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So I gather you do NOT believe that the proposal to change doctrine OR pastoral practice to allow the divorced and remarried to receive communion will be accepted, correct?Matt Fradd of Catholic Answers says in his talk “How to Win an Argument Without Losing a Soul” that if you could provide just one instance in history where the Church changed its teaching, that would prove that it isn’t infallible, and he would leave the Church. I would do the same. Because if the Church changes its teaching, doesn’t that mean it’s not infallible? Why belong to a Church that isn’t what Jesus started? Because I think it’s clear from Church teaching that Jesus started an infallible Church. What do you think of that argument? No, because my family isn’t infallible. The true Church is. If the Church changes its teaching, it isn’t infallible, and therefore is not the true Church. If that’s wrong, what am I missing? Have you considered this counter-argument? The Church Jesus started is infallible. If the Catholic Church changes its teaching, then it isn’t infallible. Therefore, the Catholic Church is not the Church Christ established if it can change its teachings. There – how do you answer that argument? How can it change if the Church is infallible? I think it’s more likely than that. One reason why is, Pope Francis has already explicitly said he will keep the discipline the same and that the doctrine won’t change. “About the problem of Communion to those persons in a second union, that the divorced might participate in Communion, there is no problem. When they are in a second union, they can’t. I believe that it is necessary to keep this within the entirety of pastoral care of marriage.” source
I was watching Raymond Arroyo the other night on World Over. His prediction for the new year was that Pope Francis WOULD change doctrine in this regard. I was a bit surprised by that because I thought the proposal was more or less dead after the 1st Synod, where it went nowhere and overshadowed so many other important, much more far-reaching problems facing the Church today. I respect Arroyo and EWTN though, and it made me start to think that there is a chance it could happen.
There have been bad popes. There have been heresies declared by Popes (Arianism). Granted, these errors have been corrected. But I don’t think the Pope is infallible based on a number of previous examples in history.
To be honest all this fuss has made me question my Catholicism, not so much my Christianity. Is this what Jesus died on the cross for? This argument? Would Jesus want my faith and my salvation to hang on this argument, whether divorced and remarried Catholics can take communion? I am coming at this from a very different angle than you.