Vatican
City, 31 Oct 2013.
The Power of Grace
After the announcement of the extraordinary synod that will take
place in October of 2014 on the pastoral care of families, speculation has been
raised regarding the question of divorced and remarried members of the faithful
and their relationship to the sacraments. In order to deepen understanding on
this pressing subject so that clergy may accompany their flock more perfectly
and instruct them in a manner consistent with the truth of Catholic Doctrine,
we are publishing an extensive contribution from the Archbishop Prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
The
problem concerning members of the faithful who have entered into a new civil
union after a divorce is not new. The Church has always taken this
question very seriously and with a view to helping the people who find
themselves in this situation. Marriage is a sacrament that affects people
particularly deeply in their personal, social and historical
circumstances. Given the increasing number of persons affected in
countries of ancient Christian tradition, this pastoral problem has taken on
significant dimensions. Today even firm believers are seriously
wondering: can the Church not admit the divorced and remarried to the
sacraments under certain conditions? Are her hands permanently tied on
this matter? Have theologians really explored all the implications and
consequences?
These questions
must be explored in a manner that is consistent with Catholic doctrine on
marriage. A responsible pastoral approach presupposes a theology that
offers “the full submission of intellect and will to God who reveals,
freely assenting to the truth revealed by him” (Dei
Verbum 5). In order to make the Church’s authentic doctrine
intelligible, we must begin with the word of God that is found in sacred
Scripture, expounded in the Church’s Tradition and interpreted by the
Magisterium in a binding way.
The Testimony of Sacred Scripture
Looking
directly to the Old Testament for answers to our question is not without its
difficulties, because at that time marriage was not yet regarded as a
sacrament. Yet the word of God in the Old Covenant is significant for us
to the extent that Jesus belongs within this tradition and argues on the basis
of it. In the Decalogue, we find the commandment “thou shalt not commit
adultery” (Ex 20:14), but elsewhere divorce is presented as a
possibility. According to Dt 24:1-4, Moses lays down
that a man may present his wife with a certificate of dismissal and send her
away from his house, if she no longer finds favour with him. Thereafter,
both husband and wife may embark upon a new marriage. In addition to this
acceptance of divorce, the Old Testament also expresses certain reservations in
its regard. The comparison drawn by the prophets between God’s covenant
with Israel and the marriage bond includes not only the ideal of monogamy, but
also that of indissolubility. The prophet Malachi expresses this
clearly: “Do not be faithless to the wife of your youth ... with whom you
have made a covenant” (Mal 2:14-15).
Above
all, it was his controversies with the Pharisees that gave Jesus occasion to
address this theme. He distanced himself explicitly from the Old
Testament practice of divorce, which Moses had permitted because men were “so
hard of heart”, and he pointed to God’s original will: “from the beginning of
creation, God made them male and female. For this reason a man shall
leave his father and mother and ... the two shall become one flesh. What
therefore God has joined together let not man put asunder” (Mk10:5-9;
cf. Mt 19:4-9; Lk 16:18). The Catholic
Church has always based its doctrine and practice upon these sayings of Jesus
concerning the indissolubility of marriage. The inner bond that joins the
spouses to one another was forged by God himself. It designates a reality
that comes from God and is therefore no longer at man’s disposal.
Today
some exegetes take the view that even in the Apostolic era these dominical
sayings were applied with a degree of flexibility: notably in the case of porneia/unchastity
(cf. Mt 5:32; 19:9) and in the case of a separation between a
Christian and a non-Christian partner (cf. 1 Cor 7:12-15).
The unchastity clauses have been the object of fierce debate among exegetes
from the beginning. Many take the view that they refer not to exceptions
to the indissolubility of marriage, but to invalid marital unions. Clearly,
however, the Church cannot build its doctrine and practice on controversial
exegetical hypotheses. She must adhere to the clear teaching of
Christ.
