P
pnewton
Guest
It does feel that way, doesn’t it. I am thinking that if we concentrate on what is literally said (that is, in quotations and in context), I do not know if it is. The media (secular and Catholic) seems almost totally concentrated on the most extreme cases, making it look like an exception might be the norm. Maybe that is why it seems forced. Take the above sentence, the thread topic. Isn’t true desire for change the same as repentance? If I truly desire to change, say a flat tire, I will change my flat tire. My desire to change will be enough to get me on the road again, if it is true desire, as it will be exercised in action. The difference is that I cannot start to drive until that desire is put into practice. With confession, once one desires repentance, one need not put into practice, i.e., make amends, before receiving communion. One need not even complete penance.The issue is how ‘forced’ it seems to ensure that the civilly divorced and remarried may not meet the third criterion to be guilty of mortal sin.