Cantabo Domino in vita mea. Alacritate et magnanimitate Eum sequar. I shall sing to the Lord in my life. I shall follow Him eagerly and generously.
Friday, December 30, 2016
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Flannery O'Connor on Tenderness
[I would substitute the word "tenderness" with "compassion" or "mercy" since those seem to be the buzz words these days. With that in mind...]
One of the tendencies of our age is to use the suffering of children to discredit the goodness of God, and once you have discredited his goodness, you are done with him [....] Busy cutting down human imperfection, they are making headway also on the raw material of good.
Ivan Karamazov cannot believe, as long as one child is in torment; Camus’ hero cannot accept the divinity of Christ, because of the massacre of the innocents.
In this popular pity, we mark our gain in sensibility and our loss in vision. If other ages felt less, they saw more, even though they saw with the blind, prophetical, unsentimental eye of acceptance, which is to say, of faith. In the absence of this faith now, we govern by tenderness.
It is a tenderness which, long since cut off from the person of Christ, is wrapped in theory. When tenderness is detached from the source of tenderness, its logical outcome is terror. It ends in forced labor camps and in the fumes of the gas chamber.
---
Source: Flannery O'Connor, Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1957), 226–227.
One of the tendencies of our age is to use the suffering of children to discredit the goodness of God, and once you have discredited his goodness, you are done with him [....] Busy cutting down human imperfection, they are making headway also on the raw material of good.
Ivan Karamazov cannot believe, as long as one child is in torment; Camus’ hero cannot accept the divinity of Christ, because of the massacre of the innocents.
In this popular pity, we mark our gain in sensibility and our loss in vision. If other ages felt less, they saw more, even though they saw with the blind, prophetical, unsentimental eye of acceptance, which is to say, of faith. In the absence of this faith now, we govern by tenderness.
It is a tenderness which, long since cut off from the person of Christ, is wrapped in theory. When tenderness is detached from the source of tenderness, its logical outcome is terror. It ends in forced labor camps and in the fumes of the gas chamber.
---
Source: Flannery O'Connor, Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1957), 226–227.
Fr. Antonio Royo Marin on Signs of a Vocation to the Priesthood
[539]
ARTICLE 6
The
Subject of the Sacrament of Orders
And here
it is also necessary to distinguish within the subject the necessary conditions
for validity and liceity.
Conclusion. A baptized male alone receives
sacred ordination validly (CIC 1024).
428. We wish to explain the conclusion a little.
A MAN
ALONE, not a woman. St. Paul expressly states, “Let women keep silence in the
churches, for it is not permitted them to speak, but to be subject” (1 Cor.
14:34). And in another place: “Let the woman learn in silence, with all
subjection” (1 Tim. 2:11). The Holy Fathers explain these words in the sense of
excluding women from the ecclesiastical hierarchy, and this has been the constant
and universal practice of the Church.
In ancient
church literature it is sometimes spoken of female bishops and priests, and St.
Paul himself speaks with praise of the deaconess Phoebe (Rom. 16:1-2) and gives
to his disciple Timothy norms for choosing deaconesses from among the widows (1
Tim. 5:9-10). None of these women received ordination as such but a sacramental
instituted by the Church, by way of a blessing of the virgins consecrated to
the Lord, which enabled them to help the priests or deacons in the
administration of baptism for women, in the catechesis of women, etc. Sometimes
the actual spouses of the deacons, priests, or bishops simply received those
titles before ecclesiastical celibacy was obligatorily imposed.
BAPTIZED,
that is to say, he who has received the sacrament
of baptism (the baptism of desire is not sufficient), which is the obligatory
and indispensable door to be able to receive any other sacrament.
Conclusion. In order to receive holy
ordination licitly, it is required that the candidate meet the canonical
conditions determined by the Church.
429. In addition to a divine vocation,
the state of grace—which is the
indispensable condition to receive licitly any sacrament of the living—and not having any irregularity or impediment,
certain conditions are required by Canon Law, which we will examine in detail
in the following article.
ARTICLE 7
Prerequisites
in order to receive sacred ordination
The
prerequisites which the candidate must meet in order to receive Holy Orders are
of two types: a) the possession of
the positive qualities demanded by the Church; and b) the absence of irregularities or impediments. We will examine
these separately.
[541]
I.
POSITIVE
QUALITIES
The
essential qualities, those that we just finished citing in the previous
conclusion, one naturally presupposes, are a divine vocation to the priesthood, the state of grace, and a right
intention. We will examine these one by one.
430. There is a great variety of opinions among theologians on the genuine
and true concept of a vocation to the priesthood. All contain some essential
core of truth, but the greater part of them fail from inadequacies because they do not examine the priestly vocation
except from an incomplete and partial point of view: the theological or the
canonical.
