THOSE WHO ARE QUALIFIED TO SIGN THE FILIAL CORRECTION HAVE NOT ONLY A RIGHT TO SIGN IT BUT A DUTY TO SIGN IT

Dr-Ed-Peters

On arguments that may be, and sometimes must be, made

October 5, 2017

I have taken no position on the Correctio Filialis. I know and respect some of its signatories as I do some of its critics but, as the document itself seems to fall within the boundaries of Canon 212, I say, ‘Have at it folks and may the better arguments prevail’. That said, some recent arguments against the Correctio are, in my view, subtly deficient and, time permitting, I will reply to them.

But even before that, I wish to reply to an attitude I perceive emerging against the Correctio, one that attempts to dissuade Correctiosupporters from their position by alleging a disastrous—but supposedly logical—consequence of their being right, something along these lines: If Amoris laetita and/or Pope Francis and/or his Vatican allies are really as bad as the authors of the Correctio seem to believe, then all petitions, Dubia, and corrections will do no good. Prayer and fasting would be more advisable.

Hmmm.

Setting aside that several of these scenarios are not asserted in the Correctio and that the evidence concerning some others is not yet in, underlying this doomsday-like retort of the Correctio is, I think, a certain despair about the importance of argument itself in this matter. At the very least, such a bleak conclusion disregards the duty of certain Catholics precisely to engage in such debates.

Canon 212 § 3 has been invoked by those supporting the Correctio to point out that the Church herself recognizes the right of certain persons “to manifest to sacred pastors their opinion on matters which pertain to the good of the Church and to make their opinion known to the rest of the Christian faithful”, namely, those persons who possess “knowledge, competence, and prestige” in regard to the matter under discussion. Indeed. But Canon 212 § 3 says something more.

Canon 212 § 3 states in regard to persons with special knowledge, competence, and prestige in regard to ecclesiastical matters, that they “have the right and even at times the duty” to express their views on matters impacting the well-being of the Church (my emphasis). The duty. Not just the right.

Thus to the extent that some qualified signatories and/or supporters of the Correctio have realized a duty (expressed in law) to address these matters, they are not simply acting under the protection of law (as are those exercising a right), they are acting in accord with its directives (as do those under an obligation). Now, to be sure, Canon 212 is not self-interpreting and several prudential considerations must be considered when applying it. But in its very terms is the expression of a duty incumbent upon certain Catholics who are qualified by their education, experience, and Church positions to make serious arguments on matters impacting the Church. And I see no exception in the law for those whose positions might imply the existence of other problems for the Church or for those who arguments seem unlikely to be acted upon.

Cdl. Caffara said “only a blind man could deny there’s great confusion, uncertainty, and insecurity in the Church.” Much of that confusion turns, obviously, on the meaning of technical terms and on the content of intellectual assertions. Those blessed with advanced training in such technical terms and intellectual assertions may be, and at times should be, at the forefront of these debates.

And, yes, all participants in these debates should be engaged in extra prayer and fasting.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on THOSE WHO ARE QUALIFIED TO SIGN THE FILIAL CORRECTION HAVE NOT ONLY A RIGHT TO SIGN IT BUT A DUTY TO SIGN IT

FATHER JAMES MARTIN, S.J., PROFESSOR OF JESUIT IMMORAL THEOLOGY

Featured Image
Fr. James Martin SJ sports double ‘devil horns’ to introduce Metallica on the Colbert Report, Sept. 24, 2013. Colbert Report
Lisa BourneLisa BourneFollow Lisa

NEWS,

‘Souls could well be lost’: Moral theologian blasts pro-LGBT Fr. James Martin

October 3, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) – Famed moral theologian Janet Smith criticised Jesuit Father Martin’s “slick dissent” from Church teaching on sexuality “and its pernicious influence” in a recent column. She said that his “scandalous” interpretation of Catholic teaching could jeopardize the salvation of the people who hear his message.

