ASK FATHER: Salvation “outside” the Church

Nulla-SalusFrom a reader…

QUAERITUR:

To begin, I want to let you know how much I enjoy reading your blog – Thank you. I have always struggled with the teaching of “Extra ecclesiam nulla salus”. Is this doctrinal? My thoughts always go to seemingly sincere and good Christians of other denominations and how it can be that in their error, they are damned. Any thoughts you an share would be appreciated.

A good deal of ink has been spilled over this concept, rooted in Holy Scripture and the consistent tradition of the Church.

We know from the Gospels that Our Lord established the Church as His vehicle for the salvation of humanity.

He ordered us to preach the Gospel to all nations, and taught that baptism is essential for salvation.

St. Cyprian of Carthage (+258) wrote, “Salus extra ecclesiam non est” (ep. 72, Ad Iubaianum de hereticis baptizandis). Even earlier, Origen, wrote, “Let no man deceive himself. Outside this house, that is, outside the Church no one is saved.” (Homily on the Birth of Jesus). Clearly from both the Fathers and from the Magisterium of the Church we have a consistent teaching that the Church is THE vehicle of the salvation.

The Church still maintains that and teaches, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church states, “all salvation comes from Christ the Head through the Church which is His Body.” (CCC 846)

This is a positive formulation of the doctrine, in contrast to the flip side, “there is no salvation outside the Church”.

The Church has always taught that we do not know the inscrutable ways of God.

Can those who appear to be visibly outside of the Church attain heaven?

Yes.

Not through their own merit.  None of us attains heaven through our own merit. We have the example of Christ Himself, who stated that, unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven (John 3:5). That’s pretty straightforward.  But then, on the Cross, He informed the Good Thief that He would be in paradise (Luke 23:43).

How do we square those things? There’s no indication that the Good Thief was “born of water and the Spirit”, yet we know he attained heaven.

If baptism is the entrance into the Church, and outside the Church there is no salvation, how can we say that the Good Thief is in heaven?

We also have the consistent teaching of the Church on the concept of invincible ignorance. There are those who, through no fault of their own, have not heard the Gospel message. Are they all guaranteed to be damned? No.  St. Augustine commented in a homily once on the sheep who are outside of the flock and the wolves who are within (tr. eu. Io. 45.12). Bl. Pius IX wrote

“It must be held by faith that outside the Apostolic Roman Church, no one can be saved; that this is the only ark of salvation; that he who shall not have entered therein will perish in the flood; but on the other hand, it is necessary to hold for certain that they who labor in ignorance of the true religion, if this ignorance is invincible, will not be held guilty of this in the eyes of God.
Now in truth, who would arrogate so much to himself as to mark the limits of such an ignorance, because of the nature and variety of peoples, regions, innate dispositions, and of so many other things? For in truth, when released from these corporeal chains, ‘we shall see God as He is’ (1 John 3:2), we shall understand perfectly by how close and beautiful a bond divine mercy and justice are united; but as long as we are on earth, weighed down by this moral mass which blunts the soul, let us hold most firmly that, in accordance with Catholic teaching, there is ‘one God, one faith, one baptism’ (Ephesians 4:5); it is unlawful to proceed further in inquiry. But just as the way of charity demands, let us pour forth continual prayers that all nations everywhere may be converted to Christ; and let us be devoted to the common salvation of men in proportion to our strength, ‘for the hand of the Lord is not shortened’ (Isaiah 9:1) and the gifts of heavenly grace will not be wanting to those who sincerely wish and ask to be refreshed by this light.” (Allocution “Singulari quadam” 9 December 1854).

Is it possible to be saved outside of the Catholic Church? No. It is not.

Salvation comes through the Church.

Is it possible that those who seem to be outside of the Catholic Church end up in heaven?

God’s mercy and judgment are such that His understanding of salvation in and through the Church is on a different plane than ours is in this life.

