On Day One of Synod 2015, conservatives strike first

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Because? Okay, let me try another approach, since examples that contradict your statement did not work. Can you show many anywhere the Church has ever taught that whenever a pastoral practice is changed, that doctrine is also changes as a result?
What if there was a pastoral practice to allow the consecration of Wheat Thins and Kool-Aid, would that not change the underlying doctrine?
 
Here’s what you said:

There was not a change in teaching, it has always remained the same. But a change in practice from both species to one and back to both has no effect on the doctrinal teaching that both species contain the body, blood, soul and divinity of Christ—an unchanging and unchangeable doctrine.
Exactly the point! I was trying to show that this statement, “Doctrine IS changed if the pastoral practice attached to it is changed,” is not a universal truth (or truth at all). It is reflexive reasoning. A leads to B therefore* B* leads to A. Crossing the Lincoln tunnel from New York puts one in New Jersey. Therefore if someone is in New Jersey, they had to get there through the Lincoln Tunnel???
A change in practice from not admitting divorced and remarried to receive communion, to a practice admitting divorced and remarried to communion, would in fact be a practical change in doctrine.
That is the opinion of some Cardinals at this synod. It is not the opinion of all Cardinals at this synod. The simple fact that you have to insert the adjective “practical”, as in “practical change in doctrine,” should be a good indication that this is not black and white.
 
What if there was a pastoral practice to allow the consecration of Wheat Thins and Kool-Aid, would that not change the underlying doctrine?
And this proves that a change in pastoral practice can lead to a change (actually a contradiction) of doctrine, that is, if Wheat-Thins are not properly made. I really do not know what kind of water is used or how they are baked.

But for example, baked breads with leaven would be a change in practice without any change in doctrine.
 
That is the opinion of some Cardinals at this synod. It is not the opinion of all Cardinals at this synod. The simple fact that you have to insert the adjective “practical”, as in “practical change in doctrine,” should be a good indication that this is not black and white.
Practical, as in the actual use or doing, not theoretical. If the Church allows communion to the divorced and remarried as a matter of pastoral practice, then the Church is changing doctrine in it’s application and practice. If the Church allows homosexuals to marry as a matter of pastoral practice, then the Church is changing doctrine in it’s application and practice. If the Church limits communion to one species or the other as a matter of pastoral practice, the Church is NOT changing doctrine since the Church has NEVER taught that both species are required.
 
And this proves that a change in pastoral practice can lead to a change (actually a contradiction) of doctrine, that is, if Wheat-Thins are not properly made. I really do not know what kind of water is used or how they are baked.

But for example, baked breads with leaven would be a change in practice without any change in doctrine.
Why is that true for the elements of communion, but not for the indissolubility of marriage?
 
Why is that true for the elements of communion, but not for the indissolubility of marriage?
No one is questioning the indissolubility of marriage.
If the Church allows homosexuals to marry as a matter of pastoral practice, then the Church is changing doctrine in it’s application and practice.
Absolutely. Marriage has been defined. The matter of the Sacrament must be one man and one woman.
 
Here’s what you said:

There was not a change in teaching, it has always remained the same. But a change in practice from both species to one and back to both has no effect on the doctrinal teaching that both species contain the body, blood, soul and divinity of Christ—an unchanging and unchangeable doctrine. A change in practice from not admitting divorced and remarried to receive communion, to a practice admitting divorced and remarried to communion, would in fact be a practical change in doctrine, unlike the other two examples you gave, because the substance of the prohibition on reception of communion----namely that a person is still validly married to their first spouse and living in an adulterous relationship in an invalid marriage----is being altered. A valid marriage is either indissoluble or it isn’t.
The far end of the spectrum is the idea that the rule of the Church might be changed to permit communion for the divorced/remarried. Most of us here aren’t supportive of that idea but its an idea thats got value to the whole synod process. It was the Church herself who coined the term ‘devils advocate’ for the process of determining the worthiness of a beatified person for sainthood. It is quite obvious that Pope Francis is fearlessly asking for all the unfettered thoughts of his bishops and Cardinals, for the same sort of process here.

Another example of the an area deeply examined by the Church in the not to distant past was the fate of infants who died without baptism. This was at issue because it was intrinsically connected with the doctrine of Original Sin. It didn’t play out in internet forums like questions do now, but there was one side who felt very strongly that Limbo must be retained to protect the integrity of the doctrine. The other side were moved by the realities of faith for those in the situation of having an infant ‘in Limbo’ and in our modern era, that includes the mothers of abortion.

