T
TimothyH
Guest
The issue is not the remarrying after divorce without annulment in-and-of itself. That is always a grave sin. The issue is how much blame each person has to bear. The issue is culpability.
In the play Les Miserables, the main character Jean Valjean stole a loaf of bread. He took something that wasn’t his without permission and that is the definition of theft. He broke one of the ten commandments and so his actions were objectively sinful. He sinned - period - but he did it because his children were starving. The question then becomes how much blame he bears - what is his level of culpability?
If Jean Valjean has no culpability, if he cannot be blamed, then can he receive the Eucharist?
A divorced and remarried couple may be objectively culpable, in a state of sin, but they may have reduced subjective culpability, or not be culpable at all. That is what they are looking at.
It is an important question to ask. The Catholics Come Home ministry at our Church gets lots of couples who left the Church because they were told they could not receive, or people who want to come back but they have questions about their status. Some are told they cannot receive the Eucharist because they are in a state of sin and they walk back out the door and never come back. If they have no culpability then maybe they can receive???
I don’t know. That is up to the Church.
-Tim-
In the play Les Miserables, the main character Jean Valjean stole a loaf of bread. He took something that wasn’t his without permission and that is the definition of theft. He broke one of the ten commandments and so his actions were objectively sinful. He sinned - period - but he did it because his children were starving. The question then becomes how much blame he bears - what is his level of culpability?
If Jean Valjean has no culpability, if he cannot be blamed, then can he receive the Eucharist?
A divorced and remarried couple may be objectively culpable, in a state of sin, but they may have reduced subjective culpability, or not be culpable at all. That is what they are looking at.
It is an important question to ask. The Catholics Come Home ministry at our Church gets lots of couples who left the Church because they were told they could not receive, or people who want to come back but they have questions about their status. Some are told they cannot receive the Eucharist because they are in a state of sin and they walk back out the door and never come back. If they have no culpability then maybe they can receive???
I don’t know. That is up to the Church.
-Tim-