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CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH
RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS PROPOSED
on the validity of Baptism conferred with the formula
«We baptize you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit»
QUESTIONS
First question: Whether the Baptism conferred with the formula «We
baptize you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit» is
valid?
Second question: Whether those persons for whom baptism was
celebrated with this formula must be baptized in forma absoluta?
RESPONSES
To the first question: Negative.
To the second question: Affirmative.
The Supreme Pontiff Francis, at the Audience granted to the undersigned
Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, On June 8,
2020, approved these Responses and ordered their publication.
Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,
June 24, 2020, on the Solemnity of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist.
Luis F. Card. Ladaria, S.I.
Prefect
✠ Giacomo Morandi
Titular Archbishop of Cerveteri
Secretary
* * *
DOCTRINAL NOTE
on the modification of the sacramental formula of Baptism
Recently there have been celebrations of the Sacrament of Baptism
administered with the words: “In the name of the father and of the mother, of
the godfather and of the godmother, of the grandparents, of the family members,
of the friends, in the name of the community we baptize you in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit”. Apparently, the deliberate
modification of the sacramental formula was introduced to emphasize the
communitarian significance of Baptism, in order to express the participation of
the family and of those present, and to avoid the idea of the concentration of a
sacred power in the priest to the detriment of the parents and the community
that the formula in the Rituale Romano might seem to imply[1].
With debatable pastoral motives[2], here resurfaces the
ancient temptation to substitute for the formula handed down by Tradition other
texts judged more suitable. In this regard, St. Thomas Aquinas had already asked
himself the question “utrum plures possint simul baptizare unum et eundem” to
which he had replied negatively, insofar as this practice is contrary to the
nature of the minister[3].
The Second Vatican Council states that: “when a man baptizes it is really
Christ Himself who baptizes”[4]. The affirmation of the Constitution
on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium, inspired by a text of Saint
Augustine[5], wants to return the sacramental celebration to the
presence of Christ, not only in the sense that he infuses his virtus to
give it efficacy, but above all to indicate that the Lord has the principal role
in the event being celebrated.
When celebrating a Sacrament, the Church in fact functions as the Body that
acts inseparably from its Head, since it is Christ the Head who acts in the
ecclesial Body generated by him in the Paschal mystery[6]. The
doctrine of the divine institution of the Sacraments, solemnly affirmed by the
Council of Trent[7], thus sees its natural development and authentic
interpretation in the above-mentioned affirmation of Sacrosanctum Concilium.
The two Councils are therefore in harmony in declaring that they do not have the
authority to subject the seven sacraments to the action of the Church. The
Sacraments, in fact, inasmuch as they were instituted by Jesus Christ, are
entrusted to the Church to be preserved by her. It is evident here that although
the Church is constituted by the Holy Spirit, who is the interpreter of the Word
of God, and can, to a certain extent, determine the rites which express the
sacramental grace offered by Christ, does not establish the very foundations of
her existence: the Word of God and the saving acts of Christ.
It is therefore understandable that in the course of the centuries the Church
has safeguarded the form of the celebration of the Sacraments, above all in
those elements to which Scripture attests and that make it possible to recognize
with absolute clarity the gesture of Christ in the ritual action of the Church.
The Second Vatican Council has likewise established that no one “even if he be a
priest, may add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy on his own authority”[8].
Modifying on one’s own initiative the form of the celebration of a Sacrament
does not constitute simply a liturgical abuse, like the transgression of a
positive norm, but a vulnus inflicted upon the ecclesial communion and
the identifiability of Christ’s action, and in the most grave cases rendering
invalid the Sacrament itself, because the nature of the ministerial action
requires the transmission with fidelity of that which has been received (cf. 1
Cor 15:3).
In the celebration of the Sacraments, in fact, the subject is the Church, the
Body of Christ together with its Head, that manifests itself in the concrete
gathered assembly[9]. Such an assembly therefore acts ministerially –
not collegially – because no group can make itself Church, but becomes Church in
virtue of a call that cannot arise from within the assembly itself. The minister
is therefore the sign-presence of Him who gathers, and is at the same time the
locus of the communion of every liturgical assembly with the whole Church. In
other words the minister is the visible sign that the Sacrament is not subject
to an arbitrary action of individuals or of the community, and that it pertains
to the Universal Church.