The
priestly vocation, adequately considered,
seems to us to consist of three elements:
a) A special calling from God.
b) Canonical suitability (idoneity).
c) Admission to the clerical state by the bishop.[1]
By this understanding,
we might say that there is a true
vocation to the priesthood for anyone who, feeling the call of God in a special
way and possessing canonical suitability, is admitted to the clerical state by
a legitimate bishop.
We are
going to examine briefly each one of these three essential elements.
It is a
theologically indisputable fact that divine Providence orders all things that
exist towards the attainment of the final end of creation, namely, the divine
glory.[2]
This providence of God extends absolutely to everything, including the most
insignificant—etiam minimorum, says
St. Thomas Aquinas[3]—, even to the point that
God has counted all the hairs of our head (Mt. 10:30), and the leaf of a tree
does not move without the previous permission of God.
This being
the case, one understands how great and excellent a thing is the Catholic
priesthood, which ought to continue across the centuries the redemptive work of
Jesus Christ, the Son well-beloved of the Father, and it is not possible that
God would abandon it to the free choice or caprice of men. “You have not chosen
me, but I have chosen you,” expressly says the Lord in the Gospel (Jn. 15:16).
That is why it seems to us that those make a great error of perspective,
theologically unjustifiable, [542] who speak of choice
of state to suggest to the possible candidate the excellent greatness of
the priesthood. There is not, there should not be such a choice of state—as if the initiative of a decision of this
magnitude was by man alone, and God was
forced to accept what the creature has decided—but solely an examination of
the depths of the inclination and the qualities which the candidate possesses
in order to discover in those qualities, with greater or lesser clarity, the
mysterious calling of God, which,
theologically speaking, constitutes the heart of the vocation.
This call of God tends to take on many
diverse forms. Sometimes it appears in the conscience of the candidate with
complete clarity and evidence, a blessing that does not allow harboring the
slightest doubt. At other times, it is obscure and mysterious yet at the same
time very true and real. Again, sometimes it imposes itself upon the conscience
in the form of a categorical imperative[4];
at other times it does not go beyond being a sweet invitation, quietly persuasive. But whatever form it adopts or with
whatever force that it may impose itself, it never dominates human free will,
which remains perfectly safe, even when efficacious
grace falls upon it, producing its effect infallibly and is most freely
accepted by the man.
The
existence and necessity of a divine vocation to the priesthood, that is, of
this call of God, can be fully demonstrated through traditional theological
sources:
1.
SACRED
SCRIPTURE. “You have not chosen me, but I
have chosen you; and have appointed you, that you should go and should
bring forth fruit; and your fruit should remain” (Jn. 15:16).
“Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that he send laborers into his harvest” (Lk. 10:2).
“And going up into a mountain, he called unto him whom he would himself, and they came to him. And he made that twelve should be with him, and that he might send them to preach. And he gave them power to seal sicknesses, and to cast out devils” (Mk. 3:13-15).
“Neither doth any man take the honor to himself, but he that is called by God, as Aaron was. So Christ also did not glorify himself, that he might be made a high priest, but he that said unto him: Thou art my Son: this day have I begotten thee” (Heb. 5:4-5).
“And praying, (the apostles) said, “Thou, Lord, who knowest the heart of all men, shew whether of these two thou hast chosen, to take the place of this ministry and apostleship, from which Judas hath by transgression fallen, that he might go to his own place” (Acts 1:24-25).
The
testimony of Sacred Scripture cannot be clearer or more conclusive.
2. THE MAGISTERIUM OF THE CHURCH. This point of
view, profoundly theological by having its immediate foundation in Sacred
Scripture, has been fully confirmed through the magisterium of the Church by
clarifying with total care and exactness some exaggerations regarding the
priestly vocation that have remained obscured by some excessively amateur
authors, who viewed this matter exclusively from a canonical point of view and
downplayed its theological aspect, which is just as important if not more than
the canonical.
[543]
In fact,
in the Instruction of the Sacred Congregation of Sacraments of December 27,
1930,[5]
approved and confirmed by Pius XI, it says among other things the following:
1. The
priestly vocation should not
be confused with admission to the
ecclesiastical state made by the bishop since it is seriously warned that
the latter will not allow candidates to receive orders if they are deprived of a divine vocation: “divina
destituti vocatione” (§1, n.1). Therefore it is a clear thing that the divine vocation is distinct from and
prior to the call of the bishop.
2. This same idea is repeated constantly through
the length of the instruction. Here are some texts:
“Those who have been chosen by the Holy Ghost to govern the Church of God, in order to avoid many and great evils against the Church and the faithful, must with the greatest caution block the path of those who through lack of a priestly vocation to such a high ministry should have applied to them the words of our Lord (Jn. 10:1): ‘Amen, amen I say to you: he that entereth not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth up another way, the same is a thief and a robber’” (§1, n.1).