Saint
Paul presents the prohibition on divorce as the express will of Christ:
“To the married I give charge, not I but the Lord, that the wife should not
separate from her husband (but if she does, let her remain single or else be
reconciled to her husband) and that the husband should not divorce his wife” (1
Cor 7:10-11). At the same time he permits, on his own authority,
that a non-Christian may separate from a partner who has become
Christian. In this case, the Christian is “not bound” to remain unmarried
(1 Cor 7:12-16). On the basis of this passage, the Church has
come to recognize that only a marriage between a baptized man and a baptized
woman is a sacrament in the true sense, and only in this instance does
unconditional indissolubility apply. The marriage of the unbaptized is
indeed ordered to indissolubility, but can under certain circumstances – for the
sake of a higher good – be dissolved (privilegium Paulinum). Here,
then, we are not dealing with an exception to our Lord’s teaching. The
indissolubility of sacramental marriage, that is to say, marriage that takes
place within the mystery of Christ, remains assured.
Of
greater significance for the biblical basis of the sacramental view of marriage
is the Letter to the Ephesians, where we read: “Husbands, love your wives, as
Christ loved the Church and gave himself up for her” (Eph 5:25).
And shortly afterwards, the Apostle adds: “For this reason, a man shall leave
his father and mother and be joined to his wife and the two shall become one
flesh. This mystery is a profound one, and I am saying that it refers to
Christ and the Church” (Eph 5:31-32). Christian marriage is
an effective sign of the covenant between Christ and the Church. Because
it designates and communicates the grace of this covenant, marriage between the
baptized is a sacrament.
The Testimony of the Church’s Tradition
The
Church Fathers and Councils provide important testimony regarding the way the
Church’s position evolved. For the Fathers, the biblical precepts on the
subject are binding. They reject the State’s divorce laws as incompatible
with the teaching of Jesus. The Church of the Fathers rejected divorce
and remarriage, and did so out of obedience to the Gospel. On this
question, the Fathers’ testimony is unanimous.
In patristic times, divorced members of the
faithful who had civilly remarried could not even be readmitted to the
sacraments after a period of penance. Some patristic texts, however, seem
to imply that abuses were not always rigorously corrected and that from time to
time pastoral solutions were sought for very rare borderline cases.
In many
regions, greater compromises emerged later, particularly as a result of the
increasing interdependence of Church and State. In the East this
development continued to evolve, and especially after the separation from the
See of Peter, it moved towards an increasingly liberal praxis. In the
Orthodox Churches today, there are a great many grounds for divorce, which are
mostly justified in terms of oikonomia, or pastoral leniency in
difficult individual cases, and they open the path to a second or third
marriage marked by a penitential character. This practice cannot be
reconciled with God’s will, as expressed unambiguously in Jesus’ sayings about
the indissolubility of marriage. But it represents an ecumenical problem
that is not to be underestimated.
In the
West, the Gregorian reform countered these liberalizing tendencies and gave
fresh impetus to the original understanding of Scripture and the Fathers.
The Catholic Church defended the absolute indissolubility of marriage even at
the cost of great sacrifice and suffering. The schism of a “Church of
England” detached from the Successor of Peter came about not because of
doctrinal differences, but because the Pope, out of obedience to the sayings of
Jesus, could not accommodate the demands of King Henry VIII for the dissolution
of his marriage.
The
Council of Trent confirmed the doctrine of the indissolubility of sacramental
marriage and explained that this corresponded to the teaching of the Gospel
(cf. DH 1807). Sometimes it is maintained that the Church de
facto tolerated the Eastern practice. But this is not
correct. The canonists constantly referred to it as an abuse. And
there is evidence that groups of Orthodox Christians on becoming Catholic had
to subscribe to an express acknowledgment of the impossibility of second or
third marriages.