It is possible for those who, due to invincible ignorance, appear to remain outside the Church are, somehow, saved in and through the Church. This possibility should, in no way, shape, or form, allow us to relax our efforts to work and pray for the spread of the Gospel and for seeking to get as many of our brothers and sisters as we possibly can into the Ark of Salvation, the Holy Catholic Church.

Bottom line: God is not limited by our understanding.  God can save whom it pleaseth Him to save.  Can He save people who are not visibly and formally within the embrace of Holy Catholic Church, and not even baptized?  Yes.  He can.  We don’t know how He might do that, but He can, whether we understand it or not.   In any event, any person who is saved, is saved through the merits of the Sacrifice of Christ on the Cross, and that salvation and those merits are mediated – somehow – through the only Church that He found, the Catholic Church.

Also, I want to remind everyone what the Second Vatican Council said in Lumen gentium 14:

“They could not be saved who, knowing that the Catholic Church was founded as necessary by God through Christ, would refuse either to enter it, or to remain in it.”

Moderation queue is ON.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Four Last Things, Hard-Identity Catholicism | Tagged , , , , ,
56 Comments

John Allen pulled a fast one over at Crux about the Synod

A preliminary list of some of the bishop-members of next October’s Synod of Bishops to discuss “the family” has been released.  There are big holes in the membership still, since many conferences haven’t yet elected officers, etc.  You can tell this is only a partial list: there’s no one on it from, for example, Germany (not that that would be horrible).   I am guessing that the Lord of the Synod, Card. Baldisseri, having learned from criticism last year that the names of the members were pretty much shrouded in mystery, got some names out early.  Who knows when we will see the rest?

With that in mind, over at Crux, on 3 Feb Crux John Allen pulled a fast one.

To be fair, he got something right.  Check out the headline: Forecast: 2015 Synod of Bishops will be just as stormy as last time

You bet.

But wait! There’s more:

“If anyone wondered whether Pope Francis might try to “stack the deck” in advance this time around, Saturday’s confirmations clearly seem to refute that idea.”

“clearly seem”?

I think John Allen ought to know by now that the Pope basically approves the delegates who are elected by the many bishops’ conferences, but that he – the Pope – is then entirely free to appoint his own bishop-members as well as other non-bishop members, such the Jesuit General and his ilk …. who can also vote.

So it clearly seems to me that the Pope still has plenty of time to stack the deck.

Posted in CRUX WATCH, Francis, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill | Tagged ,
16 Comments

Audio Books, Red Shirts, and You

In addition to using my Kindle, and using regular books, I also listen to a lot of audio books as I drive or travel or putter about doing chores drinking Mystic Monk Coffee.   I’ve found audible.com has a great range of things, even courses and language training.  I have an Audible membership, so I get monthly credits that I can apply to items that would otherwise be a good deal more expensive.

I can play the audible books through my computer or phone, and they sync, so you always have the right location.  You can even listen to audible books on your Kindle.

Spiffy.  Since I’ve been using Kindle and Audible along with regular books, my consumption of books has shot way up.

Try Audible and Get Two Free Audiobooks

BTW… if you are a Patrick O’Brian Aubrey/Maturin fan… check out the whole series read by Simon Vance. HERE  (NB: Make sure you get the Vance version, not the Tull version.)

BTW again… the Audible option came to mind because I had received a note from author Chris Kennedy saying that the series of SiFi books in which I am a character are now available on Audible.  They are a sequel to two others.

And maybe you still have a chance to join the “Red Shirts”.

PS: I was killed, but there’s a chance that I’ll be brought back as a time lord or something.  Maybe if enough of you buy some version of Kennedy’s books….  After all… I’m a black shirt.  Glück ab!

redshirts

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Lighter fare, Linking Back, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , , ,
10 Comments

Did ISIS behead a priest in Mosul?

I am not sure if this is true or not.  That said….

From ABNA24.com:

ISIS Beheads Iraqi Priest in Mosul

According to locals and eye witnesses, ISIS beheads an Iraqi priest who captured him 7 month ago.