“In order that things may not come to this result, there must be firmly impressed upon the souls of the bishops and local ordinaries an interest in a great means of immediately separating those who are to receive orders from those who are unworthy and not called” (§3, n. 4).
3.
Every
candidate to Holy Orders must sign with his own hand and in his own handwriting
a document in which he declares his desire to receive Holy Orders freely and
spontaneously with all the responsibilities accompanying it, “since I
experience and feel within me truly the
call of God.”
c) THE THEOLOGICAL REASON. It is a natural and
immediate consequence of divine Providence, which extends itself to the
smallest things as St. Thomas says.[6] It
is absurd to think that one of the most excellent things, the priestly
vocation, would have been abandoned to the arbitrary will and whim of man so
that whether a man takes it or leaves it depends on if he has a desire for it.
It is not
valid, then, to say that the aspirant to the priesthood does not sometimes
sense a small hint of the divine calling within his interior but rather that he
has full consciousness of possessing the self-determination
to choose the priesthood, having calmly considered the spiritual benefits that
have been reported of such a state. Nothing that we have finished explaining
goes against vocation in the sense of a divine
initiative since this apparent self-determination,
perhaps the product of a long, cold, and painful deliberation, is in reality
one of the forms of the divine call, an effect
of God’s free election, according to the words of Sacred Scripture: “As the
divisions of waters, so the heart of the king is in the hand of the Lord,
whithersoever he will he shall turn it” (Prov. 21:1).
[544]
This
demonstration, so clear and evident, can be further confirmed with new and
decisive arguments. It is worthwhile to explain some in order to restore fully
the truth about this subject, so important and oftentimes so obscure. The
arguments are:[7]
1.
The
ecclesiastical ministry demands, by its very nature, a special help of grace in
order to be able to exercise it conveniently. But God gives these special aids only, or at least
principally, to those who were really called and not to those who contrary to
the will of God have the audacity to consecrate themselves to the divine
ministries.
2.
The
priestly state cannot be worthily and laudably exercised without special
qualities of soul and body. However, these talents are gifts of God, which He
gives to those called precisely in virtue of their calling, and it is not given
to the rest, at least according to the general norms of His ordinary
providence.
3.
The
priest holds the position of mediator between God and man, according to these
words of St. Paul: “Every high priest taken from among men is ordained for men
in the things that appertain to God, that the may offer up gifts and sacrifices
for sins” (Heb. 5:1); and these other words: “We are ambassadors for Christ” (2
Cor. 5:20); and finally: “Let a man so account of us as of the ministers of
Christ, and the dispensers of the mysteries of God” (1 Cor. 4:1). However, it
would be absurd to think that someone, without being called by God, could have the audacity to chose the role of
ambassador of Christ, dispenser of the divine mysteries, and mediator between
God and man.
4.
The
sacerdotal state carries with it the gravest obligations, which cannot morally
be observed with fidelity for an entire lifetime without special helps from
God. However, according to the ordinary norms of His divine Providence, God
does not refuse any general graces
and sufficient helps, but He grants special and efficacious graces only to those legitimately called by Him.
In
addition to a divine calling, it is required in the candidate those conditions
or qualities that establish the aptitude or canonical suitability for the
priesthood. Precisely the lack of this suitability will be the clear sign that
God is not calling the candidate to the priesthood—even if the candidate
believes otherwise—because in God there cannot be any contradiction. And to the
contrary, the clear and manifest presence of that suitability in a man who willingly aspires to the priesthood is
the clearest and most manifest proof of a divine vocation.
Canon Law
emphatically expresses to bishops the gravest obligation not to promote to Holy
Orders those candidates who lack this canonical suitability.
We will
see in the following pages [545] what those qualities may be that constitute this
canonical suitability. But first we must examine the last point of our
discussion.
The final
and authoritative judgment over the admission or denial to Holy Orders of the
aspiring candidate rests solely with the bishop, who must not ordain any layman
if it is not necessarily or useful for his diocese (cf. CIC 2025).
During the
pontificate of St. Pius X, a commission of cardinals examined the work La vocation sacerdotale by Canon
Lahitton—which had stirred up great commotion among authors—and had the
following report issued regarding it:
“The book
of the eminent Joseph Canon Lahitton, titled La vocation sacerdotale, is in no way to be condemned, but rather
it is deserving of outstanding praise in the following points:
1. that no one has a right to ordination antecedently to the free choice of him by the bishop;
2. that the condition to which the Ordinary should look, and which is called a priestly vocation, by no means consists, at all events necessarily and as a general rule, in some interior aspiration of the subject or in impulses of the Holy Ghost to receive the priesthood;
3. but on the contrary nothing more is required in the candidate that he may rightly be invited by the bishop than a right intention together with a fitness based on those gifts of nature and grace, and confirmed by that goodness of life and sufficiency of learning, that afford a well-founded hope that he would be able rightly to fulfill the priestly duties and maintain its obligations holily.[8]
This
teaching is of complete certitude. But it does not follow in any way that in
order to be ordained a priest a prior divine
vocation is not required—as some have affirmed, disproportionately
exaggerating point 2 of the above declaration—but only that no one has a right
to be ordained before the free choice of the bishop and that in order for the
bishop to be able legitimately to invite him, it suffices that the candidate
possess right intention together with a
due suitability, that is, the unequivocal signs of a true and authentic divine vocation to the priesthood.
