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  1. sustantivo. 1. a second ordination. 2. Roman Catholic Church. the ordination of a priest whose first orders have been held invalid. 3. Ecclesiast. the second ordination of a priest whose first orders were received from another church. 4. the sacrament elevating a deacon, priest, or bishop to a higher grade or order.

  2. Overview. reordination. Quick Reference. The repetition of an ordination to the priesthood which has been conferred either extra ecclesiam, i.e. by a heretical or schismatic bishop, or intra ecclesiam but not canonically, e.g. by a deposed or simoniacal bishop.

  3. Traducción de "reordene" en español . Ejemplo de frase traducida: In relation with all the content of the site, it is prohibited the reproduction, use, copy, printing, distribuition, publication, translation, adaptation, reordenation and any other use or modification -either total or partial- of the data and content contained in this page, by any mean and of any form. ↔ En relación con ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ReordinationReordination - Wikipedia

    Reordination is the second ordination of a cleric whose original ordination is questionable. This may occur when transitioning between different Christian denominations, or if questions arise about the validity of the initial ordination.

  5. This use of the term "reordination" should be distinguished from two other possible uses: (1) the view of some theologians of the reformed churches that the power of orders can be lost and so validly reputed, and (2) reordination in cases where the first ceremony was clearly null, e.g., lack of proper form or matter.

  6. definición de reordination en el diccionario inglés. La definición de reordenación en el diccionario es la acción de reordenación, una ordenación renovada. The definition of reordination in the dictionary is the action of reordaining, a renewed ordination. Pulsa para ver la definición original de «reordination» en el diccionario inglés.

  7. reordination is of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Partly formed within English, by derivation. French réordination; Latin reordinatio; re- prefix, ordination n. See etymology.