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Blue_Horizon
Guest
Good insight.Hey Jon, I appreciate your (name removed by moderator)ut in this discussion. And lots of your points are good.
I think something here, in the bolde, is not quite right. I am trying to think of how to express it. I think it has to do with the fact that culpability is not so much the issue as you make it out to be. When someone is refraining (whether by the direction of clergy or self conscience) from Holy Communion, it is due to the current state a person is in. By that, I mean if they have done their duty, as much as they are aware and able, to Reconcile their lives to Christ’s commandments.
Obviously culpability has its place, but when someone is aware of their current condition of being at odds with the Laws of marriage, the whole aspect of ignorance is no longer relative in regards to receiving Eucharist.
You see, we can’t remain in a condition at odds with Jesus and receive the Sacrament that symbolizes complete obedience to Him. We FIRST examine ourselves and convert our hearts and lives and THEN receive His Thanksgiving offering.
The purpose of not receiving Communion is not as a punishment for sin, but a respect to not receive His gift in an unworthy manner. If we know that we are in an unlawful marriage, but remain in sexual relations within that marriage, we cannot receive His gift in a worthy manner.
Yes, there are at least two different arguments for justifying Pope Francis’s Communion innovations.