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Lormar
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The odious Arroya?What came across to me in that interview the Cardinal gave with the odious Arroya, …
The odious Arroya?What came across to me in that interview the Cardinal gave with the odious Arroya, …
I’ve only ever seen the one interview he did with Cardinal Kasper, but took an instant dislike to his attitude and tactics. He should have just done a monologue about his opinion of Cardinal Kaspers ideas rather than go through the facade of an interview.The odious Arroya?
Thomas, your method of debating me is to put words in my mouth and then ask me to explain them.I have not seen where anyone here has even suggested that those in a state of moral sin should receive communion. Nor have I. Tell me how on a pastoral level the withholding of Communion for all those in a state of mortal sin could possibly be accomplished.
If we are to speak of changing dogma, let us look first at #8 of the Dogmatic Constitution ‘Dei Verbum’:
"8. And so the Apostolic preaching, which is expressed in a special way in the inspired books, was to be preserved in an unending succession of preachers until the end of time.
"This tradition which comes from the Apostles develops in the Church with the help of the Holy Spirit. For there is a growth in the understanding of the realities and the words which have been handed down.
“For as the centuries succeed one another, the Church constantly moves forward toward the fullness of divine truth until the end of time.” –Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation ‘Dei Verbum’, Solemnly Promulgated by His Holiness Pope Paul VI on November 18, 1965
This is Catholic dogma. What Pope Francis has called for during the synod is hardly a ‘liberal proposal’.
LongingSoul, yesterday when you responded to a post of mine you said youAll just propaganda. Cardinal Kasper clearly said his contribution was not a ‘proposal’, they were ‘ideas’ and Pope Francis specifically asked him to present those ideas. If Cardinal Burke is such a great theologian, I imagine that he would have been invited to return to the synod to contribute but that isn’t the case.
I think that this is an especially good description of the problem. It is my observation that this situation is at least as difficult for the children of divorced parents as it is for their parents. Even with a Catholic education, these children frequently become non-practicing. They may be slow to marry; some never marry. Often in their teenaged years, parents are unable to guide these children who, as a result, become at-risk for drug use and promiscuity.He represents a continuing question being asked in the Church for at least 30 years. I’ve told this before but my uncle is a long serving Priest here in Australia and I was aware of this conversation happening on the ground since at least 30 years ago. A lot of parish Priests who are completely orthodox in every way, find it hard to completely resolve the dilemma they experience with this situation. It’s a common theme ‘on the ground’ as I said. A couple who are practicing Catholic, participating in the life of the Church, raising their children through the Catholic schools etc… but are permanently barred from Holy Communion because of this situation… is a difficult problem for a Priest who has the food of everlasting life in his hands.
I haven’t seen the in depth of Cardinal Kasper theological reasoning and I’m not sure if that has ever been printed anywhere. That, I imagine is what is talked about in the synod groups.LongingSoul, yesterday when you responded to a post of mine you said you
hadn’t read Cardinal Kasper’s proposals except for what you’d just read in the article
I had posted.
On what grounds are you supporting his ideas so strongly ?
I agree. Some sort of remedy for the situation is required… if not Communion… something significantly healing for the situation.I think that this is an especially good description of the problem. It is my observation that this situation is at least as difficult for the children of divorced parents as it is for their parents. Even with a Catholic education, these children frequently become non-practicing. They may be slow to marry; some never marry. Often in their teenaged years, parents are unable to guide these children who, as a result, become at-risk for drug use and promiscuity.
If the Church’s intention were to visit "the iniquity of fathers on the children and on the grandchildren to the third and fourth generations, " refusing communion to their parents would be the way to go about it. I am not saying that it is the Church’s intention to harm these children. I don’t believe that it is. Yet, in my humble opinion, that is what is happening. The children of divorced Catholics are leaving the Church and their children are not being raised in the Church. Whole generations are being lost. It is sad.
I think that this situation is a problem not only for the families directly involved but for every Catholic, and there needs to be a remedy. If the remedy can’t be making communion available to all parents, then it needs to be something else that counters the damage these Catholic families (and the Church) are experiencing.
When somebody precedes an ostensibly heretical proposition with something about the Holy Spirit blowing this or that way, you can be sure that it definitely is not the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is God, not some pathetic windsock invoked to justify crackpot theology.Again, how do arbitrarily determine when the Holy Spirit is guiding a Bishop and when they are being obstinant? You may have to accept that someone’s opposition is in fact the will of the Holy Spirit.
