?? So then it would be a good thing to receive communion at a black mass? That’s your logic.
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If the rite doesn’t matter, then we should all go to the novus ordo because we can save our soul doing so...according to you.
Leaving aside the fact that this is now the second time you are bringing up the black Mass (which means you did not learn from my first response), your comments are not doctrinally based, but emotional/sentimental/liberal.
Nevertheless, I will have another go:
1) Obviously, nobody is saying the black Mass (or the Novus Ordo!) is good;
2) What is being driven home, is that were a well-disposed communicant to receive at either (howsoever said communicant would have to be blindfolded, deceived, etc.), he would infallibly receive the grace contained in the sacrament.
3) That is de fide: Contrary to the Pfeifferian/Hewkonian/LaRosan fanatics, there is no such thing as a sterile sacrament (Trent);
4) For this specific purpose (i.e., the transmission of sanctifying grace), if there is a sacrament + well-disposed communicant = grace passes.
5) It was not until Fr. Pfeiffer's war against Bishop Williamson that the heretical notion of sterile sacraments (contra Trent) was invented (unless one wants to cite the brief and erroneous Angelus position of Fr. Carl Pulvermacher in 1984; a position for which he was roundly lambasted by the faithful who red his opinion, yet he dug his heels in, showing how priests too are subject to pride and ignorance...even good ones like Fr. Pulvermacher).
6) But your final sentence is so adolescent, that I cannot tell whether you are being a difficult child, or just dense, as I have rebutted this sophistry several times above (i.e., whether or not the rite matters depends upon where you are today: As Ladislaus pointed out, if you are a Prot, the wildest (valid) NOM represents an improvement; if you are a liberal NOM, then EWTN-style Masses represent an improvement; if you are an indulter, then EWTN represents a threat to your faith, and so on). But no Trad would go to it, because being disposed against an evil rite, he would not benefit.
I get the impression that you simply don't want to take any of this in. Suit yourself, but please quit pretending you are holding the line of the early traditionalists (the greatest of which contradicts you flatly).