M
McCall1981
Guest
His proposal is vague, and it includes some parts that are theologically fine, and some that are not. To whatever extent his proposal includes reform of the annulment process, the internal forum, baptized pagans, faith a condition for validity, etc, etc, that is all fine, and that is not the controversial problem.No. I repeat myself. He has merely offered points for the Synod’s reflection, (labeled by him as an ‘opening’) as he was commissioned to do by Pope Francis, and has not etched in stone any of these points as his own personal opinion, barring the one statement I shared previously, that he was leaning with Ratzinger’s earlier writing on one point (which, as you should have noted, was not elaborated upon in Kasper’s speech, per se.)
Furthermore, he has not adopted for his own basis, the thought of Joseph Ratzinger, as I have proved beyond a doubt, despite what your bloggers had to say to the contrary. The outcome is still to be determined next year.
Can we let this rest and stop trying to nail Kasper to the proverbial cross?
The controversial problem is that his proposal also includes the suggestion to create a “penitential process” where, at the end of the process, a person with a valid first marriage is admitted to communion. That is the part that is problematic, and that is the part he being rightly criticized for.