T
Tantum_ergo
Guest
He made it THEN. Would he (the Pope) have made it if AL was in place? You’re missing the question.Easy. The pope made the determination. Even under Amoris Laetitia if the Pope, or even a priest in the internal forum understands that communion in a situation would be contrary to doctrine and the good of the soul, it is to be denied still.
But if you are going to say the time does not matter, then the Mosaic law that permitted divorce, and was also given by God, still needs to be explained. Why did God permit an exception for the hard hear then? Furthermore, the communion between God and David, and his subsequent forgiveness after a sin with Bathsheba, while still keeping her as wife, needs to fit with the same eternal truth that King Henry does.
And again, it is not that the time does not matter, it is the ‘matter’ that matters.
If God did permit divorce for ‘hardness of heart’, that was an exception to a truth that, in the fullness of the law being fulfilled (Christ) was now to be reinstituted for good. Since we aren’t supposed to question the Pope’s decisions, I’m sure no one would question God’s decision, right? Especially when God Himself --Jesus–announces that the exception is no longer in force, right?
AL would be like reinstituting the exception, after the truth had been reinstituted. See the difference?
As for God’s forgiving David, David killed Uriah, Bathsheba’s husband. Once the murder had been repented, and forgiven, Bathsheba was as a widow free to marry. Just as, in an irregular second marriage, if the spouse from the first marriage dies, then the spouse in the second marriage becomes free to marry.