In this light must be understood the tridentine injunction concerning the
necessity of the minister to at least have the intention to do that which the
Church does[10]. The intention therefore cannot remain only at the
interior level, with the risk of subjective distractions, but must be expressed
in the exterior action constituted by the use of the matter and form of the
Sacrament. Such an action cannot but manifest the communion between that which
the minister accomplishes in the celebration of each individual sacrament with
that which the Church enacts in communion with the action of Christ himself: It
is therefore fundamental that the sacramental action may not be achieved in its
own name, but in the person of Christ who acts in his Church, and in the name of
the Church.
Therefore, in the specific case of the Sacrament of Baptism, not only does
the minister not have the authority to modify the sacramental formula to his own
liking, for the reasons of a christological and ecclesiological nature already
articulated, but neither can he even declare that he is acting on behalf of the
parents, godparents, relatives or friends, nor in the name of the assembly
gathered for the celebration, because he acts insofar as he is the sign-presence
of the same Christ that is enacted in the ritual gesture of the Church. When the
minister says “I baptize you…” he does not speak as a functionary who carries
out a role entrusted to him, but he enacts ministerially the
sign-presence of Christ, who acts in his Body to give his grace and to make the
concrete liturgical assembly a manifestation of “the real nature of the true
Church”[11], insofar as “liturgical services are not private
functions, but are celebrations of the Church, which is the ‘sacrament of
unity,’ namely the holy people united and ordered under their bishops”[12].
Moreover, to modify the sacramental formula implies a lack of an
understanding of the very nature of the ecclesial ministry that is always at the
service of God and his people and not the exercise of a power that goes so far
as to manipulate what has been entrusted to the Church in an act that pertains
to the Tradition. Therefore, in every minister of Baptism, there must not only
be a deeply rooted knowledge of the obligation to act in ecclesial communion,
but also the same conviction that Saint Augustine attributes to the Precursor,
which “was to be a certain peculiarity in Christ, such that, although many
ministers, be they righteous or unrighteous, should baptize, the virtue of
Baptism would be attributed to Him alone on whom the dove descended, and of whom
it was said: ‘It is he who baptizes with the Holy Spirit’ (Jn 1:33)”.
Therefore, Augustine comments: “Peter may baptize, but this is He that baptizes;
Paul may baptize, yet this is He that baptizes; Judas may baptize, still this is
He that baptizes»[13].
_____________________
[1] In reality, a careful analysis of the Rite of Baptism of
Children shows that in the celebration the parents, godparents and the
entire community are called to play an active role, a true liturgical office
(cf. Rituale Romanum ex Decreto Sacrosancti Oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II
instauratum auctoritate Pauli PP. VI promulgatum, Ordo Baptismi
Parvulorum, Praenotanda, nn. 4-7), which according to the conciliar
provisions, however, requires that “each person, minister or layman, who has an
office to perform, should do all of, but only, those parts which pertain to his
office by the nature of the rite and the principles of liturgy” (Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium,
28).
[2] Often the recourse to pastoral motivation masks, even
unconsciously, a subjective deviation and a manipulative will. Already in the
last century Romano Guardini recalled that if in personal prayer the believer
can follow the impulse of the heart, in liturgical action “he must open himself
to a different kind of impulse which comes from a more powerful source: namely,
the heart of the Church which beats through the ages. Here it does not matter
what personal tastes are, what wants he may have, or what particular cares
occupy his mind...” (R. Guardini, Vorschule des Betens,
Einsiedeln/Zürich, 19482, p. 258; Eng. trans.: The Art of Praying,
Manchester, NH, 1985, 176).
[3] Summa Theologiae, III, q. 67, a. 6 c.
[4] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 7.
[5] S. Augustinus, In Evangelium Ioannis tractatus, VI, 7.
[6] Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 5.
[7] Cf. DH 1601.
[8] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 22 § 3.
[9] Cf. Catechismus Catholicae Ecclesiae, n. 1140: “Tota
communitas, corpus Christi suo Capiti unitum, celebrat” and 1141: “Celebrans
congregatio communitas est baptizatorum”.
[10] Cf. DH 1611.
[11] Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, 2.
[12] Ibid., 26.
[13] S. Augustinus, In Evangelium Ioannis tractatus, VI, 7.
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