Yep. I was just pointing out that one need not confuse the refusal to accept something that is being promoted as shutting out the Holy Spirit. There are many Bishops who will quietly discern during the Synod, and come away saying the same thing they went believing - that communion for divorced and remarried Catholics is not possible. That doesn’t mean they were being obstinant, but quite the contrary - the Holy Spirit guided them as well.When somebody precedes an ostensibly heretical proposition with something out the Holy Spirit blowing this or that way, you can be sure that it definitely is not the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is God, not some pathetic windsock invoked to justify crackpot theology.
Thomas, your method of debating me is to put words in my mouth and then ask me to explain them.
Back in my post #43 I twice requested you to quote me, not put words in my mouth and say I’m being uncharitable. All I got back from you is crickets.
Now you are at it again. Please don’t waste my time.
Did I put those words from your post #43 in your mouth, KSU? I did not cite your name in my reply which was a general comment not meant for any particular person. There is ambiguity about the meaning of “second marriage”, and I explained why I think so. If you did not care to discuss the issue, fine, but discussion of ideas relevant to the synod is not unorthodoxy.Yes, Thomas, it is unambiguous. Living in an alleged valid second marriage is sinful precisely because it doesn’t exist. The Cardinal was speaking to orthodox Catholics who know what he means by a “second marriage.”
Indeed the sins of the divorce culture do end up being visited upon the children and grandchildren down to subsequent generations. That is not the fault of Church doctrine but of divorce, and divorce culture, which has continued now for several generations.I think that this is an especially good description of the problem. It is my observation that this situation is at least as difficult for the children of divorced parents as it is for their parents. Even with a Catholic education, these children frequently become non-practicing. They may be slow to marry; some never marry. Often in their teenaged years, parents are unable to guide these children who, as a result, become at-risk for drug use and promiscuity.
If the Church’s intention were to visit "the iniquity of fathers on the children and on the grandchildren to the third and fourth generations, " refusing communion to their parents would be the way to go about it. I am not saying that it is the Church’s intention to harm these children. I don’t believe that it is. Yet, in my humble opinion, that is what is happening. The children of divorced Catholics are leaving the Church and their children are not being raised in the Church. Whole generations are being lost. It is sad.
I think that this situation is a problem not only for the families directly involved but for every Catholic, and there needs to be a remedy. If the remedy can’t be making communion available to all parents, then it needs to be something else that counters the damage these Catholic families (and the Church) are experiencing.
My mother was good friends with a lady with almost the exact story except her husband died and she was able to go to confession during that week and receive for the first time in decades.I have to ask—why is communion the overarching issue here? Are couples in second marriages not at all concerned about the validity of their marriages, but only about receiving communion?
My wife had an aunt in precisely this situation. She was in a second and presumptively non valid marriage. She refrained from communion for decades because she respected the Church teaching on marriage while not wishing to deny her husband. She was a valued member of her parish, a good friend of the pastor, and a well known Catholic member of the local community. When her husband became impotent due to age and infirmity, she went to confession and began receiving communion again. No one ever thought of her as anything other than Catholic. For couples in this situation, does communion solve everything? Does it make the second marriage valid in their eyes?
I will hazard a guess and say a significant part of this has been an unwillingness by many, for whatever reasons, to endure what up to now has been the marriage tribunal process. Given the statistical reality that a very high percentage of these Catholics would be granted an annullment, it otherwise seems inexplicable.I have to ask—why is communion the overarching issue here? Are couples in second marriages not at all concerned about the validity of their marriages, but only about receiving communion?
My wife had an aunt in precisely this situation. She was in a second and presumptively non valid marriage. She refrained from communion for decades because she respected the Church teaching on marriage while not wishing to deny her husband. She was a valued member of her parish, a good friend of the pastor, and a well known Catholic member of the local community. When her husband became impotent due to age and infirmity, she went to confession and began receiving communion again. No one ever thought of her as anything other than Catholic. For couples in this situation, does communion solve everything? Does it make the second marriage valid in their eyes?
Did I put those words from your post #43 in your mouth, KSU?
**No, you didn’t, and I didn’t say you did. So it’s dishonest to now try to make that irrelevancy the issue. Here is how you changed the above words to put words in my mouth: “Almost everyone knows what the Cardinal means, he was speaking to orthodox Catholics who know what he means by a so-called ‘second marriage’, or almost everyone that is?”
