Those puerile and socially disturbed out there with their dyspeptic
mutterings of incoherence who continue to defame and dance on the supposed
episcopal grave of the Lion of Rome, need a good swift kick into the
confessional.
Raymond Cardinal Leo Burke is a humble and holy servant of the Lord and
of you and I.
May Our Blessed Lord bless him, Our Lady keep him close and St. Michael
protect him from the enemies especially catholic laity and catholic priests in
certain media circles that do the devil's work.
They know who they are.
We do too!
+++
By Michael O'Loughlin For CRUX
National reporter September 30, 2014
Not only should Catholics who have divorced and remarried not expect
permission to receive Communion following the upcoming synod of bishops, but any
streamlining to make the annulment process easier is unlikely, too.
That was the message from Cardinal Raymond Burke earlier today, in which
he blasted those who advocate for change to the church’s prohibition on divorce
and the loosening of the annulment process. He said any changes would “only
further encourage a defective view of marriage and the family.”
Speaking with reporters on a conference call hosted by Ignatius Press,
Burke said that restructuring the annulment process — which some say is church
discipline open to adjustment and not core doctrine — would lead Catholics to
believe that the church isn't serious about its prohibition on the
“insolubility” (does O'Loughlin mean indissolubility?) of marriage.
“It’s a very deceptive line of argument,” Burke said.
Burke, who heads up the Vatican’s Supreme Court, upped his public feud
with another cardinal, Walter Kasper, dismissing Kasper’s proposal that the
church restructure its annulment process. “The Kasper positions have been
discussed some decades ago,” Burke said, and “we came to the conclusion that
the solution proposed by Cardinal Kasper is fundamentally flawed.”
Kasper said earlier this month that Pope Francis shared his beliefs.
“They claim to know on their own what truth is, but Catholic doctrine is
not a closed system, but a living tradition that develops,” Kasper told the
Italian daily Il Mattino. “None of my brother cardinals has ever spoken with
me. I, on the other hand, have spoken twice with the Holy Father. I arranged
everything with him. He was in agreement. What can a cardinal do but stand with
the pope? I am not the target, the target is another.” (by inference, Pope
Francis -- Vox).
Burke, who was removed from the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops last
year by Pope Francis, bristled at this characterization.
“I find it amazing that the cardinal claims to speak for the pope,”
Burke said. “The pope does not have laryngitis. The pope is not mute; he can
speak for himself.”
Burke said proposals like Kasper’s are “disobedience to, or a
non-adherence to, the words of the Lord himself.”
According to church teaching, Catholics who remarry civilly without an
annulment of their first, sacramental marriage may not receive Communion unless
they abstain from sexual relations, living with their new partners “as brother
and sister.”
Critics say the annulment process can be expensive, demeaning and take
too long. (This is not true, I've been through it, it is a lie; it was not
demeaning, $900 charitable donation for which I received a tax receipt, done in
a year, outright lies -- Vox.) Some Catholics have expressed hope that the
synod may streamline the annulment process, and Kasper has been at the
forefront of that movement.
“He is proposing a direction that in [its] whole history, the church has
never taken,” Burke said.
James Hitchcock, a professor at St. Louis University, said that a change
in the church’s prohibition on Communion for the divorce and remarried could
alienate those living by the current teaching.
“There are people who have lived heroically by the teaching of the
Church. They have not received Communion in living in the teaching of the
Church, and they cannot be brushed away,” he said. Burke defended his public challenge to Kasper and other bishops.
“For everyone to simply be silent while they see things being said that
are not true, how can this be construed as being charitable?” he asked.
Rev. Joseph Fessio, a Jesuit priest and head of Ignatius Press who also
was on the call, agreed. He called the focus on divorced and remarried
Catholics a “very important, but very small issue” that Kasper’s ideas have
amplified. (why, the Council or Synod of the Media?")
Still, he said that the public dispute was a blessing for the church.
“I don’t think it’s a bad thing these disputes are known; in fact, I
think it’s a good thing,” he said.
“Remaining in the Truth of Christ,” which Ignatius Press will publish
Oct. 1, includes essays in response to Cardinal Kasper’s proposal by three
synod fathers: Cardinal Gerhard Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith; Cardinal Burke, prefect of the Supreme Court of the
Apostolic Signature, and Cardinal Carlo Caffarra of Bologna, Italy.
On the same day, Ignatius Press will also publish two other books in
which synod fathers respond to Cardinal Kasper’s proposal: “The Hope of the
Family,” an extended interview with Cardinal Muller; and “The Gospel of the
Family,” which features a foreword by Cardinal George Pell, prefect of the
Secretariat for the Economy. (Cardinal Kasper’s address, published by Paulist
Press, is also titled “The Gospel of the Family.”)
Burke believes he said continuing the ban on divorce will strengthen
marriage, and that the stakes are high.
“If the family is not strong, and the institution of marriage is not
strong, society is in danger,” he said.
Material from Catholic News Service was used in this report.
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