrose
    I wonder if Stubborn is honest enough to admit his calumny in falsely accusing the CMRI of schism.   :confused1:

    Let's wait and see.  

    I don't think it is calumny to say something you believe, even if it is not true. It is only calumny if you know you are lying. Anyway, most people would think all of the traditional Catholic groups are in schism because they all operate without the approval of the Church. They just assume that because the Church is in crisis anything goes and they can do what they want.


    He has been corrected, but keeps trucking along with his narrative.  

    You are not allowed to judge someone as guilty of evil unless you are morally certain of that fact.  His charge of schism against CMRI is based on a falsehood, he has been corrected, and will not own up to this fact.  



    The narrative comes from presumed reliable sources, including the main source of the CMRI website itself. Even Myrna doesn't dispute that fact.

    So exactly which falsehood which has been corrected am I basing my charge?




     
    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse


    Offline MyrnaM

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 6273
    • Reputation: +3629/-347
    • Gender: Female
      • Myforever.blog/blog
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #326 on: November 15, 2014, 09:03:48 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ambrose

    You are right that I know the correct position, and I am certain that CMRI knows and believes the correct position.  I believe that Myrna like most "traditional" Catholics innocently does not understand this very complex and little understood area of theology.  I have news for you, many Catholics, whether those who go to SSPX, SSPV, or independent priests think their priests are the same as the pre-Vatican II "sent" priests, and that traditional bishops are successors of the Apostles.

    How many in the SSPX refer to their priests as pastors?  How many call their chapels "parishes"?  How many call the SSPX bishops "successors of the Apostles?"  So, if you want to question Myrna or where her ideas on this subject come from, you need to in fairness wonder where most of traditional Catholics have formed their ideas on these matters.

    In my opinion, I highly doubt that Myrna was told this by CMRI.  It is an underlying assumption of many "traditional" Catholics who think this way, and is based on a misunderstanding of who the traditional priests are, and what their role is by many of the laity.  


    You are so right about the fact that my pee brain can not understand all this theology about the above.  It is true I have never spoken to my priest about this subject.   I should study up on jurisdiction before I defend it.  Even now as I post this I am confused about that topic.   :facepalm:
    Please pray for my soul.
    R.I.P. 8/17/22

    My new blog @ https://myforever.blog/blog/

    Offline songbird

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 4997
    • Reputation: +1956/-399
    • Gender: Female
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #327 on: November 15, 2014, 12:18:10 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Question?  I see CMRI with epikia.  Now, with epikia, do I see it right, that they may continue the sacraments with validity?

    Offline Cantarella

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 7782
    • Reputation: +4579/-579
    • Gender: Female
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #328 on: November 15, 2014, 12:23:57 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ambrose

    Bp. Pivarunas has been clear in denying jurisdiction, so all statements that could potentially be understood otherwise should be understood with this in mind.  With this in mind, the statement below can easily be read as orthodox.
     


    Then it follows that Bp. Piravunas cannot exercise his orders lawfully since he (in addition to being outside the Church) "lacks the canonical mission which the Council of Trent dogmatically teaches to be necessary for a bishop to be a legitimate minister of the word and the sacraments":

    Quote from: Trent

    “If anyone say… that those who have not been rightly ordained by ecclesiastical and canonical power and have not been sent [by the Church], but come from some other source [such as a heretical or schismatical source], are lawful ministers of the word and of the sacraments: let him be anathema.” (Council of Trent, Session XXIII, Canon VII; Denzinger 967).  


    It is also a fact that CMRI cannot claim Apostolicity given that this mark of the True Church requires BOTH material and formal succession. Even if a bishop were to have valid orders (material), formal succession requires communion with the Pope, who solely can confer them either explicitly or implicitly.

    “Apostolicity of mission means that the Church is one moral body, possessing the mission entrusted by Jesus Christ to the Apostles, and transmitted through them and their lawful successors in an unbroken chain to the present representatives of Christ upon earth. This authoritative transmission of power in the Church constitutes Apostolic succession. This Apostolic succession must be both material and formal; the material consisting in the actual succession in the Church, through a series of persons from the Apostolic age to the present; the formal adding the element of authority in the transmission of power. It consists in the legitimate transmission of the ministerial power conferred by Christ upon His Apostles. No one can give a power which he does not possess. Apostolic succession as an uninterrupted substitution of persons in the place of the Apostles, insists upon the necessity of jurisdiction or authoritative transmission, thus excluding the hypothesis that a new mission could ever be originated by anyone in the place of the mission bestowed by Christ and transmitted in the manner described.” “They have based their claims on the validity of orders in the Anglican Church. Anglican orders, however, have been declared invalid. But even if they were valid, the Anglican Church would not be Apostolic, for jurisdiction is essential to the Apostolicity of mission.”
    If anyone says that true and natural water is not necessary for baptism and thus twists into some metaphor the words of our Lord Jesus Christ" Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Spirit" (Jn 3:5) let him be anathema.

