K
KMG
Guest
This has got to be a new low for CAF.
Then you will have to accept that this is no change in doctrine and find peace with what Pope Francis is teaching in paragraph 305…That’s right, he hasn’t changed perennial Church teaching because he can’t.
Yes, and many bishops have interpreted AL in accord with the perennial Catholic teaching, so there is no conflict, for example Archbishop Chaput of Philadelphia. Other bishops have interpreted in a way that is quite at variance with the Church’s constant teaching, for example, the bishops of Malta. This is a problem.That’s right, he hasn’t changed perennial Church teaching because he can’t.
You seem to be saying that you believe that everything that the pope says or does is infallible!But if he is tasked by the Pope to push a certain agenda, then you’d be foolish to ignore him.
papalotry |pāpǝlätrē|:
the belief or stance that everything the Pope says or does is without error.
Uh-huh…sort of like what happened to Cardinal Burke?The more likely scenario is to go through the local bishop and get him to fix the problem. If he won’t, then maybe he will get assigned elsewhere and a new bishop will take his place.
Are we really loving God by receiving the Blessed Sacrament unworthily, something most offensive to Him? Should we not take the divinely inspired First Letter of St. Paul to the Corinthians seriously when he says:Jesus gives us this living water: it is the Holy Spirit, who proceeds from the Father and who Jesus pours into our hearts. The ‘living water,’ the Holy Spirit, the Gift of the Risen One who comes to dwell in us, cleanses us, enlightens us, renews us, transforms us by rendering us partakers of the very life of God who is Love…
That’s why the living water that is the Holy Spirit quenches our lives because it tells us that we are loved by God as his children, that we can love God as his children, and that by his grace we can live as children of God, as did Jesus. And us? Do we listen to the Holy Spirit who tells us: God loves you? Do we really love God and others as Jesus did?
This is serious stuff. You talk about “no strings attached”. Let’s not pit the words of our Lord against that of St. Paul’s Letter or what the Church teaches. The latter two sources find their origin in the same divine wellspring, Christ, meaning they cannot contradict each other. Do you mean that one who is conscious of grave sin may come forward to receive the Eucharist without any repercussions, as St. Paul speaks of? To substitute another situation other than adultery, would you say that the unrepentant mafia don, who has murdered and ordered the murder of several people, should go forward to receive the Eucharist, as there are no “strings attached”?Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For any one who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment upon himself. That is why many of you are weak and ill, and some have died. (1 Cor. 11:27-30)
I think this is the point we will see explored more fully, as it is actual mortal sin that kills, not object sin that one may or may not be aware of.Also, keep in mind that venial sin makes us very weak. But we are still alive. Mortal sin kills the soul.
Is it now the unpardonable sin?Let me be crystal clear. No adulterer may ever receive Communion.
Private dissent is fine, but publically a member of the clergy does not speak out against the Pope without consequences. Cardinal Burke being a good example. If you empower Cardinals to go off the range, you end up with a situation like the Great Western Schism.Luke6_37:![]()
You seem to be saying that you believe that everything that the pope says or does is infallible!But if he is tasked by the Pope to push a certain agenda, then you’d be foolish to ignore him.
papalotry |pāpǝlätrē|:
the belief or stance that everything the Pope says or does is without error.Uh-huh…sort of like what happened to Cardinal Burke?The more likely scenario is to go through the local bishop and get him to fix the problem. If he won’t, then maybe he will get assigned elsewhere and a new bishop will take his place.
Absolutely. However, St. John Paul reaffirmed the practice, not the doctrine, which is based in Scripture.Then you will have to find peace that AL 351 must be read in light of Familiaris Consortio otherwise you will have to admit that one the two popes have taught errorr which is not possible…even Pope Francis said AL is read in light of FC…it even quotes it. FC is quite clear no ambiguity. Its an objective state NOT subjective.
Familiaris Consortio
84…However, the Church reaffirms her practice,
Then you are using the word “Adulterer” in a very specific way without defining the uniqueness of the term in your usage, namely, a person who has committed adultery and has not been to confession and received absolution.I am being precise. Adulterers may not receive Communion.