Revision as of 17:31, 1 September 2003 editRK (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users10,561 edits Excommunication in Judaism. Slight re-editing.← Previous edit | Revision as of 17:31, 1 September 2003 edit undoRK (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users10,561 editsmNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
The word literally means "out of ]"; the outward sign of this loss of community involves barring the person from participating in Communion, i.e., receiving the ], and as a consequence losing their status as members of the church. One continues to be considered Catholic, but a Catholic who is damned to Hell. In ], a person may also be barred from receiving the Eucharist. In this context however, this merely changes the member's classification in the parish from 'faithful' to 'penitent'. Excommunication is often intended to be only temporary, a "medicinal" procedure intended to provoke repentance. Excommunication can only be revoked by the Pope or the Bishop of the offender's home Diocese, except when the offender is in danger of death. | The word literally means "out of ]"; the outward sign of this loss of community involves barring the person from participating in Communion, i.e., receiving the ], and as a consequence losing their status as members of the church. One continues to be considered Catholic, but a Catholic who is damned to Hell. In ], a person may also be barred from receiving the Eucharist. In this context however, this merely changes the member's classification in the parish from 'faithful' to 'penitent'. Excommunication is often intended to be only temporary, a "medicinal" procedure intended to provoke repentance. Excommunication can only be revoked by the Pope or the Bishop of the offender's home Diocese, except when the offender is in danger of death. | ||
=== Automatic excommunication == | === Automatic excommunication === | ||
There are seven sins for which Catholics are automatically excommunicated: | There are seven sins for which Catholics are automatically excommunicated: |
Revision as of 17:31, 1 September 2003
Excommunication is religious censure intended to deprive one of membership of a religious community and, in the Catholic context, preclude the excommunicated from salvation.
In Catholic Christianity
Excommunication is considered automatic for some sins within the Catholic church, but can also be a formal affair, generally reserved for renegade clerygymen and such.
The word literally means "out of communion"; the outward sign of this loss of community involves barring the person from participating in Communion, i.e., receiving the Eucharist, and as a consequence losing their status as members of the church. One continues to be considered Catholic, but a Catholic who is damned to Hell. In Eastern Orthodoxy, a person may also be barred from receiving the Eucharist. In this context however, this merely changes the member's classification in the parish from 'faithful' to 'penitent'. Excommunication is often intended to be only temporary, a "medicinal" procedure intended to provoke repentance. Excommunication can only be revoked by the Pope or the Bishop of the offender's home Diocese, except when the offender is in danger of death.
Automatic excommunication
There are seven sins for which Catholics are automatically excommunicated:
- Apostasy, Heresy, or Schism
- Desecration of the Eucharist
- Physical force against the Pontiff
- One who actually procures an abortion and all accomplices
- Priest who absolves a partner in adultery
- Priest who directly violates the sacramental seal of confession
- Both parties to the consecration of a bishop without a pontifical mandate
In Mormon theology
Excommunication is also practiced in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (commonly known as the "Mormons"). It is reserved only for serious sins such as adultery. It need not be a permanent state; excommunicated members may become bona fide members again once they have worked through a sincere repentance.
In Judaism
Cherem is the highest ecclesiastical censure in the Jewish community. It is the total exclusion of a person from the Jewish community. Except in rare cases in the Ultra-Orthodox community, cherem stopped existing after The Enlightenment, when local Jewish communities lost their political autonomy, and Jews were integrated into the greater gentile nations which they lived in. A fuller discussion of this subject is available in the cherem article.