“Souls could well be lost,” she wrote in a column last week for Catholic World Report. Smith is a professor of moral theology at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, Michigan.

“Anyone reading his book or listening to his talks can reasonably conclude that Father Martin believes the Church does not present correctly God’s plan for sexuality,” Smith said, “that he thinks the culture knows better.”

The book she referenced was Martin’s Building a Bridge, which Smith called “one of the most aggravating instances” of reemerging dissent in the Church.

The book is “full of ambiguity,” she said.

While Martin continually claims that he doesn’t oppose the Church’s moral teaching, Smith noted that “the subtext makes his position clear, as do many statements made in his public presentations.”

“For Catholics who have some background in theology and philosophy it is deeply disappointing when a highly educated priest uses specious arguments to advance his cause,” she said.

“For those whose every fiber of their Catholic being leads them to want to trust priests, bishops, and religious superiors, such instances of untrustworthiness are scandalous; for those of us who have been fighting dissent for nearly 40 years, seeing a dissenter get ecclesial support and public acclaim is demoralizing,” she added.

Despite receiving criticism from bishops and cardinals, Martin maintains that he is simply trying to welcome LGBT-identifying Catholics into the Church.

But, as Martin’s critics point out, the Jesuit priest neglects to speak about the Church’s call for everyone to reject sinful lifestyles, to confess and repent of sin, and to amend their lives.

Smith notes how Martin also neglects to mention the Church’s longtime ministries for those experiencing same-sex attraction, such as Courage and Encourage, presumably because they convey the Church’s teaching that condemns homosexual activity.

She noted in the article Martin’s tendency to affirm homosexuals in their behaviors.

“For instance,” related Smith, “at a recent presentation at Villanova University, he told to a young man, ‘I hope in 10 years you will be able to kiss your partner [in church] or, you know, soon to be your husband.’”

The moral theologian said that while she was “profoundly frustrated” that Martin’s views have a wide audience within the Catholic Church, she was also “gratified, inspired, and consoled” that so many faithful Catholic leaders have refuted his thinking.

She cited, among others, a critique of Martin’s outreach coming from Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput, Theologian Eduardo Echeverria, and Father Roger Landry. Added to this list would be Cardinal Robert Sarah and Illinois Bishop Thomas Paprocki.

“We should commit ourselves to distributing copies of these refutations to others whenever his name comes up,” said Smith.

Smith also criticised Martin’s “welcoming effort,” saying that it was an approach that “seems largely condescending.”

“Instead of challenging people to embrace the fullness of the faith, he tries to hide or downplay, or even reject, the teachings of the Church in order to appear welcoming,” she said.

“True welcoming means we make it clear we want everyone to join us in following Jesus; we want to share with others the truth and beauty we know, and we will do our best to explain beliefs and teachings that might be hard to understand or accept,” she continued.

“We do so not thinking we are any better than anyone else but wanting to be faithful to our beloved Jesus, who commissioned all Christians to stand up for challenging truths,” she added.

The moral theologian said that those who want to be welcoming and compassionate to those who experience same-sex attraction need to learn about causes and treatment, Church teaching, and how to listen to those who suffer from the attraction.

She linked to her book with Courage International Executive Director Father Paul Check, Living the Truth in Love – Pastoral Approaches to Same-Sex Attraction.

And she recommended the book Out of a Far Country, co-written by a mother and her son on their journey into Christianity through dealing with his homosexuality, as well as Daniel Mattson’s Why I Don’t Call Myself Gay.

Smith also suggested books by Andrew Comiskey, who ministers to those with same-sex attraction, citing, in particular, his book The Naked Surrender.

“We cannot and must not be content simply to rant and rave and wail because of Father Martin’s slick dissent and its pernicious influence,” concluded Smith.

“We must be the ones reaching out with genuine love, a love that strongly believes in the transforming and fortifying power of grace to enable us to embrace God’s plan for sexuality, whatever challenges it presents,” she added.

