guse:
Maybe I’m wrong, but in my opinion while we may not be permitted to hold hands, Catholics are allowed to want to or hope that someday the Church will allow it. I do not think that makes someone unfaithful to Church teaching.
These words are just so pertinent, and so powerful:
Redemptionis Sacramentum:
[5.] The observance of the norms published by the authority of the Church
requires conformity of thought and of word, of external action and of the application of the heart. A merely external observation of norms would obviously be contrary to the nature of the Sacred Liturgy, in which Christ himself wishes to gather his Church, so that together with himself she will be “one body and
one spirit”. For this reason, external action must be illuminated by faith and charity, which unite us with Christ and with one another and engender love for the poor and the abandoned. The liturgical words and rites, moreover, are a faithful expression, matured over the centuries, of the understanding of Christ, and they teach us to think as he himself does; by conforming our minds to these words, we raise our hearts to the Lord.
[7.] Not infrequently, abuses are rooted in a false understanding of liberty. Yet God has not granted us in Christ an illusory liberty by which we may do what we wish, but a liberty by which we may do that which is fitting and right. This is true not only of precepts coming directly from God, but also of laws promulgated by the Church, with appropriate regard for the nature of each norm.For this reason, all should conform to the ordinances set forth by legitimate ecclesiastical authority…
Code:
abuses are often based on ignorance, in that they involve a rejection of those elements whose deeper meaning is not understood and whose antiquity is not recognized. For “the liturgical prayers, orations and songs are pervaded by the inspiration and impulse” of the Sacred Scriptures themselves, “and it is from these that the actions and signs receive their meaning”. As for the visible signs “which the Sacred Liturgy uses in order to signify the invisible divine realities, they have been chosen by Christ or by the Church”...
So, the Church understands that some abuses are well intentioned, but committed out of ignorance, while others are committed out of disobedience. But She does instruct that once we know what the Church desires, teaches, and lays down, we should accept it, not only in practice, but in our minds and hearts. It does little good to go along physically with the norms while dissenting from them in our hearts.
(Kinda makes me think of Lot’s wife, looking back longingly at Sodom and Gomorrah.)
Pax Christi. <><