A
_Abyssinia
Guest
But consider these excerpts, words, from Fr Brian W. Harrison regarding the paragraph on Communion, and the votes it did get, over 50% as you note: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
Now, it is relevant that just 57% of the Fathers voted in favor of this paragraph – significantly less than the two-thirds majority required to make it a recommendation of the Synod as such. Also, it needs to be noted that a misleading spin was given to this Paragraph 52 in media reports that said it actually proposes sacramental Communion for some divorced and remarried Catholics. This led to needless anguish and scandal; countless members of the faithful were thus led to believe that more than half of these representatives of the world’s Catholic bishops, in voting for Paragraph 52, thereby abandoned the firm teaching and discipline of the Church. But the text of this paragraph does not propose any such revolutionary change. Rather, it reports the fact that the Synod Fathers expressed conflicting views on this question, and then it recommends nothing more than that the issue needs to be “studied more deeply” (Italian approfondita). So, quite a few Synod Fathers who voted for that paragraph were probably undecided about the matter. Furthermore, the fact that 40% of the Fathers voted against this paragraph indicates widespread and deep opposition to the revisionist proposal. They evidently considered the matter to be already closed by Pope Saint John Paul II, so that re-opening it for “further examination” or “deeper study” of the question would be wrong.
latinmassmagazine.com/articles/articles_harrison_diminished-imputability.htmlReturning to Paragraph 52, we should also note with reassurance that it upholds the key Catholic doctrine of the indissolubility of marriage by calling the relationship of divorced and civilly remarried couples an “objectively sinful situation.” Since, therefore, there was virtual unanimity among the Synod Fathers on this point, we are naturally led to ask how 57% of them could still consistently think there is room for “deeper study” as to whether some people in that “objectively sinful situation” might nevertheless be admitted to Holy Communion. I think the answer is that those Fathers who voted in favor of Paragraph 52 were not focusing on the objective character of the relationship in question. Rather, their appeal to CCC No. 1735 shows they were wondering whether the subjective, inward, psychological disposition of some of these folks might mitigate their guilt sufficiently to open up a possible path to Holy Communion. Now, this issue seems not to have received much attention from Catholic scholars, so I want to consider it here, in accordance with the recommendation of Paragraph 52, and also with the corresponding Q. 38 of the questionnaire sent out by the Synod Secretariat in preparation for this year’s October session. In regard to divorced and civilly remarried Catholics, it asks, “What are the prospects in such a case? What is possible?”