Cardinal Walter Kasper: 'The Church is not
against birth control at all' (Clarify: True, the Church is not against birth control, but, yes, against contraception).
Reported remark of the Pope:
Asked about the situation of marriage in a largely post-Christian world in which most people are at best “baptised pagans,” Kasper said, “I’ve spoken to the pope himself about this, and he said he believes that 50 percent of marriages are not valid.”
Asked about the situation of marriage in a largely post-Christian world in which most people are at best “baptised pagans,” Kasper said, “I’ve spoken to the pope himself about this, and he said he believes that 50 percent of marriages are not valid.”
“Marriage is a sacrament. A sacrament presupposes faith. And if the couple only want a bourgeois ceremony in a church because it’s more beautiful, more romantic, than a civil ceremony, you have to ask whether there was faith, and whether they really accepted all the conditions of a valid sacramental marriage—that is, unity, exclusivity, and also indissolubility.”
Blogger: I immediately add the remarks of Cardinal Ratzinger on same in 1998, which is more extensively developed in the previous few posts:
"Further study is required, however, concerning the question of whether non-believing Christians — baptized persons who never or who no longer believe in God — can truly enter into a sacramental marriage. In other words, it needs to be clarified whether every marriage between two baptized persons is ipso facto a sacramental marriage. In fact, the Code states that only a “valid” marriage between baptized persons is at the same time a sacrament (cf. cic, can. 1055, § 2). Faith belongs to the essence of the sacrament; what remains to be clarified is the juridical question of what evidence of the “absence of faith” would have as a consequence that the sacrament does not come into being."
Also Ratzinger in Aosta in 2005: "During the meeting with clergy in the Diocese of Aosta, which took place 25 July 2005, Pope Benedict XVI spoke of this difficult question: “those who were married in the Church for the sake of tradition but were not truly believers, and who later find themselves in a new and invalid marriage and subsequently convert, discover faith and feel excluded from the Sacrament, are in a particularly painful situation. This really is a cause of great suffering and when I was Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, I invited various Bishops’ Conferences and experts to study this problem: a sacrament celebrated without faith. Whether, in fact, a moment of invalidity could be discovered here because the Sacrament was found to be lacking a fundamental dimension, I do not dare to say. I personally thought so, but from the discussions we had I realized that it is a highly complex problem and ought to be studied further. But given these people’s painful plight, it must be studied further.”
Fri May 09, 2014 18:30
EST
ROME,
May 9, 2014 (LifeSiteNews.com) – The Church is not opposed to birth
control, Pope Francis believes that 50 percent of marriages are sacramentally
invalid, and the notion of “heroic virtue” in refraining from committing
adultery or other sexual sins is an unreachable ideal and “not for the average
Christian,” a senior Vatican prelate has said in a series of interviews while
on a visit to New York.
Kasper
made the comments on contraception in an interview with WNYC Radio’s Brian
Lehrer. Lehrer asked
whether it was “merciful” to condemn divorce as well as married couples who
“use condoms for birth control.”
Cardinal Walter Kasper
“Doesn’t
the Church have a whole set of these sex-related rules that at this point are
only about the rules themselves? That in common sense and independent
assessment of a merciful or an ethical way would bring you to the opposite
conclusion,” Lehrer asked.
Kasper
responded that while it is normally the Church’s role to help married couples
reconcile their difficulties and stay married, “there can be divorces
necessary, and then it’s the message of the merciful God that he gives to
everybody a new chance, a new beginning. And the Church should do it the same.”
Lehrer
asked whether married couples who already have “three children and live in
poverty” should not be “allowed to use birth control to prevent more
conception?”
Kasper
responded, “Well, the Church is not against birth control at all. … It’s about
the methods of birth control. … I do not want to enter into this
characteristic…how they have to do it. It’s their personal conscience and their
personal responsibility.”
Cardinal
Kasper, whose theological works have been praised by Pope Francis as “serene”
and “kneeling theology,” laid out a plan at the February consistory of
cardinals to allow divorced and civilly remarried Catholics to return to the
reception of Communion “after a period of penance,” but without making any
change in their circumstances. This suggestion reportedly aroused an angry
response by several cardinals present at the consistory and has since triggered
a backlash.