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

THE LATEST NEWS FROM THE DEMOCRATIC PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CALIFORNIA

unnamed-2

Gotta Love Outrageous California…. 
Update today from Jeff Stone, Republican state senator on the further progressive destruction of CA: 

Hello my friends, Friday will be the end of this legislative year. Here are some of the highlights of this session:

SB-1: increases your gas taxes by approximately 20 Cents (Nov 1) and your vehicle license fees by an average of $100 (Jan 1st).
2. Passed Cap N Tax which will increase gas 0.63 to 0.93 cents a gallon change and the taxes that go with it.
3. Proposed increase on a new tax every residence will pay for tap water in the State! 
4.. A $3.46B parks bond to pay  for parks in “disadvantaged communities”  meaning Los Angeles. We will get the crumbs.
The debt service will be over $200 million a year. The good news is some money goes to help fix the Salton Sea which should have always been a State responsibility! 
5. Law to release any lifer (murder, rape , child molestation, etc) who is :
  A. 60 years old
  B. Already spent 25 years in prison! 
      (Charles Manson qualifies today and the Melendez brothers that murdered their parents could be released in about 12 years? What about victims?) 
6. A new $10 charge on all residents living in a mobile home parks to address living condition enforcement in those parks? Why does the left embrace these regressive taxes on the poor? 
7. We picked an official dinosaur of the State of California. Really? Yes! 
8. Blackmail Tesla to either unionize with the United Auto Workers Union or forfeit State incentives to buy their electric cars! Just another Union Grab! 
9. Reduce from a felony to a misdemeanor the purposeful intent to transmit the AIDS virus to a unknowing partner. 
10. Give preferential treatment to prisoners convicted of serious crimes that are less than 25 years old because their brains are not mature enough to understand right from wrong. Whaaat? My DAD’s belt taught me right from wrong real early in my life! If the brains of our kids don’t mature until 25, why do we allow them to vote? 
11. A bill to require our true sex be omitted from drivers licenses? Whaaat? 
12. Free legal services for illegal immigrants. (Except it ain’t free. State residents will pay for it. My edit.) 
13. Establish safe “injection zones” run by government to oversee people injecting heroin! You have to be kidding me? Yep it passed!

Enough good news for today. . .

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

IF YOU FAVOR ANY KIND OF VOTER ID YOU WILL CERTAINLY BE LABELED A RACIST

 

The leftist-liberal judges appointed by Bill Clinton and Barack Hussein Obama and Democrat politicians and the mainstream media in the USA have cast those who advocate voter ID in our country as being racists. It’s really shameful how untruthful and biased they’ve become. What’s worse is that the continual retelling of such lies has been very effective in convincing many Americans that these lies are really the truth. Sad!
Very sad!
In case you’re interested, Snopes says this is true!
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on IF YOU FAVOR ANY KIND OF VOTER ID YOU WILL CERTAINLY BE LABELED A RACIST

APOSTASY, THE ABANDONMENT OF THAT WHICH HAS BEEN BELIEVED AND CONFESSED ALWAYS, EVERYWHERE, AND BY ALL: THE DOGMA

Don Nicola Bux on the Current Apostasy and Cardinal Caffarra’s Saintliness

OnePeterFive

Monsignor Nicola Bux is a highly respected clergyman and former consultor to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith who had been involved with Pope Benedict XVI’s restoration of the Traditional Latin Mass in July of 2007. He also recently wrote a foreword for a book written by Professor Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, the former President of the Vatican Bank (IOR). More recently, this June in an interview with Edward Pentin, he also raised his voice with reference to the current Church crisis, asking the pope himself to make some sort of public Profession of Faith, in order to reassure the faithful. Monsignor Bux thus said, as follows:

We are in a full crisis of faith! Therefore, in order to stop the divisions in progress, the Pope — like Paul VI in 1967, faced with the erroneous theories that were circulating shortly after the conclusion of the Council — should make a Declaration or Profession of Faith, affirming what is Catholic, and correcting those ambiguous and erroneous words and acts — his own and those of bishops — that are interpreted in a non-Catholic manner.

