B
billy15
Guest
Yes. I think Tantum Ergo had a good post at #882, and I’ll quote her in saying, “Dear Lord, if what is happening now is truly Your will and is truly a sign of grace, let it be made manifest. If it is not, let that be made manifest as well. For it is THY will we wish to be done.”So you are saying that AL didn’t change anything, is that right? How do you square that with the Pope’s statement that it did make changes, and with the way it is being implemented (with the Pope’s approval)?
I wish to follow Jesus and remain in His truth, and therefore I will accept whatever the Church commands. Stat Crux made a good point that I was thinking myself, but he has articulated it better than I could: "nothing has been stated to explain why the reasons given in FC84 for rejecting Communion for those remarried Catholics who were sexually active have been resolved or removed. It isn’t sufficient to simply state “it can no longer be said that…”; why can it no longer be said? If these reasons are the foundation of Church teaching, then why are they suddenly cast aside so arbitrarily without consideration or concern to explain why?
We seem to have a gamut of interpretations right now. Archbishops Chaput and Sample, Bishops Olmsted and Lopes, among others on one side, the Argentine bishops somewhere in the middle, and then Bishop Elbs, the Maltese bishops, among others on the opposite side of the gamut. As canon lawyer Ed Peters commented,
Another priest also made a good point about the Argentine bishops’ draft:Unlike, say, the Argentine document on Amoris which, one could argue, left just enough room for an orthodox reading, however widely it also left the doors open for abuse by others, the Maltese bishops in their document come straight out and say it: holy Communion is for any Catholic who feels “at peace with God” and the Church’s ministers may not say No to such requests.
The thing is, some are treating the private letter of the Holy Father that leaked to be an act of the Magisterium. It’s not, and if it supposedly is, someone please explain. It’d be like saying Pope Francis’ remarks on planes are to be taken as an act of the Magisterium. The *dubia *, however, have officially asked for clarification which would officially resolve the issue of contradictory applications, which I understand you don’t see as much of a problem. But if Archbishops Sample’s and Chaput’s guidelines are wrong, I would like to understand why. I would like to see a point by point rebuttal of their statements, especially Archbishop Sample’s, as to why they have misinterpreted AL.As a matter of fact, if we want to be fair to what has been written (rather clumsily and unclearly), were someone, some couple, to read and take seriously – with the help of a good, faithful priest – what Amoris said, and what the Argentinian [draft] said, not many people would be able to discern that they can honestly receive Communion.
As of now, I’m just praying for unity in the Church, as well as for our bishops and leaders.