B
BlackFriar
Guest
Not at all.“Minor” and “fallible” meaning you are prepared to consider it interesting but are prepared to dismiss whatever it says that contradicts your assertions?
Large claims such as yours require large authority.
It isn’t there mate. I’ll stick with AL, Pope Francis and their preceding tradition even if it was once a minor tradition. Now it has become a major tradition.
Such happens a lot with Church teachings. They take time to crystallise into dogma. Many teachings still aren’t clear enough to be declared dogmatically yet. That doesn’t mean the current Magisterial status cannot be discerned.
For example did Mary die? The Magisterium refuses to pronounce dogmatically on this at the moment. However if it did so tomorrow it is clear which way it would go as the Magisterium’s own teaching on this is quite clear.
Quite the opposite. Someone who has had their situation discerned by a priest who allows them to confession and forgiveness even while still active may now proceed to Communion. AL doesn’t restrict that only to a Church where they are not known. So one’s own PP’s Church certainly isn’t ruled out apriori.Are you suggesting that someone who privately “discerns” that his first marriage was invalid should therefore be given communion publicly?
And being allowed by the PP, who acts in accord with his bishop’s guidelines, is by that fact alone “public” I suggest. He represents the Church and certainly what is acceptable publicly in his own church.
Ah, the “Cardinal defence”.If you were less sententious you might be more understandable.
If it doesn’t fit my nice, tight and black and white canon law view of the world then one is “confused”.
Look how well that gambit worked. Two down, only a matter of time until the other two disappear into the could-have-been but ultimately bypassed tracks, overlooked personages and lost footnotes of history.
Just like the close-calls of Arianism, Donatism and many other good looking and well meaning heresies that were widely accepted even by sincere Catholics until the Holy Spirit prevailed over time.
Within the next 50 years Amoris Laetitia will be seen as a watershed moment in the history of the modern Church unrivalled since Vatican II (except by HV of course). As a loyal Catholic I certainly desire to be on the right side of history. Which is always where the Pope is.
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