During that June 2017 interview, Don Bux also spoke about the apostasy that is taking place right now in the Church. In a new interview now – this time with the Italian newspaper La Verità – Don Bux returns to the theme of the general apostasy. We gratefully owe it to Giuseppe Nardi who published – on 27 September, the very day of the publication of that interview – a translation into German of the original Italian article. (Parts of an Italian version of the interview are to be found here.) In the following, we shall rely on that work.

First of all, the interviewer Francesco Agnoli makes it clear that Don Bux himself was among the three candidates, five years ago under Pope Benedict XVI, to be appointed as the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. This fact alone shows how he was respected for his great competence and versatility. Agnoli also highlights that Don Bux is friends with Cardinals Raymond Burke and Walter Brandmüller.

Moreover, Agnoli asks Don Bux about the 100th anniversary of the apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima and whether the essential prophecy of Fatima has already been fulfilled, or whether it still points to the future.

Don Bux answers with the following words:

For us, the only fulfilled prophecy stems from Jesus Christ, as He Himself said it: “It is finished!” [“Consummatum est!”] Nevertheless, it is left for each of us to fulfill what is still lacking in the [suffering of the] Mystical Body of Christ, which is the Church. Thus, Fatima fulfills itself in the suffering of the Mystical Body of Christ, the Catholic Church which – and this is clear for all of us to see – suffers now under the apostasy, the abandonment of that which has been believed and confessed always, everywhere, and by all. In one word: the Dogma.

After Agnoli’s own comment that, indeed, “these are strong words,” Don Bux further explains the meaning of his words:

Are they not clearly visible, the words and deeds of priests who contradict other priests, of laymen in contradiction to other laymen, encouraged by the split among the bishops in the question as to what the Faith and Catholic morality still are? For a growing number of Catholics, the Magisterium is not any more a sign of unity. […] The community is broken, when anyone whosoever within the Church abandons the truth and accepts error. Unfortunately, this has happened already in the past. That is why Jesus prayed that we be one so that the world sees and believes.

When speaking about the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum and the Traditional Latin Mass, Don Bux makes it clear that reality will always, in the long run, set itself free. The reality, in his eyes, is that many people “find themselves going back to the Faith and they also often find their own vocation” through their participation in the traditional liturgy. However, “ideology denies this reality,” explains Don Bux. There are people who wish to deny this reality – “which is always [a form of] ideology.” This reality, however, cannot, after all, be stopped:

The reality, however, is like water: if one blocks it at one side, it looks for another path. Whosoever wishes to annul the Motu Proprio [Summorum Pontificum] would have to face a large resistance movement, a resistant Church, a growing and not suppressible reality; and this for a simple reason, namely, because it experiences the renewal of the liturgy as a rebirth of holiness in our hearts.

This comment might have some relevance with regard to recent speculations according to which Pope Francis is considering the attenuating of, or even “doing away” with, the Traditional Latin Mass. Don Bux also thinks that the restoration of the liturgical traditions could encourage a growing rapprochement between the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church.

Finally, Agnoli asks Don Bux about Cardinal Carlo Caffarra and about the legacy he left behind. We now quote here the answer, in its entirety, because it is so gracious and because it also reflects the deep spirituality of Don Bux himself:

Especially holiness, understood in the etymological sense, that is to say: to preserve the “security distance” to the world, as every Christian should do. Then: holiness of [his] thinking: a thinking that pleases God, i.e., that is complete, Catholic; and not influenced by the fashions of the day. Also: the holiness of his words: the meek and clear transmission of a deep thought of a Faith that has been thought through and well considered. A convinced word that is convincing, therefore attractive. And, not the least as a further consequence of it: the holiness of his deeds in the sanctification, the teaching, and the leadership. Sine doctrina vita est quasi mortis imago[“without doctrine, life is as it were an image of death”], said Cato the Younger. There are many who could witness to the holiness of the cardinal and who would ask for the opening of the process of beatification. I would like to end with one thought which he himself expressed quite often in the recent past: The Lord usually works in silence, and with a few persons.