The
Second Vatican Council, in the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes on
“The Church in the Modern World”, presents a theologically and spiritually
profound doctrine of marriage. It upholds the indissolubility of marriage
clearly and distinctly. Marriage is understood as an all-embracing
communion of life and love, body and spirit, between a man and a woman who
mutually give themselves and receive one another as persons. Through the
personally free act of their reciprocal consent, an enduring, divinely ordered
institution is brought into being, which is directed to the good of the spouses
and of their offspring and is no longer dependent on human caprice: “As a
mutual gift of two persons, this intimate union and the good of the children
impose total fidelity on the spouses and argue for an unbreakable oneness
between them” (no. 48). Through the sacrament God bestows a special grace
upon the spouses: “For as God of old made himself present to his people
through a covenant of love and fidelity, so now the Saviour of men and the
Spouse of the Church comes into the lives of married Christians through the
sacrament of matrimony. He abides with them thereafter so that just as he
loved the Church and handed himself over on her behalf, the spouses may love
each other with perpetual fidelity through mutual self-bestowal.” Through
the sacrament the indissolubility of marriage acquires a new and deeper
sense: it becomes the image of God’s enduring love for his people and of
Christ’s irrevocable fidelity to his Church.
Marriage
can be understood and lived as a sacrament only in the context of the mystery
of Christ. If marriage is secularized or regarded as a purely natural
reality, its sacramental character is obscured. Sacramental marriage
belongs to the order of grace, it is taken up into the definitive communion of
love between Christ and his Church. Christians are called to live their
marriage within the eschatological horizon of the coming of God’s kingdom in
Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word of God.
The Testimony of the Magisterium in the Present Day
The
Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio – issued by John
Paul II on 22 November 1981 in the wake of the Synod of Bishops on the
Christian family in the modern world, and of fundamental importance ever since
– emphatically confirms the Church’s dogmatic teaching on marriage. But
it shows pastoral concern for the civilly remarried faithful who are
still bound by an ecclesially valid marriage.
The Pope shows a high degree of concern and understanding. Paragraph 84
on “divorced persons who have remarried” contains the following key
statements: 1. Pastors are obliged, by love for the truth, “to
exercise careful discernment of situations”. Not everything and everyone
are to be assessed in an identical way. 2. Pastors and parish
communities are bound to stand by the faithful who find themselves in this
situation, with “attentive love”. They too belong to the Church, they are
entitled to pastoral care and they should take part in the Church’s life.
3. And yet they cannot be admitted to the Eucharist. Two reasons are
given for this: a) “their state and condition of life objectively
contradict that union of love between Christ and the Church which is signified
and effected by the Eucharist” b) “if these people were admitted to the
Eucharist, the faithful would be led into error and confusion regarding the
Church's teaching about the indissolubility of marriage”. Reconciliation
through sacramental confession, which opens the way to reception of the
Eucharist, can only be granted in the case of repentance over what has happened
and a “readiness to undertake a way of life that is no longer in contradiction
to the indissolubility of marriage.” Concretely this means that if for serious
reasons, such as the children’s upbringing, the new union cannot be dissolved,
then the two partners must “bind themselves to live in complete
continence”. 4. Clergy are expressly forbidden, for intrinsically
sacramental and theological reasons and not through legalistic pressures, to
“perform ceremonies of any kind” for divorced people who remarry civilly, as
long as the first sacramentally valid marriage still exists.
The
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’s statement of 14 September 1994 on
reception of holy communion by divorced and remarried members of the faithful
emphasizes that the Church’s practice in this question “cannot be modified
because of different situations” (no. 5). It also makes clear that the
faithful concerned may not present themselves for holy communion on the basis
of their own conscience: “Should they judge it possible to do so, pastors
and confessors ... have the serious duty to admonish them that such a judgment
of conscience openly contradicts the Church's teaching” (no. 6). If
doubts remain over the validity of a failed marriage, these must be examined by
the competent marriage tribunals (cf. no. 9). It remains of the utmost
importance, “with solicitous charity to do everything that can be done to strengthen
in the love of Christ and the Church those faithful in irregular marriage
situations. Only thus will it be possible for them fully to receive the message
of Christian marriage and endure in faith the distress of their situation. In
pastoral action one must do everything possible to ensure that this is
understood not to be a matter of discrimination but only of absolute fidelity
to the will of Christ who has restored and entrusted to us anew the
indissolubility of marriage as a gift of the Creator” (no. 10).
