On a spring day about five years ago, when I was rector of Mundelein Seminary,
Francis Cardinal George spoke to the assembled student body. He congratulated
those proudly orthodox seminarians for their devotion to the dogmatic and moral
truths proposed by the Church, but he also offered some pointed pastoral
advice. He said that it is insufficient simply to drop the truth on people and
then smugly walk away. Rather, he insisted, you must accompany those you have
instructed, committing yourself to helping them integrate the truth that you
have shared. I thought of this intervention by the late Cardinal often as I was
reading Pope Francis’s apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitia.
If I might make bold to summarize a complex 264-page document, I would say that
Pope Francis wants the truths regarding marriage, sexuality, and family to be
unambiguously declared, but that he also wants the Church’s ministers to reach
out in mercy and compassion to those who struggle to incarnate those truths in
their lives.
In regard to the moral objectivities of marriage, the Pope is
bracingly clear. He unhesitatingly puts forward the Church’s understanding that
authentic marriage is between a man and a woman, who have committed themselves
to one another in permanent fidelity, expressing their mutual love and openness
to children, and abiding as a sacrament of Christ’s love for his Church (52,
71). He bemoans any number of threats to this ideal, including moral
relativism, a pervasive cultural narcissism, the ideology of self-invention,
pornography, the “throwaway” society, etc. He explicitly calls to our attention
the teaching of Pope Paul VI in Humanae Vitae regarding the essential connection
between the unitive and the procreative dimensions of conjugal love (80).
Moreover, he approvingly cites the consensus of the recent Synod on the Family
that homosexual relationships cannot be considered even vaguely analogous to
what the Church means by marriage (251). He is especially strong in his
condemnation of ideologies that dictate that gender is merely a social
construct and can be changed or manipulated according to our choice (56). Such
moves are tantamount, he argues, to forgetting the right relationship between
creature and Creator. Finally, any doubt regarding the Pope’s attitude toward
the permanence of marriage is dispelled as clearly and directly as possible:
“The indissolubility of marriage—‘what God has joined together, let no man put
asunder’ (Mt 19:6) —should not be viewed as a ‘yoke’ imposed on humanity, but
as a ‘gift’ granted to those who are joined in marriage...” (62).
In a particularly affecting section of the exhortation, Pope
Francis interprets the famous hymn to love in Paul’s first letter to the
Corinthians (90-119). Following the great missionary Apostle, he argues that
love is not primarily a feeling (94), but rather a commitment of the will to do
some pretty definite and challenging things: to be patient, to bear with one
another, to put away envy and rivalry, ceaselessly to hope. In the tones of
grandfatherly pastor, Francis instructs couples entering into marriage that
love, in this dense and demanding sense of the term, must be at the heart of
their relationship. I frankly think that this portion of Amoris Laetitia should be required reading for those
in pre-Cana other similar marriage preparation programs in the Catholic Church.
Now Francis says much more regarding the beauty and integrity of marriage, but
you get my point: there is no watering down or compromising of the ideal in
this text.
However, the Pope also honestly admits that many, many people
fall short of the ideal, failing fully to integrate all of the dimensions of
what the Church means by matrimony. What is the proper attitude to them? Like
Cardinal George, the Pope has a visceral reaction against a strategy of simple
condemnation, for the Church, he says, is a field hospital, designed to care
precisely for the wounded (292). Accordingly, he recommends two fundamental
moves. First, we can recognize, even in irregular or objectively imperfect unions,
certain positive elements that participate, as it were, in the fullness of
married love. Thus for example, a couple living together without benefit of
marriage might be marked by mutual fidelity, deep love, the presence of
children, etc. Appealing to these positive marks, the Church might, according
to a “law of gradualness,” move that couple toward authentic and
fully-integrated matrimony (295). This is not to say that living together is
permitted or in accord with the will of God; it is to say that the Church can
perhaps find a more winsome way to move people in such a situation to
conversion.
The second move—and here we come to what will undoubtedly be the
most controverted part of the exhortation—is to employ the Church’s classical
distinction between the objective quality of a moral act and the subjective
responsibility that the moral agent bears for committing that act (302). The
Pope observes that many people in civil marriages following upon a divorce find
themselves in a nearly impossible bind. If their second marriage has proven
faithful, life-giving, and fruitful, how can they simply walk out on it without
in fact incurring more sin and producing more sadness? This is, of course, not
to insinuate that their second marriage is not objectively disordered, but it
is to say that the pressures, difficulties, and dilemmas might mitigate their
culpability. Here is how Pope Francis applies the distinction: “Hence it
is can no longer simply be said that all those in any ‘irregular’ situation are
living in a state of mortal sin and are deprived of sanctifying grace” (301).
Could the Church’s minister, therefore, not help such people, in the privacy of
the rectory parlor or the confessional, to discern their degree of moral
responsibility? Once again, this is not to embrace a breezy “anything-goes”
mentality, nor to deny that a civil marriage after a divorce is objectively
irregular; it is to find, perhaps, for someone in great pain, a way forward.
Will Amoris Laetitia end all debate on these matters? Hardly.
But it does indeed represent a deft and impressive balancing of the many and
often contradictory interventions at the two Synods on the Family. As such, it
will be of great service to many suffering souls who come to the Field
Hospital.
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