Surely mercy is not the same thing as letting divorced-remarried Catholics hang around the parish on the fringes of community life, as second-tier Catholics forever barred from receiving the Eucharist? I have no objection to keeping divorced-remarried Catholics from certain official positions, but to bar them from receiving the Bread of Life…? It seems extreme, not merciful at all. It sounds like the traditional application of doctrine is more important to Cardinal Burke than the salvation of souls–or is communion irrelevant to our salvation? Should people with sin be denied the experience of forgiveness the rest of us receive?
As a very liberal person in a very liberal part of the world, I have still been able to accept and enter the Catholic faith even though I struggle with some of the Church’s policies (and I have been very blessed!). I am interested to see how many Catholics on the other side of the spectrum will be able to roll with the punches the rest of us have learned to endure out of the love for our common Mother. BUT regardless of how these synods turn out, I am pleased to be a part of the Holy Catholic Church.
I do not wish to get into a discussion of either pro or con about Cardinal Burke. I also do not want to come across as judgmental, either of you, or of the people of whom you reference.
But let’s try it from another angle. My recollection of John 6 is that after Christ’s statements about the Eucharist, many left Him. He then turned to Peter and said, effectively, “And are you leaving too?” To which Peter answered, “Lord, to whom would we go? You have the words of eternal life.”
So after that bit about the Eucharist, let’s look at St Paul. My recollection is that he says, rather bluntly, “He who eats the Eucharist unworthily brings condemnation down upon himself”.
And then we will jog back to the Gospels, where Christ says, clearly, that divorce and remarriage are serious sins.
We live in a world now in which the rules, which have been around for 2000 years, give or take a decade or two, have been removed from absolute rules, to personal preference. Morality now seems up to the individual, and we have all sorts of excuses (I refuse to use the word “reasons” as that implies that the rules were always subject to multiple permutations and interpretations) as to why someone, who has made deliberate choices, now finds themselves reaping the results of those choices.
I am well aware that many, many people - I would even dare say the majority - were not raised with these rules as rules - or perhaps even suggestions. All of that can be hashed out concerning that prior marriage. If someone has an invalid first marriage, then they can be reconciled with the Church and not be on the fringes.
On the other hand, if someone had a valid first marriage, and did not approach a tribunal before entering a second one, or approached and was told that the first marriage was valid, then they have made choices.
It seems nowadays that making choices is a) highly promoted, and b) something that should never have negative consequences. In fact, bad choices still have negative consequences. Given that with a valid first marriage a conscious, deliberate choice was made, and with the second marriage a conscious, deliberate choice was made, it does not carry any weight for the individual to then say “Well, I really didn’t mean it”, or 'Well, I had no clue what I was getting into." They are adults, not children, no one forced them into the second marriage, and Christ and St Paul are rather specific about sin (and a second marriage after a divorce from a valid first marriage is continuing adultery) and the reception of the Eucharist.
This isn’t about some cold-hearted male chauvinist celibate pigs grinning and in a sing-song voice saying “Now you got yours!”. This is not something cooked up by someone in the back rooms of the Vatican. This comes directly to us from Christ, and from the great Apostle Paul.
The Pope, the Cardinals, the bishops, the priests - none of them “cooked up” this. It comes right out of the Gospels and Epistles. And no, those statements were not “cultural to the Jews in first century Palestine”, and no, things have not changed. Adultery is still a sin; remarrying after a divorce from a valid first marriage is still continuing adultery, unless the couple either separates or lives as sister and brother, and yes, it is a hared, hard saying.
So were the words of Christ concerning the Eucharist - people left Him.
People still leave Him. And no, they ;don’t make "mistakes’. They make choices. They sinned, and are continuing to live in sin.
And yes, they need mercy; but Christ, when He forgave sinners, always said “Sin no more”, not “Well, you are really sad and sorry, and I know you are going to go back to that adulterous relationship, but I’ll just ignore that part”.
We want to have mercy, but our concept of mercy is to ignore the blatant sin before us of the second adulterous relationship. Christ didn’t; St Paul didn’t, and it is time we get back to calling sin a sin, and not a “mistake”.
A mistake is wearing a polka dot time with a striped shirt. And mercy is not saying “Well, I know you are living in an adulterous relationship, but that doesn’t really matter.”
According to Christ and St Paul, it matters.
IMHO, I also believe that we have a very large number of people who did not have valid first marriages, and we need to sort that out. But it needs to be sorted in truth, not in some misguided approach that in its essence says “Well, continuing in adultery really isn’t a sin, because, well, you made a mistake…”