Blogger:
In brief:
1) There was no
specific reference to the sacraments, as in reception of the Eucharist;
2) It sets out an “internal forum”
process under the guidance of a priest, to enable “the formation of a correct
judgment on what obstacles exist to a fuller participation [read Eucharist] in
the life of the Church and on the steps that can encourage that participation
and make it grow.”
3) The burden of a decision
concerning the state of grace and reception of the Eucharist falls on the
individual conscience that needs a life-time magisterially enlightened
formation of mind and will aided by ongoing spiritual direction.[1]
4) The doctrinal background to
the above is the necessity of faith [which as “obedience” of self-gift[2]]
for the valid reception of the sacraments. Absent a lived faith by the ministers of the sacrament of matrimony,
absent the validity of the sacrament because the bond which in this case is
uniquely the gift of themselves is absent. Absent the self-gift,
absent the bond, absent the ontological reality of the mystery of Christ and
the Church as Head and Body,
5) Absent the reality of the
marriage and added the positive desire to receive Christ in the Eucharist, the
way is open to licit and fruitful reception of the sacrament.
Austen Ivereigh
In
the End, Synod Set a Pastoral Tone
The
Tablet. October 28, 2015
Pope
Francis is seen surrounded by bishops at a special audience at the Vatican on
the day after the Synod on the Family concluded.(Photo by Catholic News Service/Paul Haring)
VATICAN CITY – It
was a rocky road and sometimes it seemed as if they would get stuck. But at the
end of the three-week family synod in Rome, the world’s Catholic bishops
managed to produce a consensus document that struck a fresh pastoral tone.
The final report,
which has not yet been translated into English, examines a huge range of
painful and complex issues relating to families, calling for the Church to be
attentive to the ways in which people “live and suffer as result of their
condition.”
After an early
struggle in the synod in which a vigorous minority sought to make the assembly
about teaching and doctrine, the pastoral focus prevailed. It took for granted
existing Church teachings but looked for concrete ways of putting into practice
God’s mercy.
“The Church starts
from the concrete realities of today’s families, all in need of mercy, starting
with those who suffer most,” the final report said, likening the Church to “a
lighthouse or a torch carried in the midst of the crowd to bring light to all
those who have lost their way or who find themselves in the midst of a storm.”
After surveying the
challenges to marriage and family in the first part, and reviewing the Church’s
teaching and insights in the second, the final part turned to concrete actions
the Church can now take.
A major theme is
the need to bolster preparation and support for married couples, improving
pre-marriage catechesis and building in teaching on marriage and family into
the education of the young. Marriage courses should be “geared to the
vocational discernment both as an individual and as a couple,” and young
couples in the early years of marriage should be better integrated into parish
groups to overcome the isolation that often follows the wedding, the final
report says, adding that creating “meaningful bonds” is key to overcoming the
pressures on young marriages.
The final part of
the document spells out ways of walking with people in a huge variety of what
the report calls “complex situations”: cohabitation, civil marriage, mixed and
interreligious marriages, abandoned spouses, single parents, as well as the
divorced.
Sometimes
cohabitation and civil marriage are chosen not because the couple is rejecting
sacramental marriage, but rather for reasons of culture, finances or
circumstance, the report says, urging the Church to see these as potential
stepping stones to sacramental marriage.
A particularly
urgent need is for “a dedicated ministry to all those whose marital
relationship is broken,” says the report, noting that relationship breakdown
can become an opportunity for “reflection, conversion, and entrusting to God.”
When couples experience problems in their marriage, they should be able to
count on the help and support of the Church: with help and encouragement most
marital crises can be overcome.
The most
controversial paragraphs – one of which attained the required two-thirds
majority by just one vote – make a call for divorced and remarried Catholics to
be integrated into Church life, noting that “the logic of integration is the
key to their pastoral accompaniment.” The report then sets out an “internal
forum” process, under the guidance of a priest, to enable “the formation
of a correct judgment on what obstacles exist to a fuller participation in
the life of the Church and on the steps that can encourage that participation
and make it grow.”
Although the report
does not mention what that participation could involve, and makes no specific
reference to the sacraments, the wording is sufficiently ambiguous to allow
those favoring an opening in this area to say it remains on the table, while
those opposed can claim that the document in effect reasserts existing
practice.
Cardinal Walter
Kasper, the German theologian who has led to the call for an opening, said
afterwards that “the door has been opened to the possibility of the divorced
and remarried being granted Communion,” but that the question had not been
resolved.
But Cardinal George
Pell, the Vatican’s Australian finance chief who emerged at the synod as leader
of the opposition to the proposal, said the absence of any reference to Communion
was “fundamental” and that any suggestion of a change to existing practice was
“misguided.”
In the end, the
only person who can resolve the ambiguity is Pope Francis, who is likely to
issue a post-synodal apostolic exhortation (possibly under the title of “The
Joy of the Family”) in the first half of 2016.
[1]
Why? Because conscience is the
consciousness resulting from “an inner ontological tendency within man, who is created
in the likeness of God, toward the divine. From its origin, man’s being
resonates with some things and clashes with others. This anamnesis of the
origin, which results from the god-like constitution of our being, is not a
conceptually articulated knowing, a store of retrievable contents. It is, so to
speak, an inner sense, a capacity to recall, so that the one whom it addresses,
if he is not turned in on himself, hears its echo from within. He sees: That’s
it ! That is what my nature points to and seeks;’ J. Ratzinger, “Conscience and
Truth,” On Conscience Ignatius, (2007)32. This means that conscience is
a report from our very being. It is not “a conceptually articulated knowing.”
It is a consciousness arising from a living experience which needs to be lived
out in accordance with my being image and likeness of the divine Persons Who
are “out of themselves.” So the praxis
of self-gift is de rigueur for a
right conscience. The pastoral is the key to the true doctrinal.
[2]
See Dei Verbum #5: “‘The obedience of
faith’ (Rom. 16, 26; cf. Rom . 1 , 5; 2 Cor. 10, 5-6) must be given to God as
he reveals himself. By faith man freely commits his entire self to God, making
‘the full submission of his intellect and will to God who reveals,’ and
willingly assenting to the Revelation given by him.”
No comments:
Post a Comment