In coming to the new practice, the Church gave us this incite from her work on the subject.

The treatment of this theme must be placed within the historical development of the faith. According to Dei Verbum 8, the factors that contribute to this development are the reflection and the study of the faithful, the experience of spiritual things, and the teaching of the Magisterium. When the question of infants who die without baptism was first taken up in the history of Christian thought, it is possible that the doctrinal nature of the question or its implications were not fully understood. Only when seen in light of the historical development of theology over the course of time until Vatican II does this specific question find its proper context within Catholic doctrine. Only in this way - and observing the principle of the hierarchy of truths mentioned in the Decree of the Second Vatican Council Unitatis redintegratio (#11) – the topic can be reconsidered explicitly under the global horizon of the faith of the Church. This Document, from the point of view of speculative theology as well as from the practical and pastoral perspective, constitutes for a useful and timely mean for deepening our understanding this problem, which is not only a matter of doctrine, but also of pastoral priority in the modern era.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/cti_documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20070419_un-baptised-infants_en.html

It is possible that over the life of the Church new understandings of the deeper meaning of doctrine, reveal pathways to strengthen the faith of people, that weren’t seen before.
 
Practical, as in the actual use or doing, not theoretical. If the Church allows communion to the divorced and remarried as a matter of pastoral practice, then the Church is changing doctrine in it’s application and practice. If the Church allows homosexuals to marry as a matter of pastoral practice, then the Church is changing doctrine in it’s application and practice. If the Church limits communion to one species or the other as a matter of pastoral practice, the Church is NOT changing doctrine since the Church has NEVER taught that both species are required.
And going deeper, the Church has always observed that Christ gives us his body and blood in the Eucharist. Cannot change, ever.

The Church also observes that the union of a man and woman is unique in God’s creative plan and no other union is the same. Cannot change, ever.

The Church also observes that to be out of communion with the body due to sin is to be, well… out of communion with the body. One cannot receive what one is not. 🤷
Cannot change, ever. The same observation applies to those living in disordered lifestyles of all kinds, including the guy that verbally abused his wife last night or looked at porn on his computer. Out of communion.
Cannot change, ever, unless we envision the Church proclaiming that porn, or verbal abuse, or remarriage etc,are no longer sin. Is that going to happen???

The Church does not invent some arbitrary construct to deny communion to people, it observes and proclaims the reality that one is out of communion.
The unchanging nature of these realities does not preclude us from new ways of speaking about them or dealing with them. A change in pastoral practice does not change doctrine, as someone said on this thread (I think).
 
If our Lord Jesus commanded against divorce, and the Church allows divorced and remarried to receive, then it says too that there is no such thing as grave sin attached to this situation.
Since the argument attempts logic, and strictly as a hypothetical, how would C follow from the propositions A and B.
 
I think that if the Church finds a way to allow for full communion of those in an invalid second marriage, it will also have to find a way to explain why it is negating the words of Jesus.
 
I think that if the Church finds a way to allow for full communion of those in an invalid second marriage, it will also have to find a way to explain why it is negating the words of Jesus.
There is a belief that today the influences of Protestantism in all its incarnations have created a range of concepts of what Christs words meant. While the truth of Catholic doctrine won’t change …the reality of peoples personal culpability in contracting marriages today has to be recognised. Was it Pope Francis who theorised that maybe half of all Catholic marriages today would be technically invalid?
 
There is a belief that today the influences of Protestantism in all its incarnations have created a range of concepts of what Christs words meant. While the truth of Catholic doctrine won’t change …the reality of peoples personal culpability in contracting marriages today has to be recognised. Was it Pope Francis who theorised that maybe half of all Catholic marriages today would be technically invalid?
Maybe so. And if that is in fact the case, it might be better to formally recognize the invalidity than to simply bypass the question.

Of even more concern for the Synod, possibly, is an exploration of why so many Catholics (and Protestants too) seem incapable of forming permanent unions. In rejecting divorce, Jesus did not seem to think he was asking the impossible.
 
I think that if the Church finds a way to allow for full communion of those in an invalid second marriage, it will also have to find a way to explain why it is negating the words of Jesus.
I agree and believe a person in the state of mortal sin should not receive Communion. I see no possibility the Church will change this teaching.
 
I agree and believe a person in the state of mortal sin should not receive Communion. I see no possibility the Church will change this teaching.
Correct; no one would argue that the Church should change that teaching. The problem, of course, is that, as far as many modern Catholics are concerned, what mortal sin is seems to be like what treason is, as captured in the old poem:

Treason doth never prosper: what’s the reason?
Why, if it prosper, none dare call it treason.

