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Stat_Crux
Guest
Agreed, Popes always try to guide the Church, which can include reforms. However, those reforms must still present themselves in continuity with what has gone before if it’s to be demonstrated that it is indeed a legitimate development and not a “corruption” - to use Cardinal Newman’s terminology for those changes which are not legitimate developments of doctrine. The overt contradictions compared to what the Church has always taught have not been resolved, and so therefore the suggestion that, under certain circumstances, you could willfully and repeatedly engage in sex outside of marriage would fail Newman’s own criteria for the test of a valid development.To interject a bit. TMC has a point. Pope Francis is the one leading these reforms. So they shouldn’t so heatedly attacked as they are. YET, that being said, as we have seen from Church history, Popes try to impliment reform and while it appears to be spreading during the designated pontificate, it’s fruit is truly tested in following pontificates. So Catholics need not act like the Church is about to be killed by any of this. If God does not want this in his Church, he will kill it off. Personally though, I think what Pope Francis has implimented will not be abolished, but amended to put safety rails up because of the number of clergy who are using these reforms for abusive purposes to Church teaching. Yet, we shall see. Catholics should be joyful, pray for God’s sovereignty to take charge in the Church. Keep calm and pray.
You correctly identify that a number of clergy are exploiting the wording of Amoris Laetitia to suggest a change in teaching which fits a personal agenda that they have held for a number of years. Cardinal Kasper has held his position since at least the 1970’s and has been rebutted by Popes and the CDF several times before Amoris Laetitia was published. However, no correction of the “liberal” interpretation has yet come and there are no signs a correction will come in the foreseeable future.
Prayer is always to be recommended. However, while we “pray as though everything depends on God, we should act as though everything depends on us.” It’s not enough to kneel and pray while somebody sets fire to your house if you’re kneeling next to a bucket of water.
Now that the change has been proposed, even if it hasn’t been officially taught, it will set Bishops, Priests, Cardinals and Dioceses against each other and we are all, one way or another, eventually going to have to make a choice. We either stick to what has gone before and always been since Christ revealed it to us, embrace a change in teaching and all of the consequences or we ignore the debate and let each diocese choose for itself. The last two options, of course, actually are the same choice: a change in teaching on something so fundamental that it was explicitly condemned in familiaris consortio paragraph 84 and the 1994 CDF letter. It is not just a question of what the Church will do, which is beyond the control of any one of us, but what we as individual souls will do. That is what we will be judged upon.
The Bishop of Malta has already stated to his seminarians that if they don’t like his personal application of Amoris Laetitia “the door to the seminary is open”; e.g. “get out”.