To end this report, let us reflect on Cardinal Caffarra’s last words, as they have been quoted here by Don Bux. It is one of the great joys of these troubled days within the Catholic Church to see persons come into the public who witness to so much holiness and who – all of them individually and in different ways – give us Catholics encouragement and growth in a deeper Faith. It is due to the examples of these holy souls – clergy and laymen alike – that we can be more trustfully assured that every single Catholic in the world may have the chance to hear the truth and to abide by it. Not the least is the recent Filial Correction (the Correctio Filialis), as it was published on 24 September of this year, which now has gained worldwide coverage in the media. Let us thus be grateful for the possible access to truth and for the probable good that many souls, by hearing the faithful words of that correction, may well now turn back to Christ’s Truth. God does not abandon us. At His timing, He always sends us some saints to call us back to Him.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on APOSTASY, THE ABANDONMENT OF THAT WHICH HAS BEEN BELIEVED AND CONFESSED ALWAYS, EVERYWHERE, AND BY ALL: THE DOGMA

THE HELL YOU SAY, YES I DO

“And a certain man said to him: ‘Lord, are they few that are saved?’ But He said to them: ‘Strive to enter by the narrow gate, for many, I say to you, shall seek to enter, and shall not be able.’”—Luke 13:23-24.

Hugh Hefner died today, and even bloggers like Fr. Dwight Longenecker at patheos are promoting a very different attitude towards Hefner than the tradition of the Catholic Church.  I don’t know where Hefner is any more than Fr. Longenecker, and I’m not saying Fr.  Longenecker has a theology that is wrong,  but his attitude towards heaven and hell is very, very different from that of Jesus Christ in the New Testament and the saints in every century.

I don’t have a better insight than any priest, but I do know that we simply need to return to the Deposit of the Faith in both Scripture and Tradition to find what is taught De Fide (by defined dogma.) Even most of my faithful readers will be surprised to read that we can know De Fidethat hell is not empty.  We will look first at public revelation and later private revelation, as only the former is De Fide.

First, Our Savior Jesus Christ said “Not every one who says to me ‘Lord, Lord’ will enter the kingdom of heaven.”—Matthew 7:21a. This is not simply a “warning” like most modern theologians say. Christ looked through time as the Son of God and said very clearly that some Christians who will profess Him as Lord, but they will go still go to hell forever. Why? The answer is found in the full phrase: “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.”—Matthew 7:21.

Of course, Jesus “desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth”—1 Tim 2:4, but the problem is not in the heart of God. God wills even the worst sinners to be saved. The problem is Satan who has tricked us into original sin and actual sin to the point that we refuse the Divine Rescuer, Who, please God, will never say to us: “I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness.”—Mt 7:23.  Obviously, the first answer to all of this is to know Jesus Christ intimately.  If we do come to know Him, we will be led to the same love of God and fear of God that we read below in the lives of the saints.

But first, the Council of Trent, an infallible council of the Catholic Church gives a definitive statement on whether hell is empty or not: “But though He died for all, yet all do not receive the benefit of His death, but those only to whom the merit of His passion is communicated; because as truly as men would not be born unjust, if they were not born through propagation of the seed of Adam, since by that propagation they contract through him, when they are conceived, injustice as their own, so if they were not born again in Christ, they would never be justified, since in that new birth there is bestowed upon them, through the merit of His passion, the grace by which they are made just.”—Council of Trent, Chapter 3, Session 6, 13 January 1547 under Pope Paul III.