You changed my words so that you could go on to make it appear I was being uncharitable to you; that I was saying everyone but you understands, viz: “It is touching, it is, these charitable replies to a comment trying to provide a response to the OP’s question.”**
Discussion and argument is fine, but I have no wish to engage in a dispute. It is why I did not earlier respond to your comment #43.
**I think you did not reply because I objected to your putting words in my mouth and challenged you to “Please give me the quote where I said everyone but you knows what he meant.” I had hoped it would end there, but in your post #132, directed to me, you took a statement by the prefect of the CDF from one of my posts, and alleged that I meant you or someone on this thread “suggested that those in a state of moral sin should receive communion.” OK, you had your say; you got the final shot, so let’s let it end here. **
From my amateur people observing over my 50 odd years, I think there is another aspect.I will hazard a guess and say a significant part of this has been an unwillingness by many, for whatever reasons, to endure what up to now has been the marriage tribunal process. Given the statistical reality that a very high percentage of these Catholics would be granted an annullment, it otherwise seems inexplicable.
LS, in this thread you have been stating the case for your side very well and you melt hearts. You should be a writer, but, please, not about the OP’s issue–your admirable compassion is understandable and commendable, but it blinds you just a little to the horrific but just consequences of sin.From my amateur people observing over my 50 odd years, I think there is another aspect.
A lot of people feel they did have a valid marriage based on the fact they were in love and bonded and surrendered to each other on the marriage day. But as I tell my daughter, people who are having a sexual relationship before marriage are experiencing a natural bonding that is meant for the period after godly discernment and commitment to marriage. God meant the true faithful discernment of marriage to be within a chaste courtship. The intense bonding or sexual intimacy can be mistaken for true love, when it may just be the natural hormonal/chemical activity generated for the post sacrament surrender.
That’s my theory of why people don’t try for annulment anyway.
Thanks for that gracious compliment about my writing, KSU.LS, in this thread you have been stating the case for your side very well and you melt hearts. You should be a writer, but, please, not about the OP’s issue–your admirable compassion is understandable and commendable, but it blinds you just a little to the horrific but just consequences of sin.
All humanity should tremble at those consequences, but sin is so damn powerful and we are so weak that all of us gamble with disobedience from time to time. Even a third of the angels did.
Is modern man, like the ancient Jews, too hardhearted to be chaste?Too besieged with filth from Hollywood, New York, Europe and even legal porn in commercial advertising 24/7 to be chaste?
Thomas is on to something; he reminded us that Pope Francis helped alleviate the problem you are so compassionate about by means of the new annulment process. I will take that a giant step further and predict that your Liberal friends in Chanceries around the world will use the new process to in effect usher-in a mini “pastoral solution” akin to that which God allowed the Jews.
I don’t like it, but, hey, God promised infallibility to Francis, not me. So, I’ll just learn to live with it even though I fear a lot of innocent people will pay the price of finding their valid marriages “annulled” because of the acts of their philandering/strumpet spouses who fall in lust at the office and want annulments. Let’s pray I’m wrong and that Liberal prelates will use the new rules responsibly.![]()
Guess it would’ve been 100% accurate if he’d said **" a *so-called ***second marriage" but I think everyone knows what he was talking about.
- Almost* everyone, that is.
Yes, Thomas, it is unambiguous. Living in an alleged valid second marriage is sinful precisely because it doesn’t exist. The Cardinal was speaking to orthodox Catholics who know what he means by a “second marriage.”
I did not change your words, KSU. My reply was a general comment that mentioned no one in particular. You mistakenly assumed it was in reference to only your comment.Almost everyone knows what the Cardinal means, he was speaking to orthodox Catholics who know what he means by a so-called “second marriage”, or almost everyone that is?
It is touching, it is, these charitable replies to a comment trying to provide a response to the OP’s question: “How will the more liberal bishops respond”?
Anyway, I was wondering how y’all would know a person in a so-called “second marriage”, as understood by everyone (well, almost everyone), is in the objective state of mortal sin by that fact alone?
Hello,…
Could you please clarify for me the following, if a Baptized Catholic & a Protestant were involved in a civil marriage, do they need an annulment, or are they not considered married at all?
From what you posted above, it seems like they are not married at all, right? So, if they stay in their civil union, they are in mortal sin & if they divorce, they do not need an annulment. …