Some questions and answers from Card Burke’s most recent interview that are pertinent to this discussion here:
(Discussing the issues being raised at the Synod) Interviewer: Who is this benefiting? As faithful Catholics, we are surprised and worried about the sudden apparition of these themes.
Burke: Well, it can’t be a benefit to anyone, because it’s not true: it’s not the truth. And so it’s only doing harm to everyone. It may be perceived as a benefit, for instance, to people who for whatever reason are caught up in immoral situations. It may be seen by some as in some way to justify them. But it can’t justify them, because the acts themselves are not able to be justified.
Interviewer: Repeatedly, even the synod fathers who have touted the issues of “remarriage” of divorcee and homosexual or non-marital unions have repeated that the question is not doctrinal, but pastoral. What is your response to that?
Burke: That simply is a false distinction. There cannot be anything that’s truly pastorally sound which is not doctrinally sound. In other words: you cannot divide the truth from love. In other words still: it can’t be loving not to live the truth. And so to say that we’re just making pastoral changes that have nothing to do with doctrine is false. If you admit persons who are in irregular matrimonial unions to Holy Communion, then you’re directly making a statement about the indissolubility of marriage, because Our Lord said: “He who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery.” And the person in an irregular matrimonial union is living in a publicly adulterous state. If you give Holy Communion to that person then somehow you’re saying that this is alright doctrinally. But it can’t be.
Interviewer: So the simple fact of putting that under discussion is already an error.
Burke: Yes. In fact I have asked more than once that these subjects which have nothing to do with the truth about marriage be taken out of the agenda of the synod. [If people want to discuss these questions, fine, but they have nothing to do with the Church’s teaching on marriage.] And the same goes for the question of sexual acts between people of the same sex, and so forth.