Without a
doubt, because of the exaggerations of these authors to whom we have just
alluded, it was seen that the Holy See was obliged to clarify the true import
of point 2 of the previously mentioned declaration. And as we have seen above,
in the instruction of the Sacred Congregation of Sacraments of December 27,
1930, approved and confirmed by Pius XI, there is a clear distinction made
between a divine vocation to the
priesthood and admission to the
ecclesiastical state by the bishop. [546] We have already cited the texts and
have nothing further to add here.
431. The state of grace is an indispensable prerequisite in order to receive
licitly the sacrament of Holy Orders.
The reason is because it is a sacrament of the living, the reception of which presupposes a soul in possession of
supernatural life (the state of grace). The reception of truly sacramental orders (diaconate,
presbyterate, and episcopy) while conscious of mortal sin would constitute a
grave sacrilege, apart from the
mortal sin that would be committed by the unworthy reception of the Eucharist,
which must be received together with major orders.
432. This is another indispensable condition demanded by the very nature of
the sacrament.
This
rectitude of intention means that the candidate by his ordination ought to
strive exclusively, or at least principally,
for the glory of God, the good of souls, and his own sanctification. If he
would intend to obtain temporal goods, honors, or an easy life as his exclusive
or principal goal, then he would
commit a most serious mortal sin. It is not forbidden, however, that besides
the primary supernatural end he may
also seek after other secondary natural goods (e.g. in order to assist in the
honest sustainment of his parents). But it must be understood that his
intention would be more upright and purer the less it is influenced by these
secondary, purely natural motives.
433. It must be understood that the candidate set apart by the sacrament of
Orders for the divine mysteries and the shepherding of the faithful must be
fully confirmed in the Faith and strong in the practice of virtue. Moreover, it
would not be good that a man, before reaching the status of a soldier in the
military of Christ, should take on the responsibility of a chief or captain. Hence
the necessity of receiving the sacrament of Confirmation before that of Orders.
Long ago
this prerequisite was considered binding under pain of venial sin only. But modern moral theologians consider it to be
binding under pain of mortal sin. The
reason seems to come from canon 1033, which in order for ordination to be licit demands among other things that
the ordinand “has received the sacrament of confirmation.” Since it deals with
an intrinsically grave matter [547] and is
necessary for liceity, it seems that its culpable omission would constitute a
true mortal sin.[9]
434. Among the conditions required to bring the candidate to Holy Orders,
the Code of Canon Law demands “qualities in keeping with the order to be
received” (CIC 1029).
Not all the
orders require the same sanctity of customs since they confer neither the same
dignity nor the same powers. But it is evident that the candidate to any order
ought to show clear signs of possessing a true and authentic priestly vocation
through a solid piety and ought to be firmly resolved in completely renouncing,
throughout his entire life, the empty promises of the world and of the flesh.
The more
compromised case and that which might offer greater doubts regarding a
legitimate priestly vocation in a young man is in relation to the virtue of
chastity. Although in this as in all cases there may be exceptions, which must
be determined, nevertheless as a general rule, the youth for whom it proves
very difficult[10] to keep perfect chastity
in the environment of the seminary or religious house—which is a kind of spiritual greenhouse, heated for piety
and removed from all kinds of dangers—will find it almost impossible to keep
custody when he must live “outdoors” in the midst of the storms of the world,
which he will have to confront very closely.
There is a
common agreement among authors in demonstrating that the candidate who has
contracted a vice against chastity is not able to present himself to receive
Holy Orders, and if he does so, sins mortally.
The length
of time that he ought to remain in perfect chastity before approaching to
receive Holy Orders cannot be mathematically determined since it depends
greatly on the temperament, the energy of character, etc., of the candidate. In
general authors tend to indicate a year before entering the priesthood. But the
Holy Congregation of Seminaries [currently called the Congregation for Catholic
Education] has given much more severe orders and desires that access to the
priesthood be excluded not only from all those who have sinned with another
person (even if this was only once), but also as a rule those who have fallen
into external mortal sin after the penultimate year of philosophy.[11]
IN
PRACTICE, the confessor or spiritual director must advise the candidate who has
contracted an evil habit against purity to leave the seminary or religious
house immediately in order [548] to choose another form of life more suitable for his
weak virtue. And if the candidate obstinately persists on a path that is not
his, absolution ought to be denied to his sins until he decides to leave or to
postpone reception of orders until he has successfully achieved the total
rectification of his habits.
