B
Blue_Horizon
Guest
What you say is all true and I do not believe Bookcat disagrees.Repeating it more often adds no weight. Adultery is adultery, as that is a reflexive sentence. However, in the context of Amoris Laetitia, it is not always clear if there is adultery. That is why the Church has the system of marriage tribunals in the first place. The bigger issue is whether adultery is always sinful, or at least venial sin. Since, as the Church teaches, one can be in a state of adultery while in a second marriage, and since one be in second marriage without any knowledge or intent of sin, then it follows that adultery, as defined as being in a second marriage, may not be subjectively sinful. One simply cannot “accidentally” sin. It would be like we suddenly learned that eating chicken was sinful when we have done it our whole life. Our act prior to that knowledge would not leave any stain of sin on us.
All he is pointing out is that “adultery” (like any sin) gets its type/name mostly if not completely by identifying the first font (the “matter”, the objective external behaviour if you will).
This is what I take him to mean by saying an “act” of adultery (whether mortal or venial) is defined by the “matter” of the act of adultery.
But that is a completely different issue as to whether all irregulars are actually involved in the “matter” of adultery as you rightly say. Some will believe they are free to marry again, and objectively they could be right even if the level of proof required to demonstrate that to a Tribunal is or was lacking for some time.