In the
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Sacramentum Caritatis of 22
February 2007, Benedict XVI summarizes the work of the Synod of Bishops on the
theme of the Eucharist and he develops it further. In No. 29 he addresses
the situation of divorced and remarried faithful. For Benedict XVI too,
this is a “complex and troubling pastoral problem”. He confirms “the
Church's practice, based on Sacred Scripture (cf. Mk 10:2-
12), of not admitting the divorced and remarried to the sacraments”, but he
urges pastors at the same time, to devote “special concern” to those affected:
in the wish that they “live as fully as possible the Christian life through
regular participation at Mass, albeit without receiving communion, listening to
the word of God, eucharistic adoration, prayer, participation in the life of
the community, honest dialogue with a priest or spiritual director, dedication
to the life of charity, works of penance, and commitment to the education of
their children”. If there are doubts concerning the validity of the
failed marriage, these are to be carefully examined by the competent marriage
tribunals. Today’s mentality is largely opposed to the Christian
understanding of marriage, with regard to its indissolubility and its openness
to children. Because many Christians are influenced by this, marriages
nowadays are probably invalid more often than they were previously, because
there is a lack of desire for marriage in accordance with Catholic teaching,
and there is too little socialization within an environment of faith.
Therefore assessment of the validity of marriage is important and can help to
solve problems. Where nullity of marriage cannot be demonstrated, the
requirement for absolution and reception of communion, according to the Church’s
established and approved practice, is that the couple live “as friends, as
brother and sister”. Blessings of irregular unions are to be avoided,
“lest confusion arise among the faithful concerning the value of
marriage”. A blessing (bene-dictio: divine sanctioning) of a
relationship that contradicts the will of God is a contradiction in
terms.
During
his homily at the Seventh World Meeting of Families in Milan on 3 June 2012,
Benedict XVI once again had occasion to speak of this painful problem: “I
should also like to address a word to the faithful who, even though they agree
with the Church’s teachings on the family, have had painful experiences of
breakdown and separation. I want you to know that the Pope and the Church
support you in your struggle. I encourage you to remain united to your
communities, and I earnestly hope that your dioceses are developing suitable
initiatives to welcome and accompany you.”
The most
recent Synod of Bishops on the theme “New evangelization for the transmission
of the Christian faith” (7-28 October 2012) addressed once again the situation
of the faithful who after the failure of a marital relationship (not the
failure of a marriage, which being a sacrament still remains) have entered a
new union and live together without a sacramental marriage bond. In the
concluding Message, the Synod Fathers addressed those concerned as follows: “To
all of them we want to say that God’s love does not abandon anyone, that the
Church loves them, too, that the Church is a house that welcomes all, that they
remain members of the Church even if they cannot receive sacramental absolution
and the Eucharist. May our Catholic communities welcome all who live in such
situations and support those who are in the path of conversion and
reconciliation.”
Observations based on Anthropology and Sacramental Theology
The
doctrine of the indissolubility of marriage is often met with incomprehension
in a secularized environment. Where the fundamental insights of Christian
faith have been lost, church affiliation of a purely conventional kind can no
longer sustain major life decisions or provide a firm foothold in the midst of
marital crises – as well as crises in priestly and religious life. Many
people ask: how can I bind myself to one woman or one man for an entire
lifetime? Who can tell me what my marriage will be like in ten, twenty,
thirty, forty years? Is a definitive bond to one person possible at
all? The many marital relationships that founder today reinforce the
scepticism of young people regarding definitive life choices.
