J
JoeyWarren
Guest
Continued…
While I respect **Archbishop Burke’s **integrity and sincerity, as well as his good intentions, I want to point out that a number of our Cardinals nevertheless think **his public stance is unwise **-- more damaging to our Church here in America than it is helpful. Cardinal McCarrick summed up the thinking of these Cardinals when in a recent interview he said: “I think the canons [in the Church’s Code of Canon Law] remind us that we have to tell our people that if they are not in communion with the church they should not go and receive Communion. But that doesn’t say to us that we should deny them Communion when they come. I would be very uncomfortable to have a confrontation at the altar, because it implies that I know precisely what’s in a man’s heart or in a woman’s heart, and I’m not always sure.”
I must bring this to a close now by observing once again that we are lawyers and priests, each one of us following our own discipline in both the objective order and the subjective order. All of us here are called by God, vessels of clay that we are, to help others to do good and avoid evil. We are called to observe what is objective and visible and then to serve the invisible God made visible in those around us, remembering always that those whom we serve have inner and hidden souls made in the image and likeness of God. May all of our judgments be made in fear and trembling before God, for we, too, will one day stand before His throne to be judged. May God in His mercy help us in full measure to be his good servants. Whatever we may do that is legally permissible, may it always be what is morally right. For while we are the Law’s good servants, we are God’s first.
Fr. Charles E. Irvin, J.D.