435. This is what Canon Law states:
Canon
1031. Ҥ1. The presbyterate is not to be conferred except on those who have
completed the twenty-fifth year of age and possess sufficient maturity; an
interval of at least six months is to be observed between the diaconate and the
presbyterate. Those destined to the presbyterate are to be admitted to the
order of deacon only after completing the twenty-third year of age.
Ҥ2. A candidate for the permanent diaconate who is not married is not to be admitted until after completing at least the twenty-fifth year of age; one who is married, not until after completing at least the thirty-fifth year of age and with the consent of his wife.
Ҥ3. The conference of bishops is free to establish norms which require an older age for the presbyterate and the permanent diaconate.
“§4. A dispensation of more than a year from the age required according to the norm of §§1 and 2 is reserved to the Apostolic See.”
436. Canon Law states the following:
Canon
1032. Ҥ1. Those aspiring to the presbyterate can be promoted to the diaconate
only after they have completed the fifth year of the curriculum of
philosophical and theological studies.
Ҥ2. After a deacon has completed the curriculum of studies and before he is promoted to the presbyterate, he is to take part in pastoral care, exercising the diaconal order, for a suitable time defined by the bishop or competent major superior.
“§3. A person aspiring to the permanent diaconate is not to be promoted to this order unless he has completed the time of formation.”
The
episcopate requires a doctorate or a licentiate in sacred theology or canon
law, or at least true competence in these disciplines (CIC 378 § 1, 5°).
[549]
H) Exercising the Minor Ministries and Keeping the Interstices[12]
437. Canon 1035 states the following:
Ҥ1. Before any may be promoted to the diaconate, whether permanent or transitory, he must have received the ministries of lector and acolyte, and have exercised them for an appropriate time.
“§2. Between the conferring of the ministry of acolyte and the diaconate there is to be an interval of at least six months.”
Canon Law
indicates principally the following:
438. 1. Freedom to be Ordained.
“For a person to be ordained, he must enjoy the requisite freedom. It is
absolutely wrong to compel anyone, in any way or for any reason whatsoever, to
receive orders, or to turn away from orders anyone who is canonically suitable”
(CIC 1026).
439. 2. The Proper Declaration. “For
a candidate to be promoted to the order of diaconate or priesthood, he must submit
to the proper Bishop or to the competent major Superior a declaration written
in his own hand and signed by him, in which he attests that he will
spontaneously and freely receive the sacred order and will devote himself
permanently to the ecclesiastical ministry, asking at the same time that he be
admitted to receive the order” (CIC 1036).
440. 3. Acceptance of Celibacy.
“A candidate for the permanent diaconate who is not married and likewise a
candidate for the priesthood, is not to be admitted to the order of diaconate
unless he has, in the prescribed rite, publicly before God and the Church
undertaken the obligation of celibacy, or unless he has taken perpetual vows in
a religious institute” (CIC 1037).
441. 4. Spiritual Exercises [i.e.
a Retreat]. “All who are to be promoted to any order must make a retreat for
at least five days, in a place and in the manner determined by the Ordinary.
Before he proceeds to the ordination, the Bishop must have assured himself that
the candidates have duly made the retreat” (CIC 1039).
II. ABSENCE OF IRREGULARITIES AND IMPEDIMENTS
In
addition to the positive
qualities or conditions which we have finished examining, the candidate for
orders must possess certain negative
qualities, [550] that is, must be free from so-called irregularities and from simple
impediments that prohibit the reception of orders. We will examine each of
these separately.
441.2. 1.
The Notion. In ecclesiastical law,
an irregularity is understood to be a
perpetual, canonical impediment that prohibits the reception of orders or the
exercise of those orders already received.
We will briefly explain the terms of the
definition:
AN IMPEDIMENT, that is, a certain inability for
the clerical state, either culpable or by no fault of the one who has it.
CANONICAL, that is, established by the Church in
view of the dignity and honor of the priestly ministry and the reverence owed
to Holy Orders. No irregularity can be incurred except from this viewpoint and
which has been expressly defined by Canon Law.
PERPETUAL, at least, intrinsically; that is, it does not cease with the simple passage
of time, but may be overlooked only by a dispensation or a provision of
ecclesiastical law. This is distinguished from a simple impediment, which ends, as we shall see, when the cause that
produces it disappears.
THAT PROHIBITS THE RECEPTION OF ORDERS. This is
the primary and direct effect of an irregularity. Note, however, that an
irregularity does not affect the validity
of ordination but only its liceity;
although in itself, it binds the person gravely.
OR THE EXERCISE OF THOSE RECEIVED, even though the
irregularity was contracted after ordination. This is the secondary and
indirect effect of an irregularity.
442. 2.
