How the "dubia" drama will end
Pope Francis has declined to answer four cardinals doubts about his teaching on marriage. The Church is now in uncharted territory
An unbridgeable chasm?: Pope Francis greets Cardinal Raymond Burke in 2014 (CNS)
by Fr Mark Drew
posted Wednesday, 30 Nov 2016
Prognostications are a dangerous pastime for commentators, and in the papacy of Pope Francis the business of making predictions seems a particularly dangerous one. Back in April, when Francis issued a document called Amoris Laetitia (The Joy of Love), I warned readers to expect ongoing controversy around an unanswered question. This time I was not wrong.
The unanswered question was the one which had been hotly debated at the two consecutive synods of bishops held in 2014 and 2015 namely, whether divorced and remarried Catholics might be admitted to the Eucharist in certain circumstances. At the two synods the proposal, pushed by prelates handpicked by Francis, faced strong opposition from many bishops and failed to achieve the necessary consensus. The document produced by the 2015 meeting came up with an ambiguous formula, essentially fudging the issue.
After the synod all eyes were on Francis to see if he would intervene with a clear decision. Popes usually publish post-synodal exhortations after these gatherings. Most are anodyne and soon forgotten, but this one aroused feverish hopes and anxieties in a polarised Church. When it arrived, readers thumbed hastily through more than 300 pages to find the eagerly awaited response. That answer, hidden away in two footnotes, was once again ambiguous.
The past six months have seemed at times like a war of attrition. The controversy has centred largely on how the Popes words are to be interpreted. Some national bishops conferences Germany, for example seem more or less united in favour of liberalising the discipline, while others such as Poland insist that nothing has changed. The bishops of Buenos Aires produced a document suggesting that the way is now open for Communion for the remarried in some cases where subjective guilt might be diminished. The Pope responded with a private letter commending this interpretation as the right one. In what has become a familiar aspect of disputes around the Popes real intentions, the purportedly private exchange was leaked a transparent attempt to give momentum to the liberalising tendency.
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/issues/december-2nd-2016/how-the-dubia-drama-will-end/
Fortinbras Armstrong
(4,473 posts)The problem is that the four cardinals don't like that it says that each case has to be considered individually. They want a "one size fits all" solution, one that says "the divorced and remarried are raging adulterers in all cases!"
rug
(82,333 posts)Willie Pep
(841 posts)Is this some right-wing rebellion in the Church?