"There has been quite a bit of consternation since I sent an internal
communication to my clergy and staff last month that was unfortunately
leaked to the public concerning my 'Decree Regarding Same-sex "Marriage"
and Related Pastoral Issues.' While the underlying doctrinal issues are
not new, these norms were necessary to address situations in the
pastoral context arising from the new reality in the law and in our
culture, given that same-sex marriage is now recognized by legislative
action and judicial decision as legal throughout the United States. This
decree prohibits same-sex weddings to be performed by our diocesan
personnel or to take place in Catholic facilities, restricts persons in
such unions from receiving the sacraments or serving in a public
liturgical role unless they have repented, and says that deceased
persons who had lived openly in a same-sex marriage giving public
scandal to the faithful are to be deprived of ecclesiastical funeral
rites unless they have given some signs of repentance before their
death.
"At the same time, the decree says that a child with a Catholic parent
or parents living in a same-sex marriage may be baptized if there is a
well-founded hope that he or she will be brought up in the Catholic
faith and that such a child who is otherwise qualified and properly
disposed may receive first Eucharist and the sacrament of confirmation.
Moreover, the decree states that children living with persons in a
same-sex marriage are not to be denied admission to Catholic schools and
catechetical and formational programs on those grounds alone. However,
parents and those who legally take the place of parents are to be
advised that their children will be instructed according to the church’s
teachings on marriage and sexuality in their fullness and they must
agree to abide by the Family School Agreement.
"In the decree I also remind all who exercise a ministry within the
church that, while being clear and direct about what the church teaches,
our pastoral ministry must always be respectful, compassionate and
sensitive to all our brothers and sisters in faith, as was the ministry
of Christ Jesus, the Good Shepherd and our everlasting model for
ministry. People with same-sex attraction are welcome in our parishes in
the Catholic Diocese of Springfield in Illinois as we repent our sins
and pray for God to keep us in his grace.
"All of this is totally consistent with Catholic teaching about the
sacraments and the understanding of marriage as between one man and one
woman that has prevailed for millennia in all of society, not just in
the church. The fact that there would be such an outcry against this
decree is quite astounding and shows how strong the LGBT lobby is both
in the secular world as well as within the church. People have been
quick to quote the famous in-flight statement of Pope Francis in 2013
when he said, 'If someone is gay and is searching for the Lord and has
good will, then who am I to judge him?' But the pope quickly added, 'The
problem is not having this [homosexual] tendency, no, we must be
brothers and sisters to one another, and there is this one and there is
that one. The problem is in making a lobby of this tendency: a lobby of
misers, a lobby of politicians, a lobby of masons, so many lobbies. For
me, this is the greater problem.' So while we certainly leave the
eternal judgment of one’s soul to God, we still must deal with objective
realities here on earth and even Pope Francis recognized that the gay
lobby is a great problem.
"Critics have been urging me to rescind my 'Decree Regarding Same-sex
"Marriage" and Related Pastoral Issues.' However, this decree is a
rather straightforward application of existing Catholic doctrine and
canon law to the new situation of legal marital status being granted in
civil law to same-sex couples, which is contrary to the teaching of the
Catholic Church. All clergy before they are ordained take an Oath of
Fidelity which includes the statement, 'In fulfilling the charge
entrusted to me in the name of the Church, I shall hold fast to the
deposit of faith in its entirety; I shall faithfully hand it on and
explain it, and I shall avoid any teachings contrary to it. I shall
follow and foster the common discipline of the entire Church and I shall
maintain the observance of all ecclesiastical laws, especially those
contained in the Code of Canon Law.' Pastors and bishops repeat this
oath upon assuming their office to be exercised in the name of the
church. Thus, deacons, priests and bishops cannot contradict church
teachings or refuse to observe ecclesiastical laws without violating
their oath, which is a promise made to God.
"Father James Martin, a Jesuit priest who lives in New York, posted my
decree on Twitter and said in a series of tweets, 'If bishops ban
members of same-sex couples from funeral rites, they must also ban
divorced and remarried Catholics without annulments ... women who have
children out of wedlock, members of straight couples living together
before marriage, anyone using birth control ... To focus only on LGBT
people, even those in same-sex marriages, without a similar focus on the
sexual or moral behavior of straight people is in the words of the
Catechism a "sign of unjust discrimination."' Father Martin gets a lot
wrong in those tweets, since canon law prohibits ecclesiastical funeral
rites only in cases of 'manifest sinners' which gives 'public scandal,'
and something such as using birth control is a private matter that is
usually not manifest or made public. Moreover, my decree does not focus on 'LGBT people,' but on
so-called same-sex marriage, which is a public legal status. No one is
ever denied the sacraments or Christian burial for simply having a
homosexual orientation. Even someone who had entered into a same-sex
'marriage' can receive the sacraments and be given ecclesiastical
funeral rites if they repent and renounce their 'marriage.'
