| Warning: An SSPX Priest Is Incapable of Absolving You from Sin 
 By Dr. Jeff Mirus ( bio -  articles  -  send a comment) | May 27, 2013 3:50 PM
 
 
  In certain sources which I refuse to publicize, it is being  strenuously argued that sacramental absolution given by the priests of  the Society of St. Pius X is perfectly valid. On this basis, one might  suppose that the faithful may confess their sins to an SSPX priest and  be assured of God’s forgiveness. Unfortunately, this simply is not true.
 
 Some may assume that absolution by an SSPX priest would be illicit  but still valid. If this were true, then the Sacrament of Penance  celebrated by an SSPX priest would be unlawful, yet it would still  “work”. But again, this is not the case, because the Sacrament of  Penance requires ecclesiastical jurisdiction to be valid, and there is  not a shred of ecclesiastical jurisdiction in the entire Society.  Several popes—the source of all jurisdiction in the Church—have made  this perfectly clear. For example, when Pope Benedict lifted the  excommunications of the SSPX bishops in a gesture of good will, he  emphasized that it was still the case that “the Society has no canonical  status in the Church, and its ministers cannot legitimately exercise  any ministry in the Church” ( Ecclesiae Unitatem, 4).
 
 This renders illicit all the ministries of SSPX bishops and priests,  but it also renders some things, including absolution, invalid. When a  sacrament is celebrated invalidly, it simply does not take effect. What  this means is that SSPX bishops and priests lack the sheer ability to  absolve from sin—except in danger of death, as we will see below.
 
 Canon 966 in the Code of Canon Law states the matter succinctly: “For  the valid absolution of sins, it is required that, in addition to the  power of order, the minister has the faculty to exercise that power in  respect of the faithful to whom he gives absolution.” The “faculty” is a  grant of jurisdiction to hear confessions from someone who has  jurisdiction. This could be the pope (who has universal jurisdiction),  the local bishop (who has jurisdiction from the pope in a particular  region), or a religious superior (who has jurisdiction from the pope  within his order and/or for express circumstances). Thus faculties can  be Apostolic (papal), episcopal, or regular (from a religious superior).
 
 The second paragraph of Canon 966 explains that this jurisdiction can  be conferred either by law or by “a concession issued by the competent  authority”. By law, all priests can offer absolution to a penitent in  danger of death. All other jurisdiction or faculties must be expressly  conferred. And, as should be obvious, a bishop or religious superior  can grant faculties (jurisdiction) only within the scope of his own  jurisdiction. Thus, for example, a religious priest may be able to  absolve members of his own order but not lay persons in the region where  he exercises his ministry, unless he has faculties from the local  bishop (which are often granted in more-or-less blanket form).
 
 However, there is a bit of a twist with respect to bishops, because  not only does the pope have the universal faculty for confession by  virtue of his office, but Canon 967 accords universal faculties by law  to cardinals and bishops, who accordingly can hear confessions and grant  absolution throughout the world. Therefore, a bishop can (and commonly  does, I believe) grant faculties to his priests to hear confessions  anywhere in the world. But as the second paragraph of Canon 967 makes  clear, such faculties are operative only if not denied by the local  ordinary. The local ordinary has the authority by virtue of his supreme  local jurisdiction to deny the use of the universal faculties to any  visiting priest and even to a visiting bishop. In this sense, then, the  universal faculties of bishops and priests, when granted either by law  or by specific concession, are dependent on the acquiescence of the  local ordinary, which is presumed unless otherwise stated. There is no  such dependence for the pope or for cardinals, who represent the  universal Church. [Note that this paragraph is a change made at 10:25  pm on May 27th to correct technical inaccuracies in my original  explanation of episcopal and priestly faculties under the current Code  of Canon Law.]
 
 As the example of the religious priest above indicates, jurisdiction  is not purely territorial. It can also be limited in scope in other  ways, and it almost always is. Thus a pope or bishop may grant faculties  in some matters and not others, and in fact it is usually the case that  both the pope and the bishops reserve certain kinds of cases to  themselves. In these cases, the priest not only may not give absolution, he can not. That is, he is incapable of doing so.
 
 The point in this context is that the validity of confession depends  in part on jurisdiction (faculties). Unfortunately, all SSPX bishops are  illicitly ordained; they incurred excommunication immediately upon  ordination, and though the excommunication has been lifted, they are  still operating illicitly. This is because they lack canonical  jurisdiction, as all recent popes have plainly said (see again the  quotation from Pope Benedict cited above). Therefore, though they may  claim to grant faculties for confession to their priests, they do not  possess the requisite jurisdiction to do so. Nor, indeed, do they have  the requisite jurisdiction to grant valid absolution themselves. They do  not have it by law, as their episcopates are illicit, and they do not  have it by concession from the pope. For this reason, the following  conclusion is inescapable:
 
 Unless you are in danger of death, do not confess your sins to an  SSPX priest. If you do, it will sound like you are being absolved, and  you may think you are being absolved, but in fact the Sacrament of  Penance will not “happen”. This invalidity is exactly like a layman  donning vestments to say Mass. Things may look and sound the same, but  the ritual will be empty of effect.
 
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