L
Lion_IRC
Guest
This is crazy talk. The kind of alarmist garbage perpetuated by paranoid trads knee deep in conspiracy theories.
Any chance you could address the arguments rather than the people making the argument?
This is crazy talk. The kind of alarmist garbage perpetuated by paranoid trads knee deep in conspiracy theories.
A âdying forumâ that âattacksâ the Pope?And I should believe you, whyâŚ?
Youâre a username on a dying forum that consistently attacks the Pope and the hierarchy of the Church.
That may be it exactly⌠the pope finds himself stuck.As has been clearly demonstrated by the conflict, confusion, contradictory interpretations, etc., there is no up side to NOT responding to the dubia. Whether certain cardinals or bishops claim that the pope is exercising patience and reserve seems somewhat untenable. There seems only to be two reasons to avoid responding to the dubia: either the pope realizes that he is mistaken and that there is no way to justify the confusion and ambiguous teaching that he has promulgated and needs to figure out a gracious way to walk it back, or he truly believes this âprogressiveâ teaching to be the truth but cannot figure out a way to demonstrate this without trampling on top of already established teaching as put forth by VS, FC, and elsewhere.
âdefend the Church from tradsâ? What does that mean? Where are these trads? What are they doing wrong? There is no one at the front door of the Church asking anyone what âcategoryâ they fall under. God allows all to enter.So, ifâŚ
I should go elsewhere?
Someone has to defend the Church from trads.
Right. Though I fear that would pretty much be all that is in the well. The anti-trad hammer comes down and down and down. (is there an Internet âanti-tradâ movement? I donât know where that is coming from) I know a little bit about the trads per se.A âdying forumâ that âattacksâ the Pope?
WUT
This is too serious an issue to get bogged down in poisoned wells and ad homs.
Just for clarityâs sake: when and where did AB Chaput say âPope Francis cannot contradict John Paul II on Communionâ?
articleHerald cites and directly links to the interview by John Allen Jr. of Crux.Just for clarityâs sake: when and where did AB Chaput say âPope Francis cannot contradict John Paul II on Communionâ?
While I see it is the heading for the above article, which is repeated ad nauseam in dozens of syndicated copy-cat Net ânewspapersâ, it is strangely not actually quoted in the body of the text as coming from either the interview or his book.
Just sayin.
One of the leitmotifs that runs through the book is your concern for marriage and the institution of marriage. Todayâs debate over Amoris Laetitia pivots on that subject. What do you think is at stake?
St. Francis of Assisi encouraged the brothers, the Franciscan brothers, to accept the Gospel without gloss. And glosses were convoluted efforts to make the Gospel say something that it didnât say, or Jesus didnât really mean what he said. So it seems to me we ought to take Jesus at his word, and his words about divorce and remarriage, about it being adultery, are very clear. I mean, thereâs just no doubt about what Jesus said in the Gospels.
It seems to me that itâs impossible for us to contradict the words of Jesus, and itâs also impossible for a teaching to be true 20 years ago not to be true today when itâs the teachings of the pope. The teachings of Pope Francis canât contradict the teachings of John Paul II when it is a matter of official teaching.
The bold is John Allen, Jr.'s question, the plain font is Archbishop Chaputâs response.So, it seems to me we have to interpret Amoris Laetitia in the light of whatâs gone before it, primarily the words of Jesus, but secondarily the teachings of the pope, the Magisterium of the Church. And so how can it be true that people can receive Communion when theyâre living in an adulterous union today. How is that possible, when the Church says itâs not possible?
Thanks, that explains why my search engine missed it.The Herald article cites and directly links to the interview by John Allen Jr. of Crux.
Hereâs the part in the linked interview:
The bold is John Allen, Jr.'s question, the plain font is Archbishop Chaputâs response.
The Herald headline isnât a direct quotation, but per the last paragraph, the Archbishop states that his specific concern is the reception of Communion, so itâs not a deceptive reduction, either.
This is an important point that is too often misunderstood. Mercy is not appropriate in every situation because it is not possible in every situation. Mercy involves the forgiveness of sin, but it does not involve behaving as if no sin occurred. If we repent we are forgiven, but if we do not repent we are not forgiven, and the same dynamic is true with mercy. In order to receive mercy we must first repent; without repentance mercy is not possible.To receive his mercy, we must admit our faults. (CCC 1847)Who said anything about âearningâ mercy? You are confusing âearningâ with being properly disposed. Note that while Godâs love is unconditional, and even Godâs mercy and readiness to forgive is unconditional, the actual application of his mercy and forgiveness are NOT unconditional, but rather conditioned upon us having a godly sorrow that leads to repentance.
Youâre most welcome.Thanks, that explains why my search engine missed it.
