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FrDavid96
Guest
The problem is that you’re making a big deal about something that hardly rises to that level, because in the end, it hardly means anything.I am explaining that that was a change and what it was. So what is the problem then?
- Priests not complying with the 1983 CIC.
- Not applying the one month criteria.
People (some of them priests) are today making a false claim that somehow general absolution was considered to be nothing more significant than one option out of three possible options. They claim that Pope John Pau II somehow “changed the law” and took away from them what they considered to be the normal practice.
When you chime-in, your write something that very much seems to support that idea. You keep insisting that JP2 made some change that abrogated the existing Rite of Penance.
I keep asking you to explain the change, but you won’t give me a direct answer. You just keep posting the same thing. The reason I could not notice the change was that it was so insignificant.
Then finally, I find out what is the “change” that actually mean. It turns out, it’s nothing more than part of the procedure for defining if “grave necessity” is truly present.
The first issue is that it does nothing really to affect the availability of general absolution. The criteria is, as it has been from the beginning, “grave necessity.”
The second issue is that the advocates of general absolution today (and likewise the priests who abused this practice in the 70s and 80) have absolutely no intention of telling anyone that this can only be done in cases of “grave necessity.” Much less do they care about asking the bishop to interpret “grave necessity.”
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