Local says ISIS militants announced beheading of priest Polous Yacoub is done by group sharia court’s order.

Beheading is done in one of eastern neighborhood of Mosul.

According to Wall Street Journal, after many ISIS violence against Christians, hundreds of Christian men are picking up rifles for the first time at a Manila Training Center- former U.S. military facility in the hills of northeast Iraq – and training to reclaim their towns from ISIS militants who stormed the country last year.

Posted in Modern Martyrs, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, The Religion of Peace | Tagged , , , ,
3 Comments

ASK FATHER: Do the devout have the hardest deaths?

vanitasFrom a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have been unsettled by remarks of a Dr Martin Scurr (Daily Mail 27 Jan 2015) who some years ago served the Jesuits at their HQ in Mayfair and religious attached to Westminster Cathedral. “I always think that it is those who have devoted themselves to their religious faith who are the worst when it comes to dying. Priests are the most anxious, the most hysterical and the hardest to control”, says Dr Scurr. “Their faith didn’t help many of them to die. Only Cardinal Hume died with grace, or peace”. Talking of nuns, most of whom he found to be neurotic and anxious, he says, “In my experience, only the nuns with dementia died well”. What’s going wrong? What can we do to help?

It’s difficult and dangerous to extrapolate one man’s anecdotal experiences into something larger than it is.

However, it is true that some priests and religious struggle mightily at the time of death.  It should come as no surprise that those who have dedicated their lives to the service of the Lord are also considerable targets for the Enemy’s assault. Particularly at the time of death Satan comes with guns blazing to tempt to despair the faithful. The holier their lives, I suspect the more horrible the attack.

The Devil hates holy priests and holy religious with an intensity possible only for an angelic being.  It is fixed, complete, and indefatigable.

This is why the Church retains in Her arsenal many powerful prayers for the time of death. We should all be familiar with the prayers for the dying.  We should have sacramentals to hand.

What can we do?

Pray! Pray for yourselves and for others. Pray frequently for a happy death.  Pray for a provided death.

Attend to your loved ones who are dying. Visit them, pray with them, make sure that a priest gets to them to anoint them and give them the Apostolic Pardon and give them viaticum. When you hear of a priest or religious who is dying, redouble your efforts to pray for them, fast for them. Invoke St. Joseph, Patron of the Dying.  If you can’t visit them, pray before the Blessed Sacrament for them.

We are all engaged in a titanic and relentless struggle for souls.

We need the support that the Church provides.

We need to support each other.

And…

GO TO CONFESSION!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Four Last Things, GO TO CONFESSION, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Semper Paratus, Si vis pacem para bellum! | Tagged , , ,
24 Comments

Polish Archbishop predicts ugly confrontations at Synod: “innovators have not been idle”

At the blog Witness for Church and Pope I saw this (my emphases):

BREAKING NEWS from POLAND: Archbishop Henryk Hoser: “The Church has betrayed John Paul II…they did not follow his voice, they did not acquaint themselves with his teaching”

Today’s Niedziela, from Poland, carries an interview with Archbishop Henryk Hoser of Warsaw-Praga, about the recent acts of treachery against Our Lord, His Church and our recently sainted Pope, St. Pope John Paul II. These acts of treachery were committed by an assortment of innovators at last October’s Synod of the Family. These innovators have not been idle, and neither have the defenders of the truth about the sanctity of holy matrimony. I predicted to a friend recently that the upcoming Synod will be an ugly confrontation, that (for example) the Polish Episcopate will never surrender to the innovators. We now have conclusive evidence that this is true. When an archbishop has to publicly proclaim that a canonized saint Pope has been betrayed, then we can see the depth of the rebellion, and the “filth” (c.f. Pope Benedict XVI) that has infiltrated the Mystical Body of Christ.

