O
One_point
Guest
You people are mixing issues. Everyone has to leave something when they convert to life in Christ, must leave whatever is incompatible with this new life. Some people have to leave their entire families. Someone who remarried while still married validly to another, when the former was a sacramental marriage and not just a natural one, cannot be guilty of his past decisions if he did not know any better. However, now that he knows, he must leave everything and follow Christ. He cannot persist in adultery. If you are living with your boyfriend for many years and he refuses a wedding, when you follow Christ you must move out. You cannot just say that because we have done it before now it’s ok. Before you didn’t know any better. But now you know. You cannot apply the mind of your former ignorance once you have seen the light. Abstinence will not kill you, for goodness’ sake.I think that you (and some others) are taking Jesus’ words and extrapolating them to defend the church’s current discipline of no communion for those in second marriages.
We have no idea if a person in a second marriage is loving something more than God. I prefer to take Jesus’ comments in context of ALL he taught. He forgives any who sincerely repent. By saying “no sex” to someone who has been remarried for 25+ years or even 10+ years–because they didn’t know it was wrong–we are simply covering up the situation by a law that God never made. I disagree that someone in a second marriage has “not repented” as so many are quick to say. We do not know their heart. That is why I say they are “stuck” in a way. Two wrongs do not make a right. (as it would be in leaving a second family). To say that not having sex makes it all ok is ridiculous because it places all the emphasis on sex which is only one part of the marriage. I understand why the church says this. But the couple is still married–sharing home, family, daily living, etc-- whether they are having sex or not. And remember no one else would know that the couple is or is not having sex so the issue of scandal may or may not apply.
The church is right about the permanence of marriage. But how that applies in today’s messy world of divorce, remarriage, bad teaching, etc. and what to do with people ALREADY in this situation is the issue here. The church failed many people over the years by its lack of teaching and now many people are already in second marriages without having known (or in the case of Protestants it didn’t even apply). These are the people who need compassion. I believe this is what the Pope plans to discuss and figure out if it can be addressed in a better way.
For everyone who will jump in now and say that then everyone can just divorce and remarry, I am not talking about people who KNOWINGLY end a marriage by divorce for selfish reasons and then enter a second marriage saying who cares what the church thinks. But not every divorce/remarriage is such a case! Those people deserve compassion and not to be cut off from receiving Christ which they (and we all) desperately need.
As far as the person who quoted receiving Christ unworthily, yes, of course. But again, no one rule (no communion for remarried people) covers every instance. One must look in one’s own heart to see if they are receiving worthily. That is true no matter WHAT the circumstance.
By placing canonical rules over everyone and saying “no exceptions”, people think they can judge someone else’s heart and situtation. They cannot. Only God can. What you see on the outside may not be at all what is going on in someone’s heart.
God bless you too.
People here waiting for the church to say that it’s ok to receive communion while CONTINUING to live a “married” life that is adulterous in reality, you will be very disappointed when the church relays the plain truth yet again. You have a problem, you take it up with Jesus. It is he who called it adultery, not the church. And it was he who inspired St. Paul to say that those who receive communion unworthily are receiving condemnation unto themselves. Receiving communion while engaging in adultery without intending to stop is definitely receiving un worthily. AnneTeresa, Your comment that the church made up this law shows you have very little understanding of the foundations of catholic beliefs and doctrines. I don’t mean that as an insult.