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Did Thomas More and John Fisher die for nothing?
Following the words of Christ himself, the Church has always taught that divorce and remarriage is simply adultery by another name
BY ARCHBISHOP AQUILA
OCTOBER 19, 2015
Source:
denvercatholic.org/did-thomas-more-and-john-fisher-die-for-nothing/#.VicMHVUrKUn
Following the words of Christ himself, the Church has always taught that divorce and remarriage is simply adultery by another name
BY ARCHBISHOP AQUILA
OCTOBER 19, 2015
Source:
denvercatholic.org/did-thomas-more-and-john-fisher-die-for-nothing/#.VicMHVUrKUn
At the Synod on the Family taking place right now in Rome, some of the German bishops and their supporters are pushing for the Church to allow those who are both divorced and remarried to receive communion, while other bishops from around the world are insisting that the Church cannot change Christ’s teaching. And this begs a question: Do the German bishops believe that Sts. Thomas More and John Fischer sacrificed their lives in vain?
…
Last May, Cardinal Kasper claimed in an interview with Commonweal that we “can’t say whether it is ongoing adultery” when a repentant, divorced Christian nonetheless engages in “sexual relations” in a new union. Rather, he thinks “absolution is possible.”
And yet, Christ clearly called remarriage adultery and said adultery was sinful (Mt. 5:32, Mk. 10:12, Lk. 16:18). In the case of the Samaritan woman (John 4:1-42), Jesus also confirmed that remarriage cannot be valid, even when informed by sincere feeling and fidelity.