Key highlights from Archbishop Hoser, which I have translated, include:

On the delegates who seek to overturn the doctrine of the Church:

At the Synod there will be a confrontation with delegates from countries where there is already a majority of pathological families – broken families, patchwork families, with only a small percentage of unbroken marriages – and the demand for the provision of Holy Communion for the divorced. In this lies an erroneous assumption, the postulate that God’s mercy is without justice, when you must begin by saying that married and family life must be founded in justice, which as a whole is not taken into account….

On the influence of the media on sexuality:

…All personal relationships are eroticized, and this is an extremely dangerous phenomenon. Sexualization of friendship has destroyed male and female friendship…the texts of various theorists of this trend [genderism] proves that the world is ruled by sexual satisfaction…

…Genderism is not a struggle for equality between women and men: it is a fight with all constitutive social structures, referred to as stereotypes; in the first place with the “traditional family.” It has created a society of independent individuals. A society both asexual and pansexual.

On the Church:

The church is a prophetic voice in this world. This is not to be understood as some sort of soothsayer forecasting the future. The function of the prophet is the attitude of the consequence of enlightening the situation form God’s perspective, reading the sign of the times.

On Pope John Paul II and marriage:

I will tell you brutally. The Church has betrayed John Paul II. Not the Church as the Bride of Christ, not the Church of our Creed, because John Paul II was an expression, an authentic voice of the Church; but it is the pastoral practice that has betrayed John Paul II.

It is a thesis [theory] to which I subscribe because 40 years of my priesthood has been devoted to marriage and the family, during which time I promoted the theme of “the evangelization of marital intimacy”. In Poland it is and was better in this respect.

In many other countries, due to the contestation to the teachings of the Church, as expressed by Blessed Paul VI, the pastoral care of families was stopped.

[…]

Read the rest there.

¡Hagan lío!

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, Francis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liberals, New Evangelization, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , , ,
16 Comments

Pope Francis condones beating children

Pope baby zuchettoThe catholic Left hangs on every word that the Pope has, might, could utter about global warning and redistribution of wealth.  They can’t wait to see the next airplane presser or daily off the cuff fervorino, which they hold to have virtually magisterial authority.   When he says something about not talking about abortion or not judging a homosexual, he can’t possibly be wrong.  Pope Francis! The first Pope ever to smile or kiss a baby, the first Pope ever to preach mercy can’t possibly be wrong about anything… except perhaps anytime he mentions anything about women… but I digress.

During his Wednesday audience today Pope Francis endorsed that fathers beat their children.  HERE  Italian text HERE

Una volta ho sentito in una riunione di matrimonio un papà dire: “Io alcune volte devo picchiare un po’ i figli … ma mai in faccia per non avvilirli”. Che bello! Ha senso della dignità. Deve punire, lo fa in modo giusto, e va avanti…. Once during a marriage meeting I heard a father say: “Sometimes I have to beat the children a little… but never in the face, so as not to humiliate them.”  How beautiful!  He has an understanding of dignity.  He has to punish, but he does in the right way, and he goes forward.

15_02_04_Francis_audience_01So, Pope Francis thinks it is good that fathers beat their children.  Che bello!

I look forward to discussions among the catholic Left about the proper way to beat children.  Should fathers use a stick?  A belt?  Just the hand?   How about mothers and a wooden spoon?   Just make sure to avoid hitting them in the face and you are good to go, and maybe watch your strength.  Right?

I am confident we will learn a great deal from their unhesitating support for Pope Francis’ comments today about beating children.

The moderation queue is ON.

Posted in Francis | Tagged ,
45 Comments

ACTION ITEM! Send Fr. Z Christmas cards from around the world – UPDATE

UPDATE:

Don’t send mail to the address I had posted for Christmas Cards.  That was a temporary address.

ORIGINAL Published on: Dec 22, 2014

xmas card 01Do people still send Christmas cards?  I have fewer this year than usual.

Some one remarked to me, jokingly, that I didn’t have a lot of Christmas Cards.

First, he couldn’t know that and, second, he wasn’t being serious.

Still, his remark got me thinking.

I am not impressed by email Christmas greetings.   Not at all.  If someone wants to send me Christmas greetings, they can send a card by snail mail.

