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  1. Excommunication is an institutional act of religious censure used to deprive, suspend, or limit membership in a religious community or to restrict certain rights within it, in particular those of being in communion with other members of the congregation, and of receiving the sacraments.

  2. Excommunication is a form of ecclesiastical censure that excludes a person from the communion, sacraments, and rights of a church. Learn about the different kinds of excommunication in Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, and other Christian traditions.

  3. Excommunication is a grave penalty that excludes a Catholic from the Church's communion of grace and sacraments. It can be incurred automatically or imposed by the Church for serious offenses, but it is not intended to be permanent and can be remitted by the Holy See or the confessor.

  4. excommunication. noun [ C or U ] religion specialized uk / ˌek.skəˌmjuː.nɪˈkeɪ.ʃ ə n / us / ˌek.skəˌmjuː.nəˈkeɪ.ʃ ə n /. the act of refusing to to allow someone to be involved in the Church, especially the Roman Catholic Church, and to take part in the ceremony of Communion:

  5. Excommunication, which is the gravest penalty of all, is always "medicinal". [2] Its object and its effect are loss of communion, i.e. of the spiritual benefits shared by all the members of Catholic society; hence, it can affect only those who by baptism have been admitted to that society.

  6. Summary. By the twelfth century, excommunication and interdict were the principal spiritual sanctions of the western Church. Excommunication meant exclusion from the sacraments, notably the Eucharist, and in its harshest form separation from the communion of the faithful.

  7. 31 de ago. de 2021 · Excommunication is the most severe form of church discipline for unrepentant sin, usually a sin of grievous, harmful, and public nature. Learn from Scripture how excommunication is to be done by a plurality of elders, with the aim of restoration and not punishment.