Bishops: Integrate remarried Catholics into Church life

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The editor of Crux is Theresa Hanafin, who generally has opposed most positions of the Catholic Church over the last 3 decades. John Allen, who is associate editor, formerly worked for National Catholic Reporter (!). Compared to their other writers, or compared to Theresa Hanafin, or compared to the Boston Globe, he would be considered objective. I agree he is a very good writer.
But Crux is owned by the Boston Globe, which is considered possibly the most adversarial, to Catholicism, major daily newspaper in the US. I believe the late Fr. Benedict Groeschel “awarded” them his “Robie” award one year, for the most adversarial, non-objective, unfair, newspaper in the US. (Robie, named after Robespierre of French Revolution fame).

I would say there are 3 kinds of publications: there are those specifically pro Catholic; there are others, not in any way connected to the Catholic Church, not for or against; then there are those who are adversarial. I am not saying don’t read Crux; but better to call it what it is: an online department of the Boston Globe. I bet some of the more neutral or objective coverage might might come from Protestant sources, by the way.
I remember reading this column from crux’s ‘spiritual’ columnist…

cruxnow.com/faith/2015/01/17/feeling-devastated-by-this-pope/

after Pope Francis upheld the teaching of Jesus on contraception.

I thought then that the national catholic reporter has competition for the most liberal media that purports to being Catholic.
 
If you note, I specifically stated that they were not the same thing. A marriage tribunal will always reference the internal forum, which means that it is distinct from BEING the internal forum.
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The Marriage Tribunal is entirely of the external forum. There is the subjective and there is the objective, and they are not the same thing. A marriage tribunal objectively judges what it is told of whatever might be the subjective experience of one of the parties. This occurs as a trial, and the case is decided by the judge of the tribunal based on the testimony provided–the very definition of a ‘tribunal’. Simply stated, a marriage tribunal cannot get inside the head of either of the two spouses, persons it has probably never met, and it only knows what it is told, either by a person’s advocate or from the written record of the perceptions of others. One or the other of the parties might not even participate, as is permitted by Canon Law.
And a Marriage Tribunal focuses on the validity of the Sacrament. PART of that is Canon Law, to see if the marriage was conducted to Canonical Form. A tribunal can certainly discover that a marriage was correct according to Canon Law, but still invalid due to an issue brought forward by one of the parties via the internal forum.
A Marriage Tribunal judges the marriage under the provisions of Canon Law, just like any other court of law judges a case. I would agree that a sacrament is in effect judged, but under canon law this is not what legally occurs.
What the internal forum is NOT is a means of a person declaring, by themselves, apart from a Marriage Tribunal, that their marriage was invalid.
Again, a marriage tribunal is of the external forum as provided by Canon Law. Were another person to hear from a person concerning the internal forum, as was suggested by the synod, the resulting determination by the other person is (or should be) objective and in any case is of the external forum. That is its very purpose.
And no one in the Synod is attempting to make that claim.
And no one has said they were. With all due respect, this assumption is why silence is sometimes preferable to trying to explain what one knows. I would only note that it seems as though what is sought is a legalistic approach. What one reads from a document is objective knowledge. What is spiritual is an experience. These also are two separate things.
 
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This thread is wandering; please stay on the topic of the original post
 
“Of itself, the power of governance is exercised for the external forum; sometimes, however, it is exercised for the internal forum alone, so that the effects which its exercise is meant to have for the external forum are not recognized there, except insofar as the law determines it in specific cases” (1983 code of Canon Law, Can. 130).

There was at one time a specific reference concerning the internal forum with respect to divorced and remarried Catholics receiving communion. However, in essence the certain judgment of conscience is recognized by canon law if not externally.
When you say “there was at one time a specific…”, to what are you referring?

Canon 130 addresses the question of how ecclesiastical authorities in the Church–those with power of governance–exercise their power (legislative, executive, judicial). By nature, (“of itself”), it is exercised “externally” but there are occasions where it is exercised “internally.” While the old law referred to the “internal forum” as “the forum of conscience”, I think its best to keep the forum of conscience distinct from these two “places” of the exercise of the power of governance.

In practice, the power that can be exercised in the internal forum is executive power (dispensing impediments/irregularities, remitting undeclared, “automatic” penalties). Legislative power can never be exercised in the internal forum. Judicial power is always exercised publically.

