jordan:
My last comment: Unless you can come up with clear verbiage indicating approval of the Holy See prior to the dubium, and release of the 1994 letter, we’ve really nothing much left to discuss.
At last something we can agree upon.
jordan:
I’m interested to see what any document you can come up with that would indicate the approval of the Holy See.
There are no other documents. The point of quoting the commentaries would be to justify my claim that the majority of canon lawyers knew that the 1983 code permitted altar girls. I guess I don’t need to bother, then.
jordan:
When you claimed it was off the deep end, I didn’t bother linking to it. When I found it myself, I found nothing “off the deep end” about it.
I’ve already indicated already how it was “off the deep end.”
Can you come up with any other example of an authentic interpretation that didn’t clarify and explain canon law, but instead created an “indult”. Can you provide an instance of any other canon lawyer claiming that this is ever a possibility? Here is what canon law itself says about authentic interpretations:
Canon 16 §2 An authentic interpretation which is presented by way of a law has the same force as the law itself, and must be promulgated. If it simply declares the sense of words which are certain in themselves, it has retroactive force. If it restricts or extends the law or resolves a doubt, it is not retroactive.
Nothing about indults here.
Secondly, can you cite any Vatican document stating that the use of altar girls in a public Mass is a liturgical abuse? That is, can you cite any Vatican document that would corroborate Msgr. McCarthy’s claim, “[any bishop who feels a need to permit female altar servers] should never allow the use of altar girls at regularly scheduled parish or public Masses which people are obliged to attend or where they could be accosted with female altar servers by surprise.”
The complete divergence between Msgr. McCarthy’s conclusions from his canonical analysis and the actual Vatican teaching regarding female altar servers is what places his article “off the deep end.”
jordan:
It might seem incredible to you, but it’s the same claim made by numerous other links I’ve given you, including the one on the CA website.
Helen Hull Hitchcock is not a canon lawyer, as the content of her article amply demonstrates.
jordan:
I also gave you the link to the GIRM, which references the 1994 letter, not 230.2, which is consistent with Msgr. McCarthy’s analysis.
Given that the 1994 letter itself references canon 230 §2, I don’t see your point here.
jordan:
You never mentioned what the “ad hominem” attack was. There is no dispute that I’m aware of about the fact that Fr. Huels has been laicized, nor about the incident leading to his removal. Why do you insist on holding up a sexual predator as a model canonist, while feeling that to bring this up detracts from the credibility of the author of the Adoremus article?
I’ve already given a link that explains why
ad hominem attacks are logical fallacies.
Here is a link to a rebuttal by canon lawyer Pete Vere that might give you additional insight as to what the
ad hominem attack was. (Just search on the words “ad hominem”.)
jordan:
To have what the Church refers to as a grave disorder, and to participate in related gravely sinful acts while performing as a Catholic priest, should make everything he ever did as a canonist suspect.
Perhaps the following skit will help illustrate the fallacy of an
ad hominem:
Teacher: Wrong, Jimmy. Your arithmetic is suspect because you are a miserable sinner with a grave psychological disorder.
Teacher: Does anyone else know the answer?
Teacher: Very good, Alice!
jordan:
This respected canonist gave me his professional opinion. When I sent him the email, I didn’t ask for permission to use his email, or his name, so I chose not to use his name. Once again, you resort to acidic terms that are entirely unwarranted.
I still maintain that if your friend has problems with the canonical analyses of the canon lawyers I mentioned in my post #124, then “talking trash” about them behind their backs is not a very appropriate or professional avenue to resolve this difference of canonical opinion.