The idea that Catholics should be allowed to remarry and receive
communion did not begin with the letter signed by Cardinal Kasper and
other members of the German episcopate in 1993. Another country’s
episcopate – England’s – pioneered this experiment in Christian doctrine
nearly 500 years ago. At stake then was not just whether any Catholic
could remarry, but whether the king could, since his wife had not borne
him a son.
As with those who advocate for communion for the civilly remarried, the
English bishops were uncomfortable with embracing divorce and remarriage
outright. Instead, they chose to bend the law to the individual
circumstances of the case with which they were confronted, and King
Henry VIII was granted an “annulment” — on a fraudulent basis and
without the sanction of Rome.
If “heroism is not for the average Christian,” as the German Cardinal
Walter Kasper has put it, it certainly wasn’t for the King of England.
Instead, issues of personal happiness and the well-being of a country
made a strong utilitarian argument for Henry’s divorce. And the King
could hardly be bothered to skip communion as the result of an irregular
marriage.
England’s Cardinal Wolsey and all the country’s bishops, with the
exception of Bishop John Fisher of Rochester, supported the king’s
attempt to undo his first – and legitimate – marriage. Like Fisher,
Thomas More a layman and the king’s chancellor, also withheld his
support. Both were martyred – and later canonized.
In publicly advocating that the king’s marriage was indissoluble, Fisher
argued that “this marriage of the king and queen can be dissolved by no
power, human or Divine.” For this principle, he said, he was willing to
give his life. He continued by noting that John the Baptist saw no way
to “die more gloriously than in the cause of marriage,” despite the fact
that marriage then “was not so holy at that time as it has now become
by the shedding of Christ’s Blood.”
Like Thomas More and John the Baptist, Fisher was beheaded, and like them, he is called “saint.”
At the Synod on the Family taking place right now in Rome, some of the
German bishops and their supporters are pushing for the Church to allow
those who are both divorced and remarried to receive communion, while
other bishops from around the world are insisting that the Church cannot
change Christ’s teaching. And this begs a question: Do the German
bishops believe that Sts. Thomas More and John Fisher sacrificed their
lives in vain?
Jesus showed us throughout his ministry that heroic sacrifice is
required to follow him. When one reads the Gospel with an open heart, a
heart that does not place the world and history above the Gospel and
Tradition, one sees the cost of discipleship to which every disciple is
called. The German bishops would do well to read, “The Cost of
Discipleship” by the Lutheran martyr, Dietrich Bonhoeffer. For what they
promote is “cheap grace” rather than “costly grace,” and they even seem
to ignore the words of Jesus that, “Whoever wishes to come after me
must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me,” (Mk. 8: 34, Lk.
14: 25-27, Jn. 12: 24-26).
Think, for example, of the adulterous woman whom the Pharisees presented
to Jesus to trap him. The first thing he did was to protect her from
her accusers, and the second thing he did was to call her to leave her
sin. “Go,” he commanded her, “and sin no more.”
Following the words of Christ himself, the Catholic Church has always
taught that divorce and remarriage is simply adultery by another name.
And since communion is reserved to Catholics in the state of grace,
those living in an irregular situation are not able participate in that
aspect of the life of the Church, though they should always be welcomed
within the parish and at the Mass itself.
Last May, Cardinal Kasper claimed in an interview with Commonweal that
we “can’t say whether it is ongoing adultery” when a repentant, divorced
Christian nonetheless engages in “sexual relations” in a new union.
Rather, he thinks “absolution is possible.”
And yet, Christ clearly called remarriage adultery and said adultery was
sinful (Mt. 5:32, Mk. 10:12, Lk. 16:18). In the case of the Samaritan
woman (John 4:1-42), Jesus also confirmed that remarriage cannot be
valid, even when informed by sincere feeling and fidelity.
When one adds to the equation the high failure rate of remarriages
subsequent to a divorce, where Cardinal Kasper’s reasoning would lead,
no one can say. For example, should sacramental communion be allowed
only for the once-remarried? What about people remarried twice, or three
times? And it is obvious that the arguments made for easing Christ’s
prohibition on remarriage could also be made for contraceptive use, or
any number of other aspects of Catholic theology understood by the
modern, self-referential world as “difficult.”
Predicting what this would lead to isn’t a matter of knowing the future,
but of simply observing the past. We need only to look at the Anglican
Church, which opened the door to – and later embraced – contraception in
the 20th century and for more than a decade has allowed for divorce and
remarriage in certain cases.
The German bishops’ “Plan B” to do things “their way” in Germany, even
if it goes against the grain of Church teaching, has the same flaws.
And, it has an eerie ring to it – in an Anglican sort of way. Consider
the words of the head of the German Bishops Conference, Cardinal Marx,
who was cited in the National Catholic Register as saying that while the
German Church may remain in communion with Rome on doctrine, that in
terms of pastoral care for individual cases, “the synod cannot prescribe
in detail what we have to do in Germany.” Henry VIII would most
certainly have agreed.
“We are not just a subsidiary of Rome,” Cardinal Marx argued. “Each
episcopal conference is responsible for the pastoral care in their
culture and has to proclaim the Gospel in its own unique way. We cannot
wait until a synod states something, as we have to carry out marriage
and family ministry here.”
The Anglicans also sought such autonomy – though with increasingly
internally divisive results and the emptying of their communities.
It is undeniable that the Church must reach out to those on the margins
of the faith with mercy, but mercy always speaks the truth, never
condones sin, and recognizes that the Cross is at the heart of the
Gospel. One might recall that Pope St. John Paul II – cited by Pope
Francis at his canonization as “the pope of the family” – also wrote
extensively about mercy, dedicating an entire encyclical to the topic,
and establishing the feast of Divine Mercy. For St. John Paul, mercy was
a central theme, but one that had to be read in the context of truth
and scripture, rather than against it.
On remarriage, and many other issues, no one would say that the Church’s
teaching, which is Christ’s, is easy. But Christ himself did not
compromise on core teachings to keep his disciples from leaving him –
whether it was on the Eucharist or marriage (Jn 6: 60-71; Mt 19: 3-12).
Nor did John Fisher compromise to keep the king Catholic.
We need look no further for a model on this matter than words of Christ
and St. Peter in Chapter 6 of John’s Gospel – a passage that reminds us
that the teaching on the Eucharist is often difficult to accept even for
believers.
“’It is the spirit that gives life, while the flesh is of no avail. The
words I have spoken to you are spirit and life. But there are some of
you who do not believe. … For this reason I have told you that no one
can come to me unless it is granted him by my Father.’ As a result of
this, many [of] his disciples returned to their former way of life and
no longer accompanied him. Jesus then said to the Twelve, ‘Do you also
want to leave?’ Simon Peter answered him, ‘Master, to whom shall we go?
You have the words of eternal life.’”
As disciples we are always called to listen to the voice of Jesus before
the voice of the world, culture or history. The voice of Jesus sheds
light on the darkness of the world and cultures. Let us pray that all
concerned will listen to those words of eternal life, no matter how
difficult!
This column orignially published on Denver Catholic. It is reposted with permission.
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