S
St_Francis
Guest
How do bishops, cardinals, and popes know that “grace still abounds” for specific people?Essentially yes I would go along with that.
These disciplines were formulated as the prudential application of unchanging moral norms/precepts to the conditions of the time.
Conditions, which called for the original rules to be made so as to protect unchanging moral norms/precepts, slowly changed until such time that contrary practises were no longer seen to be at odds with the moral precepts which were being upheld.
I don’t see how that necessarily follows or why it is relevant. The Pope can validly change Canon Law over night if he wishes to. He didn’t though did he.
Can you see that your principles of “reason” for your above argument are based on the implicit conclusion you have already decided is correct?
Shouldn’t reasoning be the other way around…in which case it seems more reasonable to assume your principles have speed wobbles.
But what is clear is that conditions in the Church have changed remarkably since the 1960s where Catholic remarried turning up in Church (Communion or not) was unheard of and were treated as outcasts.
Now significant numbers of same are in the bosom of the Church and many bishops Cardinals and Popes have first hand family experience of such Catholics and realise grace still abounds for many of these despite appearances. Some have publicly “come out” emotionally on this very point.
This is a completely new experience for the Church, conditions are not what they were for the last 1930 years. So it has been ready for a sudden shift of the tectonic plates for at least the last 50 yrs. Its past time and it had to happen.
Sorry for the short warning Rau - the warning signs were always there for those with eyes to see and ears to hear.
It was for me - maybe you not so much, and less for the Pope gainsayers amongst us…