There is a reason why the world’s galactically ignorant media is glued to the Synod: to see whether the “Liberal Pope” finally will change a teaching; i.e.,will become “enlightened” and approve ways to redefine the state of mortal sin for remarried people and gays by “pastoral practice”.

The secularists and haters know that by joining the rest of the world in the 21st century, the Church of Rome soon would be no more. Francis will disappoint them.

All of us are sinners so nothing above is meant to say that the Synod should not seek ways to help and comfort people who know they strayed.
 
This is concerning, why is this being changed?
Also for the first time, changing paragraphs of the document requires passing a vote by a two-thirds majority instead of a vote on propositions at the end. This means that controversial paragraphs in the document, such as the Cardinal Kasper proposal that failed to achieve a two-thirds majority at the end of the last synod, appear to now require a two-thirds majority vote to amend them.
“The burden of proof now is on the side that wants to change it,” said a synod official. “So bishops are now trying to clarify that three controversial paragraphs that did not get the two-thirds majority now require a two-thirds majority just to change them.”
Read more: ncregister.com/daily-news/married-couples-have-their-say-at-the-synod/#ixzz3o3vsv7oa
 
I think that if the Church finds a way to allow for full communion of those in an invalid second marriage, it will also have to find a way to explain why it is negating the words of Jesus.
I asked this earlier, but when did Jesus say who would receive communion? In other words, what words are negated?

The arguments against communion for the remarried are solid, but they are not infinite, and I do not see this happens.
 
This is concerning, why is this being changed?

*Also for the first time, changing paragraphs of the document requires passing a vote by a two-thirds majority instead of a vote on propositions at the end. This means that controversial paragraphs in the document, such as the Cardinal Kasper proposal that failed to achieve a two-thirds majority at the end of the last synod, appear to now require a two-thirds majority vote to amend them.
“The burden of proof now is on the side that wants to change it,” said a synod official. “So bishops are now trying to clarify that three controversial paragraphs that did not get the two-thirds majority now require a two-thirds majority just to change them.”
*

Read more: ncregister.com/daily-news/married-couples-have-their-say-at-the-synod/#ixzz3o3vsv7oa
I am understanding this correctly? >

1 The controversial paragraphs of the document** which failed to be approved**
by vote at the extraordinary synod were nevertheless retained in a ‘working document’
for this synod.
2. Pope Francis stressed that this document is one of three “official documents”
to be used for this synod.
3. rules have now been changed to make it harder to amend these paragraphs
(which failed approval by vote in the extraordinary synod.)

Participants are also concerned that these paragraphs that failed to achieve the required votes last time were retained in the final document of the extraordinary synod — a document that Pope Francis stressed this week is one of three “official documents” of the meeting, along with his two speeches of the last synod.
The Pope has stressed that doctrine won’t be touched, but critics contend that Cardinal Kasper’s proposal will do just that, by contradicting two millennia of Church teaching on marriage.

Read more: ncregister.com/daily-news/married-couples-have-their-say-at-the-synod/#ixzz3o4aozxVG
 
I am understanding this correctly? >

1 The controversial paragraphs of the document** which failed to be approved**
by vote at the extraordinary synod were nevertheless retained in a ‘working document’
for this synod.
2. Pope Francis stressed that this document is one of three “official documents”
to be used for this synod.
3. rules have now been changed to make it harder to amend these paragraphs
(which failed approval by vote in the extraordinary synod.)

Those paragraphs were not approved by a 2/3 majority but they did receive over 50% support. To be changed, it appears that a 2/3 majority is needed. Kind of odd.

Dan
 
I am understanding this correctly? >

1 The controversial paragraphs of the document** which failed to be approved**
by vote at the extraordinary synod were nevertheless retained in a ‘working document’
for this synod.
2. Pope Francis stressed that this document is one of three “official documents”
to be used for this synod.
3. rules have now been changed to make it harder to amend these paragraphs
(which failed approval by vote in the extraordinary synod.)

Participants are also concerned that these paragraphs that failed to achieve the required votes last time were retained in the final document of the extraordinary synod — a document that Pope Francis stressed this week is one of three “official documents” of the meeting, along with his two speeches of the last synod.
The Pope has stressed that doctrine won’t be touched, but critics contend that Cardinal Kasper’s proposal will do just that, by contradicting two millennia of Church teaching on marriage.

Read more: ncregister.com/daily-news/married-couples-have-their-say-at-the-synod/#ixzz3o4aozxVG
It failed to be approved by two thirds majority.
 
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