Foundation. The remote foundation of irregularities is found in natural law and in
divine positive law, which demand due reverence and honor for the sacred
ministries. The proximate foundation
is in ecclesiastical law as we have already said.
443. 3.
Division. The following summary chart
shows the different classes of irregularities recognized by Canon Law:
[551]
a) By defect. These stem from some physical defect or moral incompatibility that is not fitting to the sacred ministry.
b) By delict. These proceed from a personal sin that is grave, external, completed with full deliberation, and committed after baptism.
c) Antecedent, if it is contracted before ordination.
d) Consequent, if committed after.
e) Total, if it impedes the reception or exercise of any order.
f) Partial, if it impedes only the ascent to a higher order or the exercise of some order (e.g. the priest that lacks a thumb is irregular with respect to celebrating the Holy Mass but not with respect to hearing confessions).
g) Public, if it has been made known among the faithful.
h) Occult, if it isn’t and probably will never be known by the faithful.
444. 4. Subject. Irregularities affect only the
baptized male; and if it is a matter
of irregularity from a crime, the subject must be able to commit it (in other
words, he has matured out of childhood).
The unbaptized are neither the subject of
irregularities nor of the sacrament of orders. But they can become the subject
of each after receiving baptism (for instance, if they receive baptism from a
non-Catholic as in the case of extreme necessity), or if the defect can remain after baptism,
affecting the person who still has it.
445. 5.
Conditions. In order to incur an
irregularity, the following are required:
a) IT
IS CERTAIN, that is, the crime or defect on which the irregularity is based
exists or can be certainly verified.
With this condition, the irregularity is contracted by the mere fact that what it is based on is verified, without the
need for any declaration from the Church.
A doubtful
irregularity is null. The reason is that in the case of something hateful, it
should be interpreted strictly, and in the case of something doubtful, it
should not be presumed but must be proven.
b) THE
ACTION that brings the attached irregularity by delict must be a personal, mortal sin, external, completed deliberately,
and committed after baptism. Everything that excuses a grave sin (e.g. lack of
grave matter, a fault of advertence, good faith, etc.) will also excuse from
the irregularity.
However, an occult
sin with all the characteristics that we have just indicated is sufficient to
contract an irregularity.
Ignorance of
irregularities, whether from a crime or defect, does not exempt one from
them. The same may be said of impediments (CIC 1045). The reason is because
irregularities are not properly speaking a penalty or a punishment (as it is
with excommunication for instance), but they are rather an obstacle or an
impediment that prohibits the reception or exercise of orders.
446. 6.
Multiplication. “Irregularities and
impediments are multiplied if they arise from different causes, not however
from the repetition [552] of the same cause, unless it is a question of the
irregularity arising from the commission of willful homicide or from having
actually procured an abortion” (CIC 1046).
From this principle it may be inferred that a
priest who is suspended from exercising orders contracts only one irregularity if he celebrates Mass several times. On the
other hand, the man who commits ten
homicides has ten irregularities.
447. 7.
Cessation. Irregularities cease only
by a dispensation from a legitimate superior granted in the internal or
external forum. Simple impediments
cease when the cause for them disappears (e.g. by the termination of military
service) or through a dispensation from a superior.
448. 8.
Author of a Dispensation. 1. THE
APOSTOLIC SEE can dispense from all classes of irregularities and impediments.
This faculty is exercised by means of the Sacred Congregation of Sacraments (or
of Religious) for these if they are not public;
through the Sacred Penitentiary if they are occult;
by the Holy Office [the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith], if it
deals with irregularities or defects relative to the Faith.
2. ORDINARIES can dispense those under their
jurisdiction as well as religious in the same place, either by themselves or by
means of another, from all irregularities that proceed from an occult delict (except one motivated by
voluntary homicide or by the procuring and carrying out of an abortion) or from
any other which has led to a judicial forum.[13]
They are also able to dispense from those which
may be doubtful, provided that they are those that the Roman Pontiff usually
dispenses from. They can also grant a dispensation when it might be difficult
to appeal to the Holy See or when there may be a grave danger in the delay.
3. ANY CONFESSOR has, with respect to those
persons who can have their confession heard, the same faculties as those of the
ordinary that we explained in the first paragraph of number 2 above in more
urgent occult cases if they cannot go to the ordinary and if there may be a
danger of grave harm or infamy but only so that the penitent can exercise licitly the orders already
received (CIC 1048).
449. 9.
Manner of Petitioning for a
Dispensation. The following is set out by Canon Law (CIC 1049):
Ҥ1. Petitions to obtain a dispensation from irregularities or impediments must indicate all the irregularities and impediments. Nevertheless, a general dispensation is valid even for those omitted in good faith, except [553] for the irregularities mentioned in can. 1041, n. 4, and for others brought to the judicial forum, but not for those omitted in bad faith.
