| Tuesday, 07-Oct-2008 05:01:51 GMT | Tell a friend |
![]() |
|
|
|
|
Latin-rite Catholic priests must be celibate. Eastern-rite Catholic priests, like Eastern Orthodox priests, may marry before they are ordained, but if they do so, they may not become bishops. In Latin-Rite Catholic jurisdictions, the sacrament of confirmation may, with rare exceptions, be licitly performed only by a bishop, and is usually given only to persons old enough to understand the importance of the sacrament. In Eastern-rite Catholic churches, that sacrament is administered by parish priests to newly baptized infants via the rite of chrismation.
The Latin Rite is so-called because until the 1960s, Latin was used as the liturgical language in Catholic churches in "Western" countries. The Second Vatican Council decided that the vernacular[?] would thenceforth be used instead.
Send this page |
|
|||||||
This online educational article is provided by contributions of Wikimedia Foundation. Partners: Digital Gadgets | Logo Design | Business Articles | Online Calculators | |||||||