pnewton;11457521:
I am sympathetic to the plight of the divorced and remarried. I understand the reasoning behind refusing communion, yet it must be hard to be in the only situation that the Church considers a “state”. I mean, it is not like all rich are denied communion because of the temptation of greed. It is not like I am forever refused communion because I am in a state of using filthy language that I can not seem to break 100%. I would bet that there is not a soul here that has had to re-confess a particularly difficult sin multiple times.
Yes, Jesus spoke on the sin of adultery as it relates to re-marriage. He spoke of the sin of denying Him, yet he sat at table with the Great Denier, Peter. The Holy Father is concerned with this topic and is asking for (name removed by moderator)ut across the world from the clergy. I am hopeful that some clarification will come and some pastoral alternative will be found.
Yes but temptation is not itself a sin. Presuming to not be married to someone you are (presumptively) married to while also presumptively pretending to be married to someone you are not married to is sinful, doubly in that case. You could be said to be lying twice, perhaps.
You are not in a state of using filthy language. Use of filthy words and phrases are instances, not stretches of time, so to speak.
A woman who pretends to be a priest is living in a sinful “state,” and this seems to be somewhat analogous here. Her “state” of sinfulness does not end until she stops pretending to be a priest. Period. Now, if there can be a pastoral help with this, it might be in better catechesis on why the priesthood is reserved by God to men alone. And there are some other pastoral helps I can think of. But until a “woman priest” stops pretending to be a priest, she is in a perpetually sinful state, and it is public, which is a factor in its perpetual-ness.
Similarly, marriage is a public, perpetual thing. You aren’t married here and there, this moment and not the next, at 12:36 PM but not 12:37 PM, when you’re awake but not when you’re asleep, etc. You’re married in perpetuity (but not forever), unless the Sacrament/natural institution is ended normally (by which I chiefly mean the death of a spouse). And you are presumed to be married, because we have to presume it, until a certain degree of no-it-didn’t-really-happen-because-blah-blah-blah/nullity is come to by the competent person(s).
This perpetuity, by which I mean not subject to an on-off-on-off pattern (and I distinguish perpetuity from indissolubility here) is just, shall we say, a natural (by which I mean flowing from its substance, so maybe you can say “substantial”) aspect of some actions/doings/experiences of humans, and God for that matter. It is not supernatural (because only God is supernatural) but it is of divine precondition, let’s say, and it’s not something we can change, no matter how hard we want and try.
This is just a logical thing to me, really. Now, how we translate the sacramental, dogmatic, doctrinal realities–which afaik none of them can be changed–into pastoral action that does not contradict these realities (because Catholics, even clerics, much less the Pope have the authority to contravene these things) is the difficulty, and I can agree that this can, may, and probably needs to happen. And that will be a great challenge. For it we should pray.
ps: please disregard my atrocious style and grammar, i just wrote an essay for class and don’t care anymore…