with every new report of Bishops allowing pro-abortion Catholic politicians to commit sacrilege by continuing to receive communion, .
Let me try this a different way, and hopefully by analogy, it will help in terms of how we view our new Pope.
Bishops have the power, through Canon law, to ultimately refuse Communion to someone who is notoriously in sin.
to begin with, the process is not either simple nor quick; Furthermore, it takes at least some minimal cooperation on the part of the individual; unless they meet with the bishop it is at best difficult for him to begin the process.
But more than that, the bishop has other issues to weigh; those are known as prudential judgments. And we - you, I, my local pastor, Bro. JR, your best Catholic friend - none of us have the ability or the duty to make those judgments; nor do we have the ability or the authority to judge whether those weighing and balancing issues are done correctly. Rome does, and I have yet to see Rome step in.
Bishops not only have to weigh the effect of not doing something and what it may say to those in the pews; but also to those not in the pews - Catholics who should be; others who might join the Church, those who are oblivious to the Church, or hate it, and to the individual to be corrected.
The bishop also has to weigh what the reaction will be should he ban someone from Communion - how will they react; how will the press react (we already have a pretty good idea about that) and what damage that may do the image and perception of the Church; and to those in the pews and etc. In addition and not to make too fine a point of it, he also has to weigh the likelihood that the priests of his diocese will cooperate with his ban, and what he could or could not do should one or more not follow it (intentionally or unintentionally) and what the consequences of that will be.
And given that I am not a bishop, I suspect there are a few more things, if not a lot, which I have not thought of which would enter into the equation.
The bottom line is that there are few bishops who have ventured down the path of a “smack down” with a public politician and in those circumstances where it has occurred, one has to ask several questions - including not only the results, but whether the results would be the same in different circumstances and a different location.
Rome itself has not engaged much in the issue of whether or not the bishops should do “smack downs”, and we never seem to get the message. Just because they do not do what we perceive they should mean that we are right and they are wrong?\
John Paul 2 personally acknowledged he was not the best in terms of discipline. But when the individual nicknamed “God’s Rottweiler” became the next Pope, and all sorts of expectations were made that he would change things, he also did not engage in “smack downs”. There is a lesson there, if we are willing to contemplate it.
And that, hopefully, will help all of us as we take this new Pope’s measure. By what yardstick are we going to measure? Ours? And what is there that says our yardstick has anything to do with how God measures? And what is there to say that what we perceive he needs to do has anything to do with what the Holy Spirit may be prompting him to do?
And by what authority, should he fail to do what we think, do we presume to judge him and/or the direction of the Holy Spirit?