V
Vadne
Guest
The job of clerics like Cardinal Cupich is to be guardians of truth and tradition. Not to help give you a green light to do whatever your conscience discerns is okay for you.
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This is what some Pharisees said to Jesus when He healed a man on the Sabbath.What? I thought here we go again with denying God’s absolute truth and replacing it with situation ethics where a person determines right or wrong, sin or not, based on their particular circumstances.
I get the feeling that many would prefer to enter into a deeper relationship with Cannon Law.Would you tell us how entering into a deeper relationship with God is nauseating?
Excuse me, it was a woman who was healed not a man.which biblical passage are you referring to?
Cure of a Crippled Woman on the Sabbath.
He was teaching in a synagogue on the sabbath.
And a woman was there who for eighteen years had been crippled by a spirit; she was bent over, completely incapable of standing erect.
When Jesus saw her, he called to her and said, “Woman, you are set free of your infirmity.”
He laid his hands on her, and she at once stood up straight and glorified God.
But the leader of the synagogue, indignant that Jesus had cured on the sabbath, said to the crowd in reply, “There are six days when work should be done. Come on those days to be cured, not on the sabbath day.”
The Lord said to him in reply, “Hypocrites! Does not each one of you on the sabbath untie his ox or his ass from the manger and lead it out for watering?
This daughter of Abraham, whom Satan has bound for eighteen years now, ought she not to have been set free on the sabbath day from this bondage?"
When he said this, all his adversaries were humiliated; and the whole crowd rejoiced at all the splendid deeds done by him.
My sentiments exactly. No authority on Earth can make it ok for people in an objective state of sin to receive communion. Father Aidan Nichols OP said that those who believe otherwise are condoning a form of concubinage - church sanctioned concubinage.The bottom line in all this is what Cardinal Burke has reminded us: no bishop, no priest…no pope…can make it okay for the divorced and remarried to receive Communion if they are not practicing sexual abstinence. No “discernment,” no “spiritual journey,” no obfuscation of the truth can permit it. It is a false mercy to pretend otherwise and to lead people astray
It’s “canon law.”I get the feeling that many would prefer to enter into a deeper relationship with Cannon Law.
Thanks for sharing Jim. It amazes me when people deny that there are any problems with AL. It sometimes feels like I’m living the story ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’ because everybody knows that there are problems but too many keep denying it - despite the fact that it’s been written about in credible newspapers and discussed on EWTN.It is impossible to deny that there is evident disagreement among members of the hierarchy currently, particularly about the interpretation of Amoris Laetitia.
From the snippet of the interview that I watched on youtube, it seems to me that Cardinal Cupich could be interpreted as saying we can discern what is right and wrong in the direction to go next, like “ought I go to seminary and prepare for the priesthood”. This is not about a moral absolute. It is about the direction one goes in life. I agree with him if that is what he is saying. Discernment does apply to choices and path in life.…you have the grace by God to discern truth in your life in terms of where the Lord is calling you to the next step…