V. The Minister of Confirmation
1312
The original minister of Confirmation is the bishop.128 In the East,
ordinarily the priest who baptizes also immediately confers Confirmation in one
and the same celebration. But he does so with sacred chrism consecrated by the
patriarch or the bishop, thus expressing the apostolic unity of the Church
whose bonds are strengthened by the sacrament of Confirmation. In the Latin
Church, the same discipline applies to the Baptism of adults or to the
reception into full communion with the Church of a person baptized in another
Christian community that does not have valid Confirmation.129
1313
In the Latin Rite, the ordinary minister of Confirmation is the
bishop.130 Although the bishop may for grave reasons concede to priests
the faculty of administering Confirmation,131 it is appropriate from
the very meaning of the sacrament that he should confer it himself, mindful
that the celebration of Confirmation has been temporally separated from Baptism
for this reason. Bishops are the successors of the apostles. They have received
the fullness of the sacrament of Holy Orders. the administration of this
sacrament by them demonstrates clearly that its effect is to unite those who
receive it more closely to the Church, to her apostolic origins, and to her mission
of bearing witness to Christ.
1314
If a Christian is in danger of death, any priest should give him
Confirmation.132 Indeed the Church desires that none of her children, even
the youngest, should depart this world without having been perfected by the
Holy Spirit with the gift of Christ's fullness.
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