So, let’s try something.  

Send me Christmas cards from all over the world with cool stamps.

I’ll save the interesting stamps and see if there is a home school group that might be into stamp collecting. 

I’ll let you know along the way how the card count is going.  Sometimes I look at the blog’s stats and I see, coming and going, people from all over the world.  Hopefully, you will take a moment or two to send a card.

UPDATE 26 Dec:

Cards are starting to come in. Among those which arrived today … from…

14_12_26_cards

  • Cleveland, OH
  • St. Louis, MO
  • Indianapolis, IN
  • Fort Wayne, IN
  • Alton, IL
  • Lincoln, NE
  • Yellowstone National Park, WY (How cool is that for an address? And the card was made in India, so they took me literally)!
  • Dallas, TX
  • Mt. Clemens, MI
  • Denton, TX

UPDATE 31 December:

I had a couple days away of down time.  I returned to find a huge stack of cards!  It took me an hour and a half to open them and extract stamps and read the contents.  Some people included family photos and their annual letter to friends and family.  Most people added written comments of appreciation for this blog.  A few people included donations.  Some people asked for prayers.  It was quite touching.

Cards came from all over the country and a few from beyond the borders, including…

  • Rochester, NY
  • Cheyenne, WY
  • Berekely, CA
  • Fresno, CA
  • Houston, TX
  • Holyoke, CT
  • Forest Hills, NY
  • King of Prussia, PA
  • Fredricksburg, VA 2x
  • Lake Worth, FL
  • Mt. Laurel, NJ
  • Thousand Oaks, 2x
  • San Jose, CA 2x
  • Aptos, CA
  • Southhampton – UK
  • Dundee, MI
  • San Diego, CA
  • Orlando, FL
  • San Rafael, CA
  • Irving, TX
  • Catskill, NY
  • Glen Burnie, MD
  • La Honda, CA
  • Arcadia, OK
  • Atlanta, GA
  • Jacksonville, FL
  • Kingston, ON
  • Meadville, PA
  • White Plains, NY
  • Lewiston, ME
  • Marshfield, MA
  • Summit, NJ
  • Camarillo, CA
  • Williamsport, PA
  • Madrid – SPAIN
  • Dorchester, MA
  • Millers Tavern, VA
  • Kansas City, MO
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Hudson, WI
  • Indian Trail, NC
  • Waldport, OR
  • Westchester, NY
  • Worchester, MA
  • New York, NY

Also, I have to share two shots of things that came in cards. Fun!

First, a bunch of old stamps.

IMG_4324.JPG

And then there was this!  I think that’s a biretta at the top!

IMG_4325.JPG

 

A few more cards today from…

  • York – UK
  • Austin, MN
  • Zebulon, NC
  • Northlake, IL

 UPDATE: 2 Jan 2015:

More cards are coming, now also from overseas!

  • Calgary, Alberta (not overseas for me)
  • Stockholm, Sweden
  • Guilford, CT
  • Sydney, Australia
  • Lansdowne, VA
  • Fritch, TX

Here is a nice card I received:

15_01_02_card

UPDATE 3 Jan 2015:

More cards have come in!

Today from

  • Quaker Hill, CT
  • Southwick, MA
  • Sheffield, England
  • Nottingham, Emgland
  • Somewhere in Ireland
  • Houston, TX (with Vietnamese)
  • Washington DC (I think)
  • Parrish, FL
  • Mount Laurel, NJ
  • Tambaram East, Kanchipuran – India
  • Franklin, MA
  • Wichita, KS
  • Bonita Springs, FL

I start the first round of travel for the new year as of tomorrow.  So, it’ll be a while before I can pick up more cards.  I hope for more.  The Christmas cycle ends conclusively with Candlemas, after all!

UPDATE 28 Jan:

More cards have come in. It took me a while to dig out from under my mail after my travels. I like to read the cards and the notes that are included. Some of them are quite touching. They give me a glimpse into the lives of readers. Many people asked for prayers for their families. DONE!