Ҥ2. If it is a question of the irregularity from voluntary homicide or a procured abortion, the number of the delicts also must be mentioned for the validity of the dispensation.
“§3. A general dispensation from irregularities and impediments to receive orders is valid for all the orders.”
450. As
it has been stated, irregularities can be through delict or through defect.
The former always suppose a grave
fault in the one who has committed it; the latter can affect innocent persons.
Here is a complete list of each of the irregularities according to the new Code
of Canon Law:
Canon 1040. “Those affected by any impediment,
whether perpetual, which is called an irregularity, or simple, are prevented
from receiving orders. The only impediments incurred, however, are those
contained in the following canons.”
Canon 1041. “The
following are irregular for receiving orders:
1. A person who labors under some form of amentia or other psychic illness due to which, after experts have been consulted, he is judged unqualified to fulfill the ministry properly;
2. A person who has committed the delict of apostasy, heresy, or schism;
3. A person who has attempted marriage, even only civilly, while either impeded personally from entering marriage by a matrimonial bond, sacred orders, or a public perpetual vow of chastity, or with a woman bound by a valid marriage or restricted by the same type of vow;
4. A person who has committed voluntary homicide or procured a completed abortion and all those who positively cooperated in either;
5. A person who has mutilated himself or another gravely and maliciously or who has attempted suicide;
6. A person who has placed an act of orders reserved to those in the order of episcopate or presbyterate while either lacking that order or prohibited from its exercise by some declared or imposed canonical penalty.”
Canon 1042. “The
following are simply impeded from receiving orders:
1. A man who has a wife, unless he is legitimately destined to the permanent diaconate;
2. A person who exercises an office or administration forbidden to clerics according to the norm of cann. 285 and 286 for which he must render an account, until he becomes free by having relinquished the office or administration and rendered the account; [554]
3. A neophyte unless he has been proven sufficiently in the judgment of the ordinary.”
Canon 1043. “If the Christian faithful are aware
of impediments to sacred orders, they are obliged to reveal them to the
ordinary or pastor before the ordination.”
Canon 1044. “The
following are irregular for the exercise of orders received:
1. A person who has received orders illegitimately while affected by an irregularity to receive them;
2. A person who has committed a delict mentioned in can. 1041, n. 2, if the delict is public;
3. A person who has committed a delict mentioned in can. 1041, nn. 3, 4, 5, 6.
“The
following are impeded from the exercise of orders:
1. A person who has received orders illegitimately while prevented by an impediment from receiving them;
2. A person who is affected by amentia or some other psychic illness mentioned in can. 1041, n. 1 until the ordinary, after consulting an expert, permits the exercise of the order.”
Footnotes:
[1] Cf.
CAPPELLO, De sacramentis vol. 4, n. 363.
We follow this author closely in the following pages.
[2]
Cf. 1,22,104.
[3]
1,22,3.
[4]
I.e., an absolute moral obligation binding upon the person, regardless of their
personal inclinations.—Translator’s note.
[5]
AAS 23,120 ff.
[6]
1,22,3.
[7] Cf.
CAPPELLO, S.I., op. cit., n. 370, with whom we are in total agreement in this
matter.
[8]
Circular Letter of the Secretariat of State to the Bishops of July 2, 1912 (AAS
4.485).
[9]
Cf. CAPPELLO, op. cit., n. 405.
[10]
This does not mean to say that it is necessary that the candidate does not
experience temptations, even if they may be very vehement, but that they can be
overcome, and in fact that he does conquer them with the help of divine grace
and by employing the appropriate means.
[11]
Cf. ARREGUI, Compendio de teología moral (Bilbao
1945) n. 680.
[12]
The space of time that must pass between receiving different orders according
to Canon Law.
[13]
Actually, bishops and religious superiors enjoy wider faculties with respect to
dispensing from irregularities.
---
Source: Fr. Antonio Royo Marin, OP, Moral Theology for Laity, Volume II: The Sacraments, trans. by Richard Grablin (Madrid: Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos, 2006), 539–554.
This translation is from a reprint of the 5th Spanish edition, published originally in November 1994. The Spanish title is Teología moral para seglares, II: Los sacramentos.
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Repost: "To Scale: The Solar System"
This is really cool.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zR3Igc3Rhfg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zR3Igc3Rhfg
Monday, December 12, 2016
Repost: Steven Pinker debate excerpt "The Truth Cannot Be Sexist"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mYeZ9by-eM
Full debate (S. Pinker vs. Elizabeth Spelke): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bTKRkmwtGY
Full debate (S. Pinker vs. Elizabeth Spelke): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bTKRkmwtGY
Repost: NRK Documentary "The Gender Equality Paradox" (2010)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5LRdW8xw70&t=0s
Wikipedia page on the series: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hjernevask
Wikipedia page on the series: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hjernevask
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
St. Augustine on Sin as Preference for the Private Good
[69] In the way we know all things of which we have knowledge
by reason, and yet reason itself is also counted among the things we
know by reason. Or did you forget that when we asked what is known by
reason, you conceded that reason is also known by reason? [1] So do not be
surprised that even if we use other things by free will, we are able to use
free will through free will itself. The will that uses other things somehow
uses itself, the same way as reason, which knows other things, knows
itself too. Memory does not only embrace all the other things we remember.
