Brian Acebo Glossary 2 min read

Excommunication

Excommunication is the Church's most serious canonical penalty — exclusion from the sacraments — a medicinal measure intended to call the excommunicated person to repentance and return.

Excommunication

Excommunication is the most serious canonical penalty in the Catholic Church — the exclusion of a baptized Catholic from the community of the faithful and the reception of the sacraments. It is a medicinal penalty, intended to bring about repentance and conversion, not permanent condemnation (CCC 1463).

What Excommunication Does

An excommunicated person is forbidden from participating in the celebration of any sacrament, receiving the sacraments, exercising any ministry or office, and receiving sacramentals and funerals. Excommunication does not mean the person is damned or beyond God's mercy — it means the Church is calling them urgently to repentance (Canon 1331).

Automatic vs. Imposed

Some excommunications are automatic (latae sententiae) — they take effect by the mere commission of the act. Examples include apostasy, heresy, schism, procuring an abortion, and desecration of the Eucharist. Others are imposed by a judge following a formal canonical process.

Its Purpose Is Healing

The Church does not excommunicate to condemn. The penalty exists to signal the extreme gravity of certain offenses, to protect the community of the faithful, and above all to move the person to repentance and reconciliation. Most excommunications can be lifted in the Sacrament of Penance by a confessor with the appropriate faculties (CCC 1463).

Frequently Asked Questions

Is an excommunicated person still Catholic? Yes. Excommunication does not erase Baptism — the excommunicated person remains Catholic but is excluded from the sacramental life of the Church. The goal is always their return to full communion (CCC 1463).

Does abortion automatically result in excommunication? Yes — those who procure a completed abortion incur a latae sententiae excommunication. This applies to the woman and to all who cooperate in the abortion as a necessary condition. Pope Francis has granted all priests the faculty to lift this excommunication in Confession (CCC 2272).

About the author

I'm a Catholic layman from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. No seminary, no credentials — just a deep love for the Faith and a conviction that ordinary Catholics are called to evangelize.

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May the Lord bless you and keep you.

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