This round…

IMG_4673.JPG

 

Only one piece of hate mail this time, typically anonymous. Ho hum.

Your cards came from….

 

  • Spokane, WA
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Winder, GA
  • Koln, Germany
  • Huntersville, NC
  • France
  • USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70)
  • Malta
  • Eltopia, WA
  • Glasgow, Scotland
  • Christchurch, NZ
  • Harvard, MA
  • Muskegon, MI
  • Emsdetten, Germany
  • Miami, FL
  • Gibraltar
  • St. Peters, MO
  • Monticell, MN
  • Albuquerque, NM
  • Langhorne, PA
  • Simpson, PA
  • Destrehan, LA
  • Czech Republic
  • Chula Vista, CA
  • South Jordan, UT
  • Cuyahoga Falls, OH
  • Manchester, NH
  • Citta del Vaticano
  • Philadelphia, PA
  • Shelton, CT
  • Bellingham, WA
  • Markt Schiebe, Germany
  • Indianapolis, IN
  • Vadnais Heights, MN
  • Raleigh, NC
  • Eden, NC
  • Columbus, OH
  • Ponte Vedra, FL
  • Grand Rapids, MI
  • Voorhees, NJ
  • Albany, NY
  • Carol Stream, IL
  • Arlington Hts, IL
  • Orlando, FL
  • Mililani, HI
  • Lawrenceburg, TN
  • Gerocery West, NSW
  • Westminster, CO
  • Calgary, Alberta
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Tiverton, RI
  • Issaquah, WA
  • Tacoma, WA
  • Washington, DC
  • Menoken, ND
  • Breese, FL
  • Poland
  • Turku, Finland
  • Columbia, IL
  • Fresno, CA
  • Wichita, KS
  • Burnwood, Vic
  • Huffman, TX
  • Palmyra, WA
  • Richmond, VA
  • Nogales, AZ
  • Trinidad & Tobago
  • Paicineo, CA
  • Suffield, OH
  • Nogent-sur-Marne, France

Here’s one, making reference to my desire to write more by hand and my nostalgia for old school correspondence, that came nicely penned in Latin.

IMG_4674.JPG

UPDATE 4 Feb:

A few more have trickled in.  Thanks!

  • Burley, ID
  • Brentwood, TN
  • Halifax, NS
  • Dörfli, Switzerland

With the Feast of the Purification (Presentation) and I collected the cards and, alas, out they go.   It is with regret, since so many have great messages inside.  These things are, by their nature, ephemeral.   I look forward to next year, when we can get an earlier start.

Some final shots.

As the cards came in, I put them out on the shelf below the windows in the hallway here at the Steam Pipe Distribution Venue.

(null)

 

I received so many that the shelves rapidly filled up.

 

(null)

 

Their final resting place.   Note that, on the top, is an image of my home parish in St. Paul, which I miss.

(null)

 

I have also taken down now the black, tactical stocking…. until next year.

Thanks, everyone!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes |
33 Comments

ISIS burned Jordanian Pilot – alive – in a cage

Jordanian_pilotIt seems that ISIS/ISIL put the Jordanian pilot, Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbe, in a cage, doused him with some flammable liquid, trailed some out of the cage, and lit him on fire.    HERE

The video is slick, carefully made.  The video cuts to slow motion as the flame goes into the cage as they burned the pilot… alive.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.

St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.

Posted in Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
89 Comments

ASK FATHER: Blessing of Throats by a nun

st_blaiseFrom a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Father Z you are one of the very few people I can go to when I have a question about our faith (I’m still learning) and I had my head bitten off today when I asked if this was ligit: Our priest blessed the candles after mass then had a nun administer the throat blessing for St. Blaise day alongside him. He did one side of the aisle, she the other. Is the blessing from the nun just as efficacious as from the priest? Thank you Father Z for all you do, I pray for you regularly.

Thanks for the prayers.  I need them.

