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OraLabora
Guest
Important point. Medicine sort of has the same dilemma, in that there’s an inclination to treat a statistic rather than a person, and doctors need to remind themselves that each patient is an individual. I had a recent bad episode with this, when a statin was prescribed to me but which was inappropriate for my specific situation (high-intensity muscle exercise; I am an avid cyclist)Priest are to minister to people, not situations.
A priest must be a physician to a soul, not to a law; his job is to save the soul, not protect the law at all costs. In the Rule of St. Benedict the abbot must measure the discipline he provides so as to not discourage the penitent. If he uses too powerful a medicine he may discourage the weak, or if he uses the same medicine uniformly for everyone, he may discourage and drive away the weak, and not sufficiently challenge the strong to turn him away from sin.
We cannot always fall back on “church teaching” just as we cannot always fall back on a statin to treat cholesterol in all cases and must sometimes deviate from the established protocols. Church teaching provides a framework for the priest to work with, but he may need to exceptionally exit that framework to be able to save a soul in distress; if he loses the soul for having applied too strong a medicine, it weighs as much on his shoulders as the lost soul’s. AL is tentatively telling priests that it is OK to do that on an exceptional basis. But it also says it is not OK to do it across the board or for people who cavalierly flaunt the rules, but nor is it OK to refuse to do it across the board.
It’s actually a very “latin” way of thinking, which I know some folks on CAF have a hard time getting their heads around as they tend to see a law as an absolute. In French we say “the exception confirms the rule”, meaning that the rule, or law, is just because it can accommodate an unforeseen circumstance. A civilian aircraft can land on a restricted military base in a life-threatening emergency when there’s no alternative. It is against the “law”, but it is tolerated. It doesn’t mean you can land there willy-nilly when you feel like it, and the crew might be faced with a mountain of paperwork afterwards. Similarly, the use the Eucharist in exceptional cases where it normally wouldn’t be allowed because the priest discerns it’s necessary to save a soul doesn’t make the law invalid nor give every barred person the right to receive. Amoris Laetitia is very, very clear on that point.
Again we need to stop thinking like lawyers and more like physicians.