D
Duane1966
Guest
Let’s see. You state in your post how you feel that withholding the “Bread of Life” from divorced and remarried Catholics is not merciful. I and another responded how based on Jesus’ teaching and what St. Paul states in Cor. why the Church withholding the Eucharist is merciful. We responded to a statement you made. Since we quoted scripture you compared us to Protestants. Where did that come from?I appreciate both of your replies, and I want to state up front that I have no intention of changing your minds or winning an argument. I respect your positions and I defer my personal judgments of doctrine and tradition to the authority of the Catholic Church. One of my reasons for participating in the forums is to get a sense of my church culture in the wider world, and it has been a very enlightening experience.
What I want to point out is this: I observed that 1) The rhetoric of mercy seems like a bad idea in defense of a traditional tribunal system that developed over centuries, which is the subject of dispute between Burke and Kasper as outlined in the NCR article and 2) that some conservative Catholics have reacted to the controversy with disproportionate vindictiveness.
You both immediately responded by sweeping aside the actual issue (making some procedural changes to the way the church processes annulments) and by making defenses of your understanding of biblical doctrine (how very Protestant!) to defend a definition of marriage you attribute to Jesus, God, and the Apostles (as if the decisions of the Magisterium are irrelevant?). I’m not an expert on Catholic culture (obviously) but it seems to me that your responses demonstrate the reasonable nature of my observations: when I brought up Catholics who go crazy and change the subject, you went a little crazy and changed the subject.
*No one is suggesting that we should teach that divorce and remarriage is not sinful. * We are kind of–sort of–talking about changing the process by which the church forgives a particular category of sin. This does not seem to justify the wave of terror sweeping conservative Catholic blogs. Tuesday–in a class on Patristic-Medieval Exegesis–I heard a Dominican Father say, “Any time you have to make your argument based on authority, it’s a sign your argument has problems.” When people respond to a minor threat by going nuclear, it’s a sign that their position is difficult to defend.
P.S. How is commenting on a statement you made about mercy changing the subject?