Perhaps so. I’m just wrestling with it all and trying to understand the issues.
I like in the article you linked to where it says:
*However, the prevalence of “universalism” (the unbiblical view that all are saved in the end no matter what) in the Church has led to a profound lack of urgency. Very few in pastoral leadership today have a strong sense of concern about the fact that so many people are confused, are in darkness, and are living in serious, unrepentant sin. In the midst of a great moral crisis, many pulpits remain strangely silent *and most parishes seem more focused on the next chicken dinner or the upcoming fundraiser than about how to reach out to those who live in darkness.
catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=10690
This is my perception also. If I’m getting into some kind of error, it seems–with due respect-- like most of the clergy and laity are in the same error.
The article you link to also appears to approve of gradualism at the one-on-one pastoral level (not at the homiletic level). And isn’t that the context of Pope Francis’s new approach?
Here’s what your article says:
*The better approach is that reputed of St. John Vianney: the Church should be clear in the pulpit and work quietly and in stages with people who struggle to meet the norms (and that is all of us, really). *
catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=10690
It sure would be refreshing to hear clear, catechetical homilies about the Sacrament of Matrimony, openness to fertility, indissolubility, etc.