"Father Martin also misses the key phrase in the decree that
ecclesiastical funeral rites are to be denied to persons in same-sex
marriages 'unless they have given some signs of repentance before their
death.' This is a direct quote from canon 1184 of the Code of Canon Law,
which is intended as a call to repentance. Jesus began his public
ministry proclaiming the Gospel of God with these words: 'This is the
time of fulfillment. The kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe
in the gospel' (Mark 1:15). In other words, those living openly in
same-sex marriage, like other manifest sinners who give public scandal,
can receive ecclesiastical funeral rites if they gave some sign of
repentance. This does not mean that unrepentant manifest sinners will
simply be refused or turned away. Even in those cases where a public
Mass of Christian Burial in church cannot be celebrated because the
deceased person was unrepentant and there would be public scandal, the
priest or deacon may conduct a private funeral service, for example, at
the funeral home.
"Father Martin’s tweets do raise an important point with regard to
other situations of grave sin and the reception of Holy Communion. He is
right that the Church’s teaching does not apply only to people in
same-sex marriages. According to canon 916, all those who are 'conscious
of grave sin' are not to receive Holy Communion without previous
sacramental confession. This is normally not a question of denying Holy
Communion, but of people themselves refraining from Holy Communion if
they are 'conscious of grave sin.' While no one can know one’s
subjective sinfulness before God, the Church can and must teach about
the objective realities of grave sin. Speaking objectively, then, one
can say the following:
"Those who have sexual relations outside of a valid marriage, whether
they are heterosexual or homosexual, should not receive Holy Communion
unless they repent, go to confession and amend their lives. This
includes the divorced and remarried without an annulment. An exception
would be where the couple agrees to live as brother and sister, as long
as there is no public scandal. Similarly, if there is no public scandal,
two men who live chastely with each other as friends or as brother and
brother, or two women who live chastely with each other as friends or as
sister and sister, may receive Holy Communion if there is no public
scandal.
"Those who have had an abortion or have assisted in performing or
procuring an abortion should not receive Holy Communion unless they
repent, go to confession and amend their lives.
"Those politicians and judges who helped to make same-sex marriage
legal and who aid and abet abortion, for example, by voting for taxpayer
funding for abortion, should not receive Holy Communion unless they
repent, go to confession and amend their lives.
"Those who use artificial contraception should not receive Holy
Communion unless they repent, go to confession and amend their lives.
"Those who miss Mass on Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation, unless it
would be impossible due to a grave cause such as serious illness,
should not receive Holy Communion unless they repent, go to confession
and amend their lives.
"These are just a few examples, but in fact all those who are
conscious of any grave sin should not receive Holy Communion unless they
repent, go to confession and amend their lives. Those who do receive
Holy Communion while conscious of grave sin compound the moral offense
by committing the sin of sacrilege.
"My recent decree did not address all these various other situations
because they have long been part of Church teaching. The decree was
needed to add the novel concept of same-sex 'marriage' to those
instances considered to be objectively grave sins.
"The truths of the faith revealed by our Lord in Scripture and
Tradition are not always easy to accept, especially in a world that
seeks to make all truth subjective. The fact is that some truths are
objective and unalterable. Jesus said, 'Blessed are the pure of heart,
for they shall see God' (Matthew 5:8). There is no greater happiness
than to see God. Saint Paul reminds us that we are all in need of daily
conversion in that 'all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God
(Romans 3:23).' Let us pray for each other, that each of us may come to
an ever deeper understanding of God’s call to discipleship in our
lives, the same God who 'wills everyone to be saved and come to
knowledge of the truth' (1 Tim. 2: 4).
"May God give us this grace. Amen." (Bishop Paprocki, 7/9/17)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Links Promoting the Sanctity of Human Life & Marriage/ Family/ Human Sexuality
- Abortifacients & Catholic Hospitals....Under no circumstances should Catholic hospitals jeopardize the Catholic witness by providing abortifacients or contraceptives.
- Ads in parish bulletins....this is an appeal for parishes to forego ads for providers of abortifacients and contraceptives.
- AFA (Tell "AMA: Taxpayers should [NOT] subsidize trans reproductive surgeries")
- C-Fam
- Catholic Vote.org
- Children of God for Life
- Family Policy Alliance
- Mass Resistance (The [misleadingly named] Equality Act is back before Congress & must be stopped)
- NJ Family Policy Center (Petition to Attorney General Matt Platkin)
- NJ Right to LIfe
- PA Family
- Pa Pro Life (Oppose Pa HB 1888)
- Pa Pro-Life Federation
- President Joe Biden Has Turned a Blind Eye to the Killing of Christians in Nigeria. Sign the Petition Now.
- Tell your bishop to prohibit the “blessing” of sinful unions in your diocese
- USCCB (re: Child Welfare Provider Inclusion Act)
- USCCB (re: Equality Act)
- USCCB (re: Letters to Pharmaceutical Companies ["to protest the use of abortion-derived cell lines and advocate for the development of vaccines with no connection to abortion."])
No comments:
Post a Comment