On the
other hand, the ideal – built into the order of creation – of faithfulness
between one man and one woman has lost none of its fascination, as is apparent
from recent opinion surveys among young people. Most of them long for a
stable, lasting relationship, in keeping with the spiritual and moral nature of
the human person. Moreover, one must not forget the anthropological value
of indissoluble marriage: it withdraws the partners from caprice and from
the tyranny of feelings and moods. It helps them to survive personal
difficulties and to overcome painful experiences. Above all it protects
the children, who have most to suffer from marital breakdown.
Love is
more than a feeling or an instinct. Of its nature it is self-giving.
In marital love, two people say consciously and intentionally to one
another: only you – and you for ever. The word of the Lord: “What
God has joined together” corresponds to the promise of the spouses: “I
take you as my husband ... I take you as my wife ... I will love, esteem and
honour you, as long as I live, till death us do part.” The priest blesses
the covenant that the spouses have sealed with one another before God. If
anyone should doubt whether the marriage bond is ontological, let him learn
from the word of God: “He who made them from the beginning made them male
and female, and said: for this reason a man shall leave his father and mother
and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh. So they
are no longer two but one flesh” (Mt 19:4-6).
For
Christians, the marriage of baptized persons incorporated into the Body of
Christ has sacramental character and therefore represents a supernatural
reality. A serious pastoral problem arises from the fact that many people
today judge Christian marriage exclusively by worldly and pragmatic
criteria. Those who think according to the “spirit of the world” (1
Cor 2:12) cannot understand the sacramentality of marriage. The
Church cannot respond to the growing incomprehension of the sanctity of
marriage by pragmatically accommodating the supposedly inevitable, but only by
trusting in “the Spirit which is from God, that we might understand the gifts
bestowed on us by God” (1 Cor2:12). Sacramental marriage is a
testimony to the power of grace, which changes man and prepares the whole
Church for the holy city, the new Jerusalem, the Church, which is prepared “as
a bride adorned for her husband” (Rev 21:2). The Gospel of
the sanctity of marriage is to be proclaimed with prophetic candour. By
adapting to the spirit of the age, a weary prophet seeks his own salvation but
not the salvation of the world in Jesus Christ. Faithfulness to marital
consent is a prophetic sign of the salvation that God bestows upon the
world. “He who is able to receive this, let him receive it” (Mt19:12).
Through sacramental grace, married love is purified, strengthened and
ennobled. “Sealed by mutual faithfulness and hallowed above all by
Christ's sacrament, this love remains steadfastly true in body and in mind, in
bright days or dark. It will never be profaned by adultery or divorce” (Gaudium
et Spes, 49). In the strength of the sacrament of marriage, the spouses
participate in God’s definitive, irrevocable love. They can therefore be
witnesses of God’s faithful love, but they must nourish their love constantly
through living by faith and love.
Admittedly
there are situations – as every pastor knows – in which marital cohabitation
becomes for all intents and purposes impossible for compelling reasons, such as
physical or psychological violence. In such hard cases, the Church has
always permitted the spouses to separate and no longer live together. It
must be remembered, though, that the marriage bond of a valid union remains
intact in the sight of God, and the individual parties are not free to contract
a new marriage, as long as the spouse is alive. Pastors and Christian
communities must therefore take pains to promote paths of reconciliation in
these cases too, or, should that not be possible, to help the people concerned
to confront their difficult situation in faith.
Observations based on Moral Theology
It is
frequently suggested that remarried divorcees should be allowed to decide for
themselves, according to their conscience, whether or not to present themselves
for holy communion. This argument, based on a problematical concept of
“conscience”, was rejected by a document of the CDF in 1994. Naturally,
the faithful must consider every time they attend Mass whether it is possible
to receive communion, and a grave unconfessed sin would always be an
impediment. At the same time they have the duty to form their conscience
and to align it with the truth. In so doing they listen also to the
Church’s Magisterium, which helps them “not to swerve from the truth about the
good of man, but rather, especially in more difficult questions, to attain the
truth with certainty and to abide in it” (Veritatis Splendor, 64).
