O
OraLabora
Guest
Yet He did give the Church the power to bind and loose. Nobody’s asking the Church to abandon the doctrine of indissoluble marriage.We might have liked our Blessed Lord to have taught differently regarding marriage (Matt. 19). The standard is His, not ours, to impose.
What I am suggesting is that in specific pastoral circumstances, the Church (or rather her clergy) determine if continuing life in a state of grave sin (marriage after civil divorce), does in fact always constitute mortal culpability. After all the Church does teach that for other grave sins, culpability requires three conditions: grave matter, full knowledge, and full consent. Why does this not apply to this situation? Why is it always assumed that the culpability is mortal?
For instance the CCC says this about another grave sin (masturbation):
I have yet to see a cogent case made for why similar circumstances wouldn’t apply to the divorced and remarried.To form an equitable judgment about the subjects’ moral responsibility and to guide pastoral action, one must take into account the affective immaturity, force of acquired habit, conditions of anxiety, or other psychological or social factors that lessen or even extenuate moral culpability.
I would think the level of culpability is different for someone who abandons his young wife and kids to marry his secretary is rather different that of the abandoned wife who remarried and has been with the same person, in a stable union, with children, for 20 or more years. I think the Holy Father has alluded to the fact that the Orthodox more or less look at it this way.
Of course the Church could also streamline the annulment process, but at the risk of it being ridiculed as “Catholic divorce”…
The Current practice really comes across as “shunning” by another name.