I rather frequently preach about how God can use whatever circumstances we are in, good or bad, to bring us to himself. Even our very worst sins, the moment we hit bottom, can be redeemed.
HOWEVER I always qualify that by emphasizing that we cannot presume on God’s mercy, and we shouldn’t go looking for trouble, and then count on God to bail us out.
The reason so many people are criticizing the title of this article is that, in the context of other things that Fr. Martin has said, which are problematic when taken to their conclusions, he seems to be leaving out the qualification I would be inclined to make.
I would argue that holy things are the surest way to get us to God. But sometimes some unholy things can be the means by which we get back to God. We should seek out the holy. We should not seek out the unholy. Fr. Martin has a history of pushing the envelope, as others have said. He has a way of writing such that he doesn’t say something that is technically wrong, he leaves just enough plausible deniability in there to say that he’s still preaching according to spec as far as the Catechism and the Magisterium are concerned. But he also tends to have some blind spots that could admit of problems.
To be fair to him, he’s not as bad as Richard Rohr, who writes as though he failed 2nd grade catechism in an effort to push his own agenda.
-Fr ACEGC