Yes it is comforting to know that the only obstacle to Godâs absolution is an explicit refusal to be absolved.This is an important point that is too often misunderstood. Mercy is not appropriate in every situation because it is not possible in every situation. Mercy involves the forgiveness of sin, but it does not involve behaving as if no sin occurred. If we repent we are forgiven, but if we do not repent we are not forgiven, and the same dynamic is true with mercy. In order to receive mercy we must first repent; without repentance mercy is not possible.To receive his mercy, we must admit our faults. (CCC 1847)
*There are no limits to the mercy of God, but anyone who deliberately refuses to accept his mercy by repenting, rejects the forgiveness of his sins and the salvation offered by the Holy Spirit. *(CCC 1864)It should also be understood that mercy does not necessarily mean the elimination of punishment.*Any punishment which aims at correcting the one who does wrong is in fact a form of mercy. *(Augustine)
Where is the mercy in acting as if a personâs sins donât matter, or as if his sins werenât sins at all?
In no passage of the Gospel message does forgiveness, or mercy as its source, mean indulgence towards evil⌠(JPII, Dives in Misericordia)
Ender
True. Unfortunately it is not fully realized that a refusal to give up ones sins constitutes a refusal to be absolved. The complication with communion for the divorced and civilly remarried is the implication that such a situation (other than living as brother and sister) is not sin and does not require either repentance or change.Yes it is comforting to know that the only obstacle to Godâs absolution is an explicit refusal to be absolved.
Evil is in the eye of the beholder not the thing beheld.True. Unfortunately it is not fully realized that a refusal to give up ones sins constitutes a refusal to be absolved. The complication with communion for the divorced and civilly remarried is the implication that such a situation (other than living as brother and sister) is not sin and does not require either repentance or change.
Ender
That is incorrect. Evil is objective. Although, Iâm sure that some involved in sex trafficking, spouse swapping or some other evil would like to believe such a statement as the above to be true.Evil is in the eye of the beholder not the thing beheld.
I suppose if you tame the language, it could sound that way. But if one were to state that all active adulterers are gravely sinning so as not to be allowed to Communion, then the implication becomes quite apparent.There is no necessary implication that all active irregulars are so gravely sinning that they may not be allowed to Communion.
I donât know that the two popes are in conflict either. While Pope Francis is less clear than Popes John Paul and Benedict, Amoris Laetitia can be read in line with Catholic teaching. But if there is a conflict, it has not been pointed out HOW Pope John Paul II would be wrong. And if Pope John Paul was indeed wrong, then it would seem that the CDF was also in error, along with Pope Benedict, as well as the Council of Trentâs statements on marriage, etc.Even if it were true that Pope John Paul II and Pope Francisâ teaching were in direct conflict (which I am not sure is the case), why would it automatically be the case that Pope John Paul would have to be correct, and Pope Francis would have to be wrong?
Are you for real? God save us from binary lay moralists.Evil is in the eye of the beholder not the thing beheld.
You just defined moral physicalism.
When we speak of evil we are talking âmoral disorderâ which is over and above âphysical disorder.â Moral fault by definition involves âintentionâ which has a rather heavy subjective component.
That is why God doesnât care about animals that gather harems or steal the females of weaker males or kill other animals even if not required for food. Likewise humans sometimes get themselves into messy situations that effectively means sometimes even graced persons also lack a similar freedom of choiceâŚjust as Pope Francis states.
A typical untrained laymanâs understanding of âsinâ and âsinningâ.âŚall active adulterers are gravely sinning so as not to be allowed to Communion, then the implication becomes quite apparent.
Again, as Pope Francis and 1000 years of boilerplate Moral Scholastic Theology says, deeds of grave matter (a form of âsinning gravelyâ) are not always mortal and indeed are regularly venial and so not incompatible with sanctifying grace. And some such objectively disordered deeds may not involve moral fault at all.
I and many other loyal Catholics see no intrinsic reason why some of these may never approach Communion, especially if they are in a state of grace and the Church judges their âscandalâ is no longer what it once was.
Of course, older resentful brother types for some reason like to oppose a mercy that goes beyond justice (but which does not oppose justice).
Or the assumption that irreformable doctrine or infallibility is in play equally in all cases needs to be reflected upon further.I donât know that the two popes are in conflict either. While Pope Francis is less clear than Popes John Paul and Benedict, Amoris Laetitia can be read in line with Catholic teaching. But if there is a conflict, it has not been pointed out HOW Pope John Paul II would be wrong. And if Pope John Paul was indeed wrong, then it would seem that the CDF was also in error, along with Pope Benedict, as well as the Council of Trentâs statements on marriage, etc.
If publically known active irregulars are regularly receiving Communion I would assume the PP has absolved them and therefore it cannot be that they refuse to give up their sins despite appearances to the contraryTrue. Unfortunately it is not fully realized that a refusal to give up ones sins constitutes a refusal to be absolved. The complication with communion for the divorced and civilly remarried is the implication that such a situation (other than living as brother and sister) is not sin and does not require either repentance or change.
Ender
Iâm glad the good Archbishop Chaput has been asking for a clear interpretation. Raymond Cardinal Burke is doing the same. I also respect Chaput for putting his foot down on those on parish committees and parish ministries who are in irregular marriages.Good point, it needs to be clear especially to those Bishops who have made statements that have appeared to twist or actually have twisted AL(I hope thatâs not the case) to go against doctrine.