    Offline MyrnaM

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 6273
    • Reputation: +3629/-347
    • Gender: Female
      • Myforever.blog/blog
    Who ordains CMRI priests?
    « Reply #329 on: November 15, 2014, 01:12:53 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • From CMRI web site:

    Quote
    By the Most Rev. Mark A. Pivarunas, CMRI

    Among the various issues raised today in traditional Catholic circles, jurisdiction is one topic that has been a subject of confusion, especially among some lay “theologians.” According to these mistaken souls, there are no longer any lawful bishops or priests available to offer Holy Mass or to administer the Sacraments. Some of these unfortunate and misguided “theologians” have gone on a “mission” to divert the faithful from the reception of the Sacraments administered by the traditional clergy. That there are mistaken and confused souls around should be no surprise to us, given the unique situation in the Catholic Church since Vatican Council II. With the extended interregnum following the death of Pope Pius XII, we see fulfilled the prophetic words of Pope Leo XIII in his prayer to St. Michael: “In the Holy Place itself, where has been set up the See of the most Blessed Peter and the Chair of Truth for the light of the world they have raised the throne of their abominable impiety with the iniquitous design that when the Pastor has been struck, the sheep may be scattered” (Leo XIII, Motu Proprio, September 25, 1888). Although our situation is unique, it is not entirely unprecedented. In the past history of the Church, there have been difficult times — not as difficult as today — which should guide us in our perseverance in the true Faith.

    The first historical difficulty to consider is the extended interregnum between the death of Pope Clement IV (November 29, 1268) and the election of Pope Gregory X (September 1, 1271). Here was the case of vacancy of the Apostolic See for nearly three years. In addition, during this extended interregnum, vacancies also occurred in various dioceses throughout the world. In order to provide spiritual shepherds for the priests and faithful, bishops were consecrated to fill these vacant Sees. The most important aspect of this historical precedent is that Pope Gregory X affirmed the lawfulness of the consecrations which took place without the usual papal mandate. Furthermore, those bishops functioned and provided for the spiritual needs of the faithful.

    Monsignor Charles Journet in his book, The Church of the Word Incarnate, states: “The power of naming or instituting bishops belongs to the Roman Pontiff. But, remarks Cajetan in his De Romani Pontificis Institutione, we have to distinguish between the power of the Sovereign Pontiff and the exercise of this power, which has varied in mode... The elections of bishops effected during the vacancy of the Holy See and regarded as valid, are thus to be explained.”

    The second historical precedent occurred during the Great Western Schism (1378-1417). During this time, there were two, then three, claimants to the papal office (one in Rome, another in Avignon, and a third in Pisa). Special focus should be centered on the fact that there could not have been three popes ruling the Church at the same time and that at least two of them were not true popes. The particular point to be made, however, is that two of these false claimants had “mandated” the consecration of bishops and these bishops ordained priests and appointed them as pastors.

    How did the Church resolve this ecclesiastical mess? At the Council of Constance, attended by some 18,000 clergy, with the resignation or abdication of the claimants, rules were established for the papal election. [“In case of ambiguity (for example, if it is unknown who the true Cardinals are or who the true pope is, as was the case at the time of the Great Schism), the power of applying the Papacy to such and such a person devolves on the universal Church, the Church of God.” — Cardinal Cajetan as quoted by Monsignor Journet, The Church of the Word Incarnate].

    With the election of Pope Martin V, the Great Western Schism came to an end. A question may be raised, however, about the Sacraments administered by the bishops and priests who mistakenly followed the unlawful claimants to the Papacy. These anti-popes could not have given a canonical mission and ordinary jurisdiction to the bishops under them. Nor could these bishops grant faculties to the priests under them. Were the Sacraments administered by these bishops and priests during the Western Schism unlawful and in the case of Penance and Matrimony invalid (due to the lack of ordinary jurisdiction)? The answer to this question is found in De Ecclesia Christi by Fr. Timothy Zapelena, S.J.:

    “The true pope was the Roman one, that is Urban VI and his successors. Therefore, he was able to give jurisdiction even to the other bishops of the other obediences (on account of common error of the faithful together with the colored title).”

    Fr. Zapelena goes even further in his treatise and considers what would have been the situation if all three papal claimants were not truly pope. He answers: “For the rest, if you figure those three popes to be null, you ought to admit that jurisdiction is supplied (on the account of color of title) not indeed by the Church, which lacks the supreme power, but by Christ Himself, Who would have conferred jurisdiction on each of these anti-popes as much as was necessary.”

    This concept of supplied jurisdiction is well established in Canon Law and there are numerous examples cited in moral and sacramental theology.

    With the end of the Western Schism and the election of Pope Martin V, the Sacraments administered by the mistaken clergy who adhered to the wrong factions (who thus lacked a true canonical mission and ordinary jurisdiction) were never called into question. The Church supplied the jurisdiction to the bishops and priests.

