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OraLabora
Guest
As someone who was adopted as an infant in 1958, I have the same blind spot on discussions about abortion, but fortunately I find a receptive audience for my view in the Church. Outside the Church, not so much.Based on personal experience I may be sensitive to the idea that the abandoned party may not get their say. It wasn’t a very good time for my mother. She was devastated and for a very long time insisted on having her say in the validity of the marriage before the tribunal. There is no way to include the abandoned party in the internal form. There are lots of abandoned partys out there. 30% of marriages end due to infidelity. Its not fun and very damaging to the party abandoned.
On the question of internal forum, this is what the Holy Father had to say:
It doesn’t sound to me like a flippant process, nor does it appear to guarantee access to the sacraments. It is however, not clear to me if the “internal forum” is sufficient to declare nullity and convalidate the second marriage. I pretty sure not but someone more informed can perhaps help here. I think it would still require a decree of nullity through a proper process. I think the “internal forum” recognizes that such a process is not possible for whatever reasons, and allows cautious reception of the sacraments (or at least in this document; it wasn’t possible in previous ones). It doesn’t make the second marriage valid but may mitigate culpability for it, which is what the Holy Father seems to be saying.Conversation with the priest, in the internal forum, contributes to the formation of a correct judgment on what hinders the possibility of a fuller participation in the life of the Church and on what steps can foster it and make it grow. Given that gradualness is not in the law itself (cf. Familiaris Consortio, 34), this discernment can never prescind from the Gospel demands of truth and charity, as proposed by the Church. For this discernment to happen, the following conditions must necessarily be present: humility, discretion and love for the Church and her teaching, in a sincere search for God’s will and a desire to make a more perfect response to it”. These attitudes are essential for avoiding the grave danger of misunderstandings, such as the notion that any priest can quickly grant “exceptions”, or that some people can obtain sacramental privileges in exchange for favours. When a responsible and tactful person, who does not presume to put his or her own desires ahead of the common good of the Church, meets with a pastor capable of acknowledging the seriousness of the matter before him, there can be no risk that a specific discernment may lead people to think that the Church maintains a double standard