Dan
 
Both the internal forum and the external forum are nothing new to the Annulment process. Both are used.

The External formum deals with what can be publically known or declared. , the presence or absence of Canonical form, the age of the participants, their use of drugs or alcohol during the wedding etc…

The internal forum dealt with acceptance or rejection of children, if one party felt duress or pressure to marry, undiagnosed mental issues, the view (or lack of view) of marriage as a permanent institution.

So use of the internal forum is not new in the least, and no one is suggesting that it is. And likewise, no one, least of all the Synod, is suggesting an EXCLUSIVE use of the internal forum, or one absent a marriage tribunal of some sort.
I would have to disagree with the statement that marriage tribunals “use” the internal and external forums. There is nothing “internal” about a trial. All that matters is what is external. Judicial power is always exercised in the external forum.

Dan
 
When you say “there was at one time a specific…”, to what are you referring?
I have been unable to find the reference and can only paraphrase it from memory. In either the CCC or the code of Canon Law it was specifically stated that through the internal forum a divorced and remarried Catholic who had not obtained an annulment could in some instances be permitted to receive communion. The text went on to say that the Church could not recognize this practice in any widespread way. I am certain this was called the Internal Solution. This was a reference to the conscience. There was also the mentioning of a secret recognition, in special circumstances, that would not be revealed by either the person or the Church. This was possibly in the pre-1992 catechism but not at all certain.
 
They already are part of church life. No one’s saying that they can’t go to church or participate in church activities. They just can’t receive communion while still committing adultery.
 
They already are part of church life. No one’s saying that they can’t go to church or participate in church activities. They just can’t receive communion while still committing adultery.
Sorry to bring this up again. But these three sentences are pivotal.

No one will remember what I said in prior posts, just let me say again:

What’s the use of going to church and participating in church activities if they can’t receive communion because they’re committing adultry??

Instead of saying the above, shouldn’t the church be telling them their soul is in danger?
Shouldn’t this be a serious issue? Maybe the church should stop just telling these couples to keep going to church? Maybe this makes it seem to them that all is okay?

Sorry. I don’t really expect an answer. Just making a point - again.

Fran
 
They already are part of church life. No one’s saying that they can’t go to church or participate in church activities. They just can’t receive communion while still committing adultery.
The language we use is interesting. For example, you said, " They just can’t receive communion while still committing adultery." Normally, when we used the word “while” we think of two things occurring at the same time, as in chewing bubble gum while walking. This does not convey the idea that one chewed gum a few times this month and will likely chew gum next week, while walking. Yet I know you do not mean that the person is actually involved in an adulterous act at the moment in time he is receiving communion.

This seems absurd and silly, yet underneath it is why this particular sin is so unique, as there is no other sin in Catholic theology that we treat as a “state” instead of an act, though one can be in a state of mortal sin as a result of an act.
 


This seems absurd and silly, yet underneath it is why this particular sin is so unique, as there is no other sin in Catholic theology that we treat as a “state” instead of an act, though one can be in a state of mortal sin as a result of an act.
It is certainly the most common “state of sin” out there. It results from the fact that divorce/remarriage are countenanced by the civil law and so, by/in civil law, the people involved are in a public state which is contrary to the faith.

If there was a state approval (like a license) for, let’s say an abortion doctor or a pornographer or a mafia boss (a favorite target of the Pope) or, etc., then such a person would be said to be in a state of sin for as long as they are in that situation. That’s the way it seems to me.

Dan
 
Just out of curiosity how can remarried Catholics who have not or cannot receive an annulment…cannot receive the Eucharist which is central to the Catholic faith and are considered adulterers living in grave sin…yet expected to be incorporated back into the life of the church…it won’t work.
 
Just out of curiosity how can remarried Catholics who have not or cannot receive an annulment…cannot receive the Eucharist which is central to the Catholic faith and are considered adulterers living in grave sin…yet expected to be incorporated back into the life of the church…it won’t work.
Well my wife’s aunt was in just that situation for a long time. She had always been active in her parish, was good friends with the pastor, was active in many parish functions, attended Mass every Sunday. When she married, her husband walked away after a few months, never to return. She remarried a non-Catholic civilly. Her application for annulment was denied. In those days, declarations of nullity were rare. In her relationship to her parish, nothing whatever changed, except that she no longer went to communion. She was still active in the parish, attended Mass every Sunday, was friends with the pastor. In today’s parlance, she was always welcomed. Later, her husband became ill and impotent, and she returned to communion.

