Sunday, March 04, 2007

The Eucharistic and Sacerdotal Doctrine of the 'Ritualists'

In November 1867, the Church Association, a radically protestant prosecutorial body created to attack Catholic Anglicanism in the church and civil courts of England, accused Anglican Catholics of holding the following:

'First, that the Supper of the Lord is a Propitiatory Sacrifice; secondly, that the Body and Blood of Christ are objectively present in the Elements; thirdly, that all who partake of the Elements receive the Body and Blood of Christ (including 'the wicked, albeit they do not receive it to salvation'); fourthly, that the Clergymen are Sacrificing Priests; fifthly, that the Clergy possess judicial authority to forgive sin, and that forgiveness of sin is not complete without Priestly Absolution; sixthly, that the Clergy are authorized to receive confessions as an habitual part of religious practice; seventhly, that Christ is to be adored as personally present in the Elements.'

Overall one can say, with a little correction and clarification - what a clear assertion of our Holy Religion! What was and is at stake as regards the Catholic Movement is not churchmanship or tastes or styles of worship, but the whole sacramental system of the Church and in particular the revealed dogma of the Real Presence. Keep the Faith...

4 comments:

The Bovina Bloviator said...

Everything looks in order. Tell me, what were they so upset about again?

J. Gordon Anderson said...

Yeah, I know... looks to me like they have it all figured out. Keep the faith indeed!

Anonymous said...

Bill says:

Isn't this rather close to an orthodox Lutheran position as well?

Anonymous said...

I challenge anyone to compare these points to Bishop Muhlenberg's Four Points (adopted by the REC) and show me any literal inconsistency.

IMHO, when you reconcile both, then you are and Anglican. If you can't, then your are either Roman or Calvinist.

The Comprovincial Newsletter - November 2024

The Comprovincial Newsletter - November 2024 - https://mailchi.mp/anglicanprovince.org/november2024