In
an interview with the liberal Jesuit magazine
Commonweal on his trip to
New York, said the high standards required by Church teaching on marriage could
be considered an “ideal” to which the Church ought not hold people in the
practical realm.
Speaking
of ‘remarried’ couples who live together as “brother and sister,” Kasper told
the magazine, “I have high respect for such people. But whether I can impose it
is another question. But I would say that people must do what is possible in
their situation.”
“We
cannot as human beings always do the ideal, the best. We must do the best
possible in a given situation,” he said.
“It’s
a heroic act, and heroism is not for the average Christian,” he added.
Asked
about the situation of marriage in a largely post-Christian world in which most
people are at best “baptised pagans,” Kasper said, “I’ve spoken to the pope
himself about this, and he said he believes that 50 percent of marriages are
not valid.”
“Marriage
is a sacrament. A sacrament presupposes faith. And if the couple only want a
bourgeois ceremony in a church because it’s more beautiful, more romantic, than
a civil ceremony, you have to ask whether there was faith, and whether they
really accepted all the conditions of a valid sacramental marriage—that is,
unity, exclusivity, and also indissolubility.”
While
some might believe that Catholics who have repented of their divorce and who
are civilly remarried ought to remove themselves from the “occasion for sin” or
live together chastely “as brother and sister,” Cardinal Kasper suggested that
such a view of repentance is itself a sin. (Blogger:?)
Asked
what ought to stop people from applying this “rigorist” interpretation, Kasper
said, “The breakup of the second family. If there are children you cannot do
it. If you’re engaged to a new partner, you’ve given your word, and so it’s not
possible.”
Kasper
is on a lecture tour to promote his most recent book, “Mercy: The Essence of
the Gospel and the Key to Christian Life.” At a talk at Fordham University, he
openly attacked the current head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Cardinal Gerhard Müller and claimed that Pope Francis has no concerns
about “heresy” or the overturning of the Church’s doctrines.
Religion
News Service reported that in the Q&A session following his lecture, Kasper
related that Pope Francis himself had told him the story of “an old cardinal”
who had said of Kasper’s book, “Holy Father, you cannot do this! There are
heresies in this book!” The German cardinal related that the pope had reassured
him with a smile that, “This enters in one ear and goes out the other.” Pope Francis
is on record saying that Kasper’s book “has done me such good.”
Asked
about the ongoing
dispute between the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the dissident American
organisation, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, Kasper took the
opportunity to contradict CDF prefect Cardinal Gerhard Müller. In an address in
Rome at the end of April, Müller had
told the LCWR nuns that they must
drop their New Age “Conscious Evolution” rhetoric and return to basic Catholic
doctrine on the nature of God, Jesus Christ and the Church. Kasper dismissed
Müller’s concerns, saying that what is needed is more “dialogue.”
“If
you have a problem with the leadership of the women’s orders, then you have to
have a discussion with them, you have to dialogue with them, an exchange of
ideas,” he said.
“Perhaps
they have to change something. Perhaps also the [CDF] has a little bit to
change its mind. That’s the normal way of doing things in the church. I am for
dialogue. Dialogue presupposes different positions. The church is not a
monolithic unity.”
“We
should be in communion,” he continued, “which also means in dialogue with each
other. I hope all this controversy will end in a good, peaceful and meaningful
dialogue.”
Kasper
even took the opportunity to praise the “feminist theologian,” Elizabeth
Johnson, CSJ, to whom the LCWR has chosen to give an award for “Outstanding
Leadership.” Müller had singled out the award as a “deliberate provocation to
the Holy See,” since Johnson has been sharply rebuked by the US Conference of
Catholic Bishops’ Doctrinal Committee for her divergence from Catholic theology
on the nature of God.
Kasper
praised Johnson at Fordham, along with the notoriously anti-Catholic
author Elisabeth
Schussler Fiorenza, one of the leading
voices of “feminist” theology that rejects the Catholic teaching on the Trinity
and the fatherhood of God. Kasper said, “I esteem them both,” and joked that
since he had often clashed with the former Cardinal Ratzinger when he was head
of the CDF, the two women “are in good company.”
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