Since we do not forget that we have memory, memory also somehow
grasps memory itself in us, and it remembers not only other things but
also itself – or, rather, we remember other things as well as memory itself
through it.
Thus when the will, which is an intermediate good, holds fast to the unchangeable good as something common rather than private – like the truth, which we have discussed at length without saying anything adequate – a person grasps the happy life. And the happy life, i.e. the [70] attachment of the mind holding fast to the unchangeable good, is the proper and fundamental good for a human being. It also includes all the virtues, which no one can use for evil. Although the virtues are great and fundamental goods in human beings, we thoroughly understand that they are proper to each person, not that they are common. Truth and wisdom, however, are common to all, and people become wise and happy by holding fast to them. Of course, one person does not become happy by the happiness of another. Even if you emulate another in order to be happy, you seek to become happy by means of what you saw made the other person happy, namely through the unchangeable and common truth. Nor does anyone become prudent by another person’s prudence, or is made courageous by another’s courage, or moderate by another’s moderateness, or just by another’s justice. Instead, you conform your mind to those unchangeable rules and beacons of the virtues,[2] which live uncorruptibly in the truth itself and in the wisdom that is common, to which the person furnished with virtues whom you put forward as a model for your emulation has conformed and directed his mind.
Therefore, when the will adheres to the common and unchangeable good, it achieves the great and fundamental goods of a human being, despite being an intermediate good. But the will sins when it is turned away from the unchangeable and common good, towards its private good, or towards something external, or towards something lower. The will is turned to its private good when it wants to be in its own power; it is turned to something external when it is eager to know the personal affairs of other people, or anything that is not its business; it is turned to something lower when it takes delight in bodily pleasures. And thus someone who is made proud or curious or lascivious is captured by another life that, in comparison to the higher life, is death.[3]
Footnotes:
1. See 2.3.9.36.
2. See 2.10.29.116–2.10.29.118.
3. See 1.4.10.30.
---
Source: St. Augustine, On the Free Choice of the Will, in On the Free Choice of the Will, On Grace and Free Choice, and Other Writings, ed. by Peter King (New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 2.19.51.194–2.19.53.200, 69–70.
https://philonew.files.wordpress.com/2016/08/augustine-augustine-on-the-free-choice-of-the-will-on-grace-and-free-choice-and-other-writings-2010.pdf
Thus when the will, which is an intermediate good, holds fast to the unchangeable good as something common rather than private – like the truth, which we have discussed at length without saying anything adequate – a person grasps the happy life. And the happy life, i.e. the [70] attachment of the mind holding fast to the unchangeable good, is the proper and fundamental good for a human being. It also includes all the virtues, which no one can use for evil. Although the virtues are great and fundamental goods in human beings, we thoroughly understand that they are proper to each person, not that they are common. Truth and wisdom, however, are common to all, and people become wise and happy by holding fast to them. Of course, one person does not become happy by the happiness of another. Even if you emulate another in order to be happy, you seek to become happy by means of what you saw made the other person happy, namely through the unchangeable and common truth. Nor does anyone become prudent by another person’s prudence, or is made courageous by another’s courage, or moderate by another’s moderateness, or just by another’s justice. Instead, you conform your mind to those unchangeable rules and beacons of the virtues,[2] which live uncorruptibly in the truth itself and in the wisdom that is common, to which the person furnished with virtues whom you put forward as a model for your emulation has conformed and directed his mind.
Therefore, when the will adheres to the common and unchangeable good, it achieves the great and fundamental goods of a human being, despite being an intermediate good. But the will sins when it is turned away from the unchangeable and common good, towards its private good, or towards something external, or towards something lower. The will is turned to its private good when it wants to be in its own power; it is turned to something external when it is eager to know the personal affairs of other people, or anything that is not its business; it is turned to something lower when it takes delight in bodily pleasures. And thus someone who is made proud or curious or lascivious is captured by another life that, in comparison to the higher life, is death.[3]
Footnotes:
1. See 2.3.9.36.
2. See 2.10.29.116–2.10.29.118.
3. See 1.4.10.30.
---
Source: St. Augustine, On the Free Choice of the Will, in On the Free Choice of the Will, On Grace and Free Choice, and Other Writings, ed. by Peter King (New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 2.19.51.194–2.19.53.200, 69–70.
https://philonew.files.wordpress.com/2016/08/augustine-augustine-on-the-free-choice-of-the-will-on-grace-and-free-choice-and-other-writings-2010.pdf