development: a significant event, occurrence or change
Development of doctrine: “the understanding of the things and words handed down grows, through the contemplation and study of believers…(which) tends continually towards the fullness of divine truth” (Constitution on Revelation, article 8).
If AL is a development of doctrine, as Cardinal Schonborn said it is, then this means something, and this something is change of existing doctrine. And I believe we would do well to accept this reality and that those who resist this change ought to at least develop their own understanding of it.
I don’t know, it sounds a bit of a circular argument. What was going through his head at the time of him saying it, before he has the evidence of him saying it on which to base his argument? Maybe something like…
“What I’m about to say may not appear to be supported by past Magisterial documents, but it’s about to become Magisterial after I say it, therefore I’m allowed to say it because once I have said it, it will be and is Magisterial. Therefore I am right in saying it because I said/will say it.”
Part of the problem, from my perspective is that we see eminent, respected Cardinals such as Cardinal Schonborn saying things which, from the perspective of many Catholics who were formerly secure in their faith, seem to contradict past Magisterial teachings of the same or greater weight or at least are difficult to reconcile with the clear teaching till now. I say that not as an insult to the Cardinal, but as an expression that some, including myself, can’t quite follow his logic.
Simply to say “because person X said it, it must be true” doesn’t sound like a very firm foundation for judging the truth of something. Isaac Newton was undeniably more intelligent and knowledgeable than I, but he was still factually incorrect about a great number of things as subsequent events have shown. Those mathematical ideas of his which are still accepted as true to this day are seen as true because he demonstrated them to be true using a rigorous process that could be repeated and demonstrated to others, and not because Isaac Newton was the one who said it.
However the argument, demonstrating with patience and charity, step-by-step how we get from the Magisterial teaching of Familiaris Consortio and Veritatis Splendor to the “liberal” interpretation of Amoris Laetitia hasn’t yet been put forward. If it is put forward, the idea and the reasoning can be respectfully discussed and debated in order to arrive at the truth of the matter. That would be a robust way of giving confidence that we have genuinely arrived at the truth.
Instead it feels like there isn’t transparency in why or how such an interpretation could be possible. We’re just told to smile, stop asking questions and ignore the problem that some are seeing. Certainly in my experience, including with some on these forums, if you question how a change such as some are proposing is possible, you’re automatically labelled as “anti-Francis” for asking honest questions.
If the “liberal” interpretation of AL is correct, and that those who hold that position are confident enough to bet their souls and the souls of others that they are following the will of God, then I’d hope for more confidence in putting their cards on the table so that we can have an open debate to arrive at the truth of the matter. If the “liberal” interpretation of AL is true, and that those who have sex outside of marriage may receive Communion (with more or less restrictive criteria depending on the specific liberal interpretation), then that position would have to be
demonstrably correct if we could ever again expect to have confidence that the will of God can be communicated from one person to another.