I also had a friend, a non-Catholic married to a Catholic, who though not Catholic, was quite active in the parish. He attended Mass with his wife every Sunday, knew all the priests, even chaired several parish organizations. He was never not welcomed. Later, he did become Catholic. He was quite active in the parish for years before ever being able to receive communion.
 
It is certainly the most common “state of sin” out there. It results from the fact that divorce/remarriage are countenanced by the civil law and so, by/in civil law, the people involved are in a public state which is contrary to the faith.

If there was a state approval (like a license) for, let’s say an abortion doctor or a pornographer or a mafia boss (a favorite target of the Pope) or, etc., then such a person would be said to be in a state of sin for as long as they are in that situation. That’s the way it seems to me.

Dan
Yes, but the state of sin is a result of an act. I have never heard any being in the state of theft, for example, or the state of abortion, or even a state of premarital sex. Yet I have heard state of adultery.
 
I would have to disagree with the statement that marriage tribunals “use” the internal and external forums. There is nothing “internal” about a trial. All that matters is what is external. Judicial power is always exercised in the external forum.

Dan
No, The external forum deals with certain canonical elements, such as the place and time of the attempted marriage. If the Catholic form of marriage was used, and if not, was there a dispensation from the valid ordinary

the external forum cannot determine the dispositions of persons, if they were compelled, if they had hidden reservations at the time, if they had intentions of rejecting children. All of that are matters of the internal forum. But these all have a bearing on the validity of the Sacrament which is the focus of the tribunal.

That is why the tribunal attempts to discover these matters via the interviews and testimony of the participants. Such testimony, in a marriage tribunal INCLUDES questions related to the internal forum of the participants.
 
Yes, but the state of sin is a result of an act. I have never heard any being in the state of theft, for example, or the state of abortion, or even a state of premarital sex. Yet I have heard state of adultery.
Maybe the phrase came about because we talk about “the state of marriage”
…and contrast that with the “state of adultery”.
 
Yes, but the state of sin is a result of an act. I have never heard any being in the state of theft, for example, or the state of abortion, or even a state of premarital sex. Yet I have heard state of adultery.
It is an act that is state-sanctioned and, in state/civil law, public.

You have never heard of those other “states” because there is no formal, legal approval of any of them in particular cases. If the state said “here is your license to steal” or “here is your license to have an abortion”, that would be a different matter.

For marriage, the state says “you were once married. We, the state, have ended that marriage. Now, we declare that you are married again.”

Dan
 
Maybe the phrase came about because we talk about “the state of marriage”
…and contrast that with the “state of adultery”.
I think this is the most likely answer. After all, the Church normally does not develop theology or terminology around civil immorality. Anyway, I still hold this one issue to be theologically unique, and singular in its canonical treatment.
 
No, The external forum deals with certain canonical elements, such as the place and time of the attempted marriage. If the Catholic form of marriage was used, and if not, was there a dispensation from the valid ordinary

the external forum cannot determine the dispositions of persons, if they were compelled, if they had hidden reservations at the time, if they had intentions of rejecting children. All of that are matters of the internal forum. But these all have a bearing on the validity of the Sacrament which is the focus of the tribunal.

That is why the tribunal attempts to discover these matters via the interviews and testimony of the participants. Such testimony, in a marriage tribunal INCLUDES questions related to the internal forum of the participants.
I’m pretty confused by what you say here…and will just leave it at that.

Dan
 
Just out of curiosity how can remarried Catholics who have not or cannot receive an annulment…cannot receive the Eucharist which is central to the Catholic faith and are considered adulterers living in grave sin…yet expected to be incorporated back into the life of the church…it won’t work.
Peebo

I like how you think.

Fran
 
I’m pretty confused by what you say here…and will just leave it at that.

Dan
May I?

The external forum is regarding the FORM of the marriage. Just as in baptism, or any other sacrament, the form must be correct. The actions, the words the priests says, etc. Things that are visible. Was everything DONE correctly –

The internal forum has more to do with what was on people’s minds when they got married.
Did they intend to remain faithful? Did they want chidlren?

The internal forum is taken into consideration in the external forum.

If Brendan is around, he could check the above for correcting - I believe it’s correct.

Fran
 
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