F
francesco920
Guest
I was reading this interview of Honduran Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga and I got really confused about a point he made about moral theology. He seemed to completely flip flop on the issue of pro-abortion politicians from one question to the next:

Is the Cardinal right? And what exactly does he mean when he says that he “cannot” deny Holy Communion to a person that he knows is living in great sin?
Here’s the link: time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1620570,00.html
**Q. Do you agree with the Pope’s statement that pro-choice Catholic politicians merit excommunication. **
A. It is canon law that everyone who works for abortion is excommunicated. It’s not something the Pope invented. If you favor abortion, you are outside the communion of the Church. And it was necessary to say that. There are people in Mexico saying I am Catholic and I support abortion rights. This is a contradiction in its very essence. As a teacher of the Church, the Pope has a responsibility of teaching when something happening is wrong.
I must say that I am completely confused**Q. Do you agree with bishops who deny giving Holy Communion to the these politicians? **
A. This is a different point. For who am I to deny Holy Communion to a person? I cannot. It’s in the tradition of moral theology that even if I know a person is living in grave sin, I cannot take a public action against him. It would be giving scandal to the person. Yes, he should not seek (communion), but I cannot deny it from him.
Is the Cardinal right? And what exactly does he mean when he says that he “cannot” deny Holy Communion to a person that he knows is living in great sin?
Here’s the link: time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1620570,00.html