R
Rau
Guest
I don’t follow the suggested analogy. I thought you were going to say that if a wayward priest can successfully preside at the consecration, then the counsel of such a priest becomes valid even when it objectively wrong. I think we all agree that would be wrong.The way I see it, if a priest loses faith and provides communion, the people receiving communion are still receiving the Body of Christ. In a similar manner, if a priest provides the faithful guidance based on the situation at hand, I believe our most loving and merciful God will have pitty on all involved. Unless you can prove otherwise, no need to reply.
What matters for the couple is what they “know” in their hearts.
I am not sure what you mean by “have pity on all”. If the priest misrepresents his advice as true to catholic faith, then he deserves punishment. If the couple knew no better and believed the priest advised faithfully, then it could be they do no wrong in following his advice (even if objectively wrong).
And your very last sentence seems out of place on a discussion board.