If remarried divorcees are subjectively convinced in their conscience that a
previous marriage was invalid, this must be proven objectively by the competent
marriage tribunals. Marriage is not simply about the relationship of two
people to God, it is also a reality of the Church, a sacrament, and it is not
for the individuals concerned to decide on its validity, but rather for the
Church, into which the individuals are incorporated by faith and baptism.
“If the prior marriage of two divorced and remarried members of the faithful
was valid, under no circumstances can their new union be considered lawful, and
therefore reception of the sacraments is intrinsically impossible. The
conscience of the individual is bound to this norm without exception” (Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger, “The Pastoral approach to marriage must be founded on truth” L’Osservatore
Romano, English edition, 7 December 2011, p. 4)
The
teaching on epikeia, too – according to which a law may be
generally valid, but does not always apply to concrete human situations – may
not be invoked here, because in the case of the indissolubility of sacramental
marriage we are dealing with a divine norm that is not at the disposal of the
Church. Nevertheless – as we see from the privilegium Paulinum –
the Church does have the authority to clarify the conditions that must be
fulfilled for an indissoluble marriage, as taught by Jesus, to come
about. On this basis, the Church has established impediments to marriage,
she has recognized grounds for annulment, and she has developed a detailed
process for examining these.
A further
case for the admission of remarried divorcees to the sacraments is argued in
terms of mercy. Given that Jesus himself showed solidarity with the
suffering and poured out his merciful love upon them, mercy is said to be a
distinctive quality of true discipleship. This is correct, but it misses
the mark when adopted as an argument in the field of sacramental
theology. The entire sacramental economy is a work of divine mercy and it
cannot simply be swept aside by an appeal to the same. An objectively
false appeal to mercy also runs the risk of trivializing the image of God, by
implying that God cannot do other than forgive. The mystery of God
includes not only his mercy but also his holiness and his justice. If one
were to suppress these characteristics of God and refuse to take sin seriously,
ultimately it would not even be possible to bring God’s mercy to man.
Jesus encountered the adulteress with great compassion, but he said to her “Go
and do not sin again” (Jn 8:11). God’s mercy does not
dispense us from following his commandments or the rules of the Church.
Rather it supplies us with the grace and strength needed to fulfil them, to
pick ourselves up after a fall, and to live life in its fullness according to
the image of our heavenly Father.
Pastoral care
Even if there
is no possibility of admitting remarried divorcees to the sacraments, in view
of their intrinsic nature, it is all the more imperative to show pastoral
concern for these members of the faithful, so as to point them clearly towards
what the theology of revelation and the Magisterium have to say. The path
indicated by the Church is not easy for those concerned. Yet they should
know and sense that the Church as a community of salvation accompanies them on
their journey. Insofar as the parties make an effort to understand the
Church’s practice and to abstain from communion, they provide their own
testimony to the indissolubility of marriage.
Clearly,
the care of remarried divorcees must not be reduced to the question of
receiving the Eucharist. It involves a much more wide-ranging pastoral
approach, which seeks to do justice to to the different situations. It is
important to realize that there are other ways, apart from sacramental
communion, of being in fellowship with God. One can draw close to God by
turning to him in faith, hope and charity, in repentance and prayer. God
can grant his closeness and his salvation to people on different paths, even if
they find themselves in a contradictory life situation. As recent
documents of the Magisterium have emphasized, pastors and Christian communities
are called to welcome people in irregular situations openly and sincerely, to
stand by them sympathetically and helpfully, and to make them aware of the love
of the Good Shepherd. If pastoral care is rooted in truth and love, it
will discover the right paths and approaches in constantly new ways.
Archbishop
Gerhard Ludwig Müller
October 23, 2013
No comments:
Post a Comment