M
McCall1981
Guest
Well, I don’t agree, but if you want current, the CDF has confirmed it twice this year.But we have to face facts that the times are relevant. The juridical annulment process like any judicial laws, have to take into account the culture of the times to be properly effective. In 1968 in the US 338 annulments were granted compared to 27 000 in 2006. Pope StJPII expressed strong concern about what that fact was saying about the Catholic understanding of marriage among the faithful and initiated a movement within the Church to look at the question more deeply. On the one hand you have people saying that the annulment process needs to be made easier and cheaper but that isn’t really addressing the problem of a general lack of true faith among people presenting at Church for a marriage. Pope Francis in echoing another respected theologian, speculated that probably half of all Catholic marriages are null in the current climate of deficient faith.
For those of us who like JPII worry about what the current annulment process is doing to undermine Catholic marriage in general… there is the realisation that another way of determining validity needs to be developed. A way that is not so much about assumptions and guess work based on what a person says, but something based on the evidence of spiritual fruits that bloom in someones life.
In the early Church certain gratuitous gifts of God were recognised and esteemed in Christian communal life. Things like discernment of spirits, prophecy,wisdom and mercy and these gifts complemented judicial processes in determining questions of faith and morals. Pope Francis coming from the Jesuit tradition is perfectly situated to help bring these charisms to the table in dealing with this huge problem of broken Catholic marriages.
The stance that once the law is implemented it must never be revised or reformulated in any conditions is not the way of the Church. This is why she exists, so that we get the best grasp of scripture and doctrine possible in the light of every age. If not for that, there really would be no need for a Church that is anything more than a library of unchangeable facts.
As this topic gets discussed, it seems to flow back and forth from referring to annulments, to referring to communion for remarried people. These are two very different things, and it confuses the conversation (to be fair, I don’t think this is the fault of us posters here on CAF, the “proposals” being put forth are vague so we don’t know what they mean exactly).