Pardon granted, an absolutely reasonable question and one I’m happy to try and clarify.
I do not deny the authority of the Pope, Pope Francis is my Pope. I also do not deny the Dogma of Papal Infallibility as we have been taught it and as it has been defined in precise terms. I have enormous respect for the Pope. Given the bad image the Church had after the sex abuse scandals he has done enormous good in re-engaging both Catholics and non-Catholics alike in the central message of mercy contained in the Gospels. However, that does not mean that everything said is infallible. I say that not as an insult or criticism, but as a stated fact which he has said he agrees with on several occasions. It is also why he has asked and continues to ask us to pray for him, which we gladly do at every Mass we attend, that he may be strengthened in his teaching ministry. If I am wrong to think that, I pray for God’s correction
and the wisdom to see that correction for what it is.
With AL, no formal clarification has yet been offered, and nothing meeting the criteria of the Dogma of Papal Infallibility as understood when it was defined. However, Cardinals have asked for a formal clarification on what is being taught and how we must interpret it, to which no response (supporting one way or the other) has been given, instead there is in effect an “abstention” from a response. Yes, AL has some Magisterial weight, that is undeniable given that it comes from two Synods and bears the Pope’s name, but the wording is such that a number of interpretations may be made, including an interpretation entirely in harmony with the Church’s teaching on sexual morality and the Sacraments of Marriage, Eucharist and Confession.
Is it a troubling situation? Of course, I’m sure it is on both “sides”. Am I “sure” of my reasoning? Not at all absolutely. But it’s for that very reason that I follow the Church’s
constant and consistent teaching, not only on the specific question of Communion for the divorced and remarried, but moral theology and practice in general. The difference with the protestant argument used by Martin Luther wasn’t simply that he thought “the Pope was wrong”, but that he thought “the Catholic Church was not given authority by Christ, and had departed from the “true” Christian teaching as expressed in the Bible and introduced error into its teachings”. My position is the other way around, I hold that the Church has been right on this issue of moral teaching since the beginning because I firmly believe it was instituted by Christ himself as the Ark of Salvation to teach the means of our salvation. Is the situation in this current moment confusing for all involved? Yes. However, looked at against the teaching for 2,000 years it’s clearer what God wanted from us when he revealed his teaching to us.
It is critical that we do not allow this situation to cause harm to the Church or divide us. Today’s Epistle (Sunday 22 January 2017) was especially pertinent to the present situation (funny how the readings are always the right thing at the right time…). I pray that this is all eventually resolved in a manner which is to God’s greater glory