    Canon Law describes the three types of jurisdiction: ordinary, delegated, and supplied. The traditional clergy today receive supplied jurisdiction at the moment of their administration of the Sacraments. And this is provided by the Church for the spiritual benefit of the faithful. So generous and beneficent is our Holy Mother the Church that She even allows the faithful for their spiritual benefit to approach an excommunicated priest (toleratus: before sentence). According to Canon 2261: “The faithful can for any just cause ask for Sacraments or sacramentals of one who is excommunicated, especially if there is no one else to give them.”

    A well-known principle of sacramental theology is: the Sacraments are for men (Sacramenta propter homines).

    Part of the confusion on the part of some of these lay “theologians” is the issue of “canonical mission.” They erroneously hold that unless a bishop or a priest has a “canonical mission,” he cannot lawfully administer the Sacraments. Their problem is their lack of understanding of the distinction between orders and jurisdiction.

    In The Sacred Canons by Rev. John A. Abbo, S.T.L., J.C.D. and Rev. Jerome D. Hannan, A.M., LL.B., S.T.D., J.C.D., we read:

    “The hierarchy of orders is the power which of its nature directly promotes the sanctification and the salvation of the faithful through public worship, especially through the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, and the administration of the sacraments.

    “The hierarchy of jurisdiction is the power of governing the faithful in order that they may be brought to eternal life.

    “Differences distinguish the two kinds of hierarchy. The power of orders is acquired through a sacred rite; the power of jurisdiction, except in the case of the Roman Pontiff, through canonical mission. The power of orders once acquired is never lost, and any exercise of that power thereafter is always valid, though it may be unlawful; the power of jurisdiction can be revoked and the exercise of it thereafter is ordinarily invalid. In the hierarchy of orders three degrees, at least, are of divine origin; in the hierarchy of jurisdiction, only two. It is possible that the jurisdiction usually associated with  a particular degree of the hierarchy of orders may be possessed by one not enjoying that degree, e.g., the jurisdiction over a diocese possessed by an administrator or a vicar general who is a priest. On the other hand, that jurisdiction may be wanting to one who possesses the degree of the hierarchy of orders with which it is ordinarily associated, e.g., to a titular bishop.”

    The point to be made here is that even in ordinary times not all bishops possess ordinary jurisdiction and not all priests possess faculties for the administration of the Sacraments. Moral theologians treat of this subject when they consider whether a priest commits a sin by administering a Sacrament without the necessary jurisdiction. St. Alphonsus Liguori among others teaches that when there is a real necessity on the part of the faithful, a priest does not commit sin by invoking supplied jurisdiction in the administration of the Sacraments.

    In an excellent article on this topic, Traditional Priests, Legitimate Sacraments, Fr. Anthony Cekada makes reference to moral theologians who teach that there is a moral obligation for priests without faculties to administer the Sacraments when the faithful are in serious need.

    “When priests who have the cura animarum are lacking, other priests are bound out of charity to administer the sacraments... in serious need for a community, [such priests] are bound to administer the sacraments, even at the risk of their lives, as long as there is reasonable hope of assisting and there is no one else who will help” (Merkelbach 3:87).

    “They are bound by a certain general obligation arising from the sacred order they received. For Christ the Lord made them priests to devote themselves to saving souls. Because of this purpose, their special duty is to administer the Sacraments. This is obvious from the ordination rite, which gives them the power to offer sacrifice and absolve from sins, and which specifies administering the other sacraments among their other duties... This obligation binds more gravely depending on the seriousness of the spiritual need of the faithful in the dioceses where [such a] priest is supposed to serve or in the place where he lives. When such a community is obviously in serious need — when, for instance, due to the small number of priests or confessors, people have no convenient way to assist at Mass on Sundays and feast days and receive the Eucharist, or where it is inconvenient for people to frequent the Sacrament of Penance, so that many remain in sin — a priest has a grave obligation to administer these sacraments and to prepare himself properly for the duty of confessor” (Aertnys-Damen, Theologia Moralis 2:26).

    Time and space do not allow us to review the other relevant issues to be raised against those lay “theologians” who are on their “mission” to persuade the Catholic faithful to stay home rather than receive the Sacraments from the traditional clergy. These matters have been treated frequently in the past, such as the intrinsic cessation of law, epikeia (the benign interpretation of law), and the very nature of law itself (the common good). The faithful need not be disturbed by these theological troublemakers. They come and they go. Their position is indeed sad and can be described in four words. Fr. Anthony Cekada once wrote an article entitled “Follow Me or Die” concerning those who demand complete submission to their positions. For those who promote this erroneous position to stay home, I would identify them with the title “Follow Me and Die.” Without the Mass and Sacraments, they deprive themselves and their children of so many graces! What a tragedy! Let us pray for these poor mistaken souls.

    - See more at: http://www.cmri.org/02-question-of-jurisdiction.shtml#sthash.GUu4kfTb.dpuf
    Please pray for my soul.
    R.I.P. 8/17/22

    My new blog @ https://myforever.blog/blog/