I find this argument obscene. You are realistic about human nature but Vatican II, St. John Paul II, Pope.Benedict, the current prefect for the Congregation for the Divine Faith, and indeed Jesus Himself were not? All because you believe that people won’t just stop having sex with other despite it being abjectly immoral adulterous sex?
Come on.
It isn’t “obscene” to understand the limitations of human nature. Even the Rule of St. Benedict allows for the fact that we have different levels of ability, different limitations. The proper measure of what is possible in a situation is not what
we are capable of, but what the
other is capable of. Any evangelization or conversion of that person has to start with them, with where
they are, not where we are. That is not to say that there isn’t an ideal we want to help them strive to, the Christian ideal proposed by the Church in her moral teachings.
How then would you deal with a penitent in a situation similar to this, if you were the priest in the confessional?
A penitent arrives and wants to come back to the Church after many years of absence. (S)he had a failed first marriage early on. It could be for any number of non or reduced culpability: abandonment or abuse by their first spouse; or it could be something such as the couple had difficulty surviving a major traumatic event, something such as the death of a child.
Whatever the reason, the person remarried and started a family with someone else many years ago, who is non-Catholic. It’s a successful family, with children; just the normal ups and downs of a “married” couple. But something is missing in the penitent’s life, God and His sacramental grace. (S)he has discussed it with the non-Catholic party. The non-Catholic doesn’t want to end their conjugal life or doesn’t feel able or ready to. The Catholic doesn’t know what to do to regularize their situation, perhaps because of difficulty tracking down the ex for the annulment process. The penitent is now in front of you in the confessional, crying.
All you have to offer is “I cannot give you absolution unless you stop having sex with your husband/wife because you’re in a situation of objective adultery”. According to the current “rules” you can’t say “well your culpability is not mortal”. You have no Church resource to offer the penitent to help them cope other than “go to Mass and make a spiritual communion”.
This is what the clergy in the trenches are asking for. How to deal with cases like this in the confessional or the parish office. How to find a path to welcome these people back in the Church and set them on the path to reconciliation and conversion. So how would you deal with the penitent in this case, if you were on the other side of the grille in the confessional?
And of is the adulterer who should receive Communion? Using your conversion-oriented rationale, there are not a lot of people who CANNOT receive Communion. The Pauline insistence on being in a state of grace when receiving Communion is unalterable and is applied for very basic theological reasons.
This particular discussion is not about receiving communion, it is about a penitential path.
I don’t agree with “by my rationale” most can receive communion. We are talking about taking things on a case-by-case basis. The case of the person in the example above would not be treated in the same way as the person sitting in the confessional who just abandoned his wife to take up with his new lover, for instance. A sin can be grave matter, guilt something else (read the CCC on masturbation for instance). There is nothing wrong with the basic doctrine of the Church that mortal sin requires 3 conditions:
- Grave matter
- Full knowledge
- Full consent of the will (and this means not will tainted by pressure from someone else).
Or have you decided that this doctrine is only selectively applicable?
In any case the proposal here is:
- not about changing doctrine;
- is not about allowing reception of communion;
- but is about finding a path to sacramental grace for those asking for healing.
On this basis, do you accept, or reject, that this proposal be
discussed at the Synod? The clergy are simply asking for
tools to deal with these cases and help the penitent with conversion and spiritual growth. Not just simple guidelines about who’s in, and who’s out.
Because I can tell you that with what they have now, they are successfully filling the pews in my wife’s Anglican parish.