Traditionally that is unthinkable.  Thus, I don’t know what a “blessing” from a nun does.  I don’t have to wonder what a blessing from a priest does.

The problem here is that the new rites are in line with the theology of the Book of Blessings, or De Benedictionibus, which in its preliminary comments, radically departs from the Church’s perennial understanding of blessings and their distinction as constitutive (making something a blessed thing) and invocative (calling down God’s blessing).

In The Book of Blessings (which I think ought to be eradicated) we find a difference in what priests or deacons do and what all laypeople (including all women religious):

PRAYER OF BLESSING

1647 A minister who is a priest or deacon touches the throat of each person with the crossed candles and says the prayer of blessing. Through the intercession of Saint Blase, bishop and martyr, may God deliver you from every disease of the throat and from every other illness:

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, + and of the Holy Spirit. [The “+” indicates that the priest or deacon makes the sign of the Cross.]

Each person responds: Amen.

During the blessing suitable psalms or other suitable songs may be sung.

1648 A lay minister touches the throat of each person with the crossed candles and, without making the sign of the cross, says the prayer of blessing. Through the intercession of Saint Blase, bishop and martyr, may God deliver you from every disease of the throat and from every other illness:

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

Each person responds: Amen.

1649 After receiving the blessing each person may depart.

1650 If all cannot be blessed individually, a minister who is a priest or deacon, without candles, may extend his hands over the assembly and say the prayer of blessing. A lay minister says the prayer proper to lay ministers without making the sign of the cross.

Other than the fact that the priest makes the sign of the Cross, or extending a hand, does this look different?

But… something is different here.  It’s just not easy to put one’s finger on it.

On the one hand, anyone can ask God at anytime to pour His blessings down on anyone or anything.  When a priest does that, however, as a man whose soul has been ontologically conformed to Christ the High Priest, who acts in persona Christi capitis, I think something else happens than when a lay person does it.  What is that “something else”?  First, I think it has to do with our assurance that the petition for blessing has been heard.  In an analogous way, though this limps, we can all earnestly pray to God to forgive our sins and, we hope God will do so.  We can even tell a friend about our problems and receive consolation and advice.  Great!  On the other hand, in sacramental confession, when the priest gives you absolution, you don’t have to wonder if your sins are forgiven.

On the other hand, it must be noted that the Rituale Romanum indicated that a lector (in the older sense, not the installed modern lector) could bless bread and first fruits… but he wouldn’t be ordained as either a deacon or a priest!  So, apparently Major Orders are necessary.

Moreover, lay people are baptized, which means that they do participate in the priesthood of Christ, though not in the way that priests and bishops do.  Laypeople have vocations which, frankly, call on them to call down blessings.  I have especially in mind the duty of a father to bless his own children.   In the ancient Church, catechists would bless catechumens (cf Traditio apostolica).  There is clearly a hierarchical distinction that must be observed: If a priest is present, the priest should give blessings before a deacon would, or layperson.  Keep that in mind in the family home: perhaps the father of the family customarily begins the meal blessing… if a priest is your guest, he should do it.

CCC 1669 says:

Sacramentals derive from the baptismal priesthood: every baptized person is called to be a “blessing,” and to bless. Hence lay people may preside at certain blessings; [However…] the more a blessing concerns ecclesial and sacramental life, the more is its administration reserved to the ordained ministry (bishops, priests, or deacons).

Does the St. Blaise blessing have a great deal to do with the ecclesial and sacramental life of the Church?  I don’t think so.

In the final analysis, we have to accept that the efficacy of blessings depends on the authority and authoritative prayers of the Church.  Furthermore, we have to admit that the efficacy of the blessing must rely in large part on the will, disposition and desire of the recipient.

Keep in mind that the St. Blaise Day blessing isn’t efficacious because of the candles… this isn’t magic.

In sum, I think there is a difference between what Father does and what Sister does.  I think Holy Orders matters.   What that difference is…. I don’t know.

But if it were up to me I’d get in the line with the priest.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity |
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