Yes, but Trent noted
If anyone says that the Grace of Baptism is not required for salvation, let them be anathema.
I’m not sure what point you are trying to make. I wasn’t implying that doctrine ‘changed’. It developed. Applying our understanding of the doctrine with the light of various ages since Limbo took a part in the doctrine of original sin, is a different thing to how the people of the time understood it. That’s how doctrine is. The Church develops in its understanding of them. Limbo was accepted by people as an integral part of the doctrine of original sin because the Church in her wisdom said so.
So what new knowledge of human nature in this regard came about since Trent?
Are we less fallen?, are we less in need of Grace? Is God less or more free to grant Grace as He sees fit?
So what new insights of human nature or philosophy came since Familaris Consortio?
It amazes me when people ask these questions as though development is not a feature of the universe and the people in it. It’s a real thing. At the present time, the number of failed Catholic marriages has motivated a deeper look at what constitutes validity of sacramental marriage. That’s got to be a good thing in the long run and go towards helping people in the future contract true sacramental marriages.
Pope Benedict in this
2013 speech to the Roman rota noted the conditions of todayl…
- Contemporary culture, marked by accentuated subjectivism and ethical and religious relativism, places the person and the family before pressing challenges. Firstly, it is faced with the question about the capacity of the human being to bind him or herself, and about whether a bond that lasts a lifetime really is possible and corresponds with human nature or whether, rather, it contradicts man’s freedom and self-fulfilment. In fact, the very idea that a person fulfills him or herself living an “autonomous” existence and only entering into a relationship with the other when it can be broken off at any time forms part of a widespread mindset
And in regards to this modern day situation he reflects on how the resultant failure of faith might preclude the validity of a marriage…
I recognize the difficulties, from a juridical and practical viewpoint, of clarifying the essential element of the bonum coniugum, so far understood mainly in relation to the hypothesis of incapacity (cf. CIC, can. 1095). The bonum coniugum also assumes importance in the context of the simulation of consent.
Of course, in the cases submitted to your judgement, it will be the investigation in facto that will ascertain the possible grounds for this reason for annulment, prevalent or co-existent with another reason of the three Augustinian “goods” of marriage: procreativity, exclusiveness and permanence. One must not, therefore, disregard the consideration that can arise in the cases in which, precisely because of the absence of faith, the good of the spouses is jeopardized, that is, excluded from the consent itself; for example, in the hypothesis of subversion on the part of one of them, because of an erroneous conception of the nuptial bond, of the principle of equality, or in the event of the refusal of the conjugal union that distinguishes the marriage bond, together with the possibly concomitant exclusion of fidelity and of the practice of conjugal relations in humano modo, a truly human manner.
With these reflections, I certainly do not intend to suggest any facile automatism between the lack of faith and the invalidity of the matrimonial union, but rather to highlight how such a lack may, although not necessarily, also damage the goods of the marriage, since the reference to the natural order desired by God is inherent in the conjugal pact
In a sense, if many of those Catholics in second marriages are unaware of this failure of faith caused by the whole secularised culture they’ve grown up in, they may be able to be helped by the Church to see how that failure impacted on the first marriage and be helped to eventually regularise the second union officially.