Therefore, no one can say: “The Church admits that hell exists but we don’t know if anyone is there.” (Fr. Longenecker never wrote this, but I hear it all the time from priests and modernist theologians.)  But such a statement would indeed be a material heresy, considering that the Council of Trent infallibly stated that “not all receive the benefit of His death.” (It would be a formal heresy to say such a thing after reading this blog post!)

Let us look to what has been referred to as “The Magisterium of the Saints.” The “Magisterium of the Saints” is not as De Fide (defined dogma of the faith) as the above quotes from inerrant Sacred Scripture or an infallible council like Trent. However, those canonized men and women had to be found nearly flawless in their theology to be canonized. Furthermore, the canonized saints’ private revelations of the afterlife have to be pretty spot-on to make the honors of the altar. As far as visions of the afterlife in the following quotes from the saints, you will notice how many saints give actual percentages as to how many are saved, and ask yourself if Hugh Hefner showed any signs of being in these numbers below:

  • “Out of one hundred thousand sinners who continue in sin until death, scarcely one will be saved.’”—St. Jerome, Western Doctor and Father of the Church
  • “What do you think? How many of the inhabitants of this city may perhaps be saved? What I am about to tell you is very terrible, yet I will not conceal it from you. Out of this thickly populated city with its thousands of inhabitants not one hundred people will be saved. I even doubt whether there will be as many as that!’”—St. John Chrysostom, Eastern Doctor and Father of the Church, speaking about Constantinople when it was still a Christian city.
  • “Our chronicles relate an even more dreadful happening. One of our brothers, well-known for his doctrine and holiness, was preaching in Germany. He represented the ugliness of the sin of impurity so forceful that a woman fell dead of sorrow in front of everyone. Then, coming back to life, she said, ‘When I was presented before the Tribunal of God, sixty thousand people arrived at the same time from all parts of the world; out of that number, three were saved by going to Purgatory, and all the rest were damned.’”—St. Leonard of Port Maurice
  • “Woe to you who command others! If so many are damned by your fault, what will happen to you? If few out of those who are first in the Church of God are saved, what will happen to you? Take all states, both sexes, every condition: husbands, wives, widows, young women, young men, soldiers, merchants, craftsmen, rich and poor, noble and plebian. What are we to say about all these people who are living so badly? The following narrative from Saint Vincent Ferrer will show you what you may think about it. He relates that an archdeacon in Lyons gave up his charge and retreated into a desert place to do penance, and that he died the same day and hour as Saint Bernard. After his death, he appeared to his bishop and said to him, ‘Know, Monsignor, that at the very hour I passed away, thirty-three thousand people also died. Out of this number, Bernard and myself went up to heaven without delay, three went to purgatory, and all the others fell into Hell.’”—St. Leonard of Port Maurice
  • “So many people are going to die, and almost all of them are going to Hell! So many people falling into hell!”—Bl. Jacinta of Fatima
  • “If you would be quite sure of your salvation, strive to be among the fewest of the few. Do not follow the majority of mankind, but follow those who renounce the world and never relax their efforts day or night so that they may attain everlasting blessedness.”—St. Anselm, Doctor of the Church
  • “With the exception of those who die in childhood, most men will be damned.”—St. Regimius of Rheims.

These quotes come from Fewness of the Saved Saints’ Quotes, a post that contains 101 quotes describing the population of heaven versus hell, at the writing and description of only canonized saints. Honestly, I hope those numbers are wrong, but I can no longer say that the above saints are “Jansenist” or “sedevacantist.”  I can no longer claim that those quotes are “Jansenist” or “sedevacantist” because those quotes span 2,000 years, coming from saints in the East and the West, long before the advent of either of those errors.

Again, I don’t know if Hugh Hefner is in purgatory or hell, but I have a pretty good guess, and I do no one any favors by promoting this presumption that Hugh having a last-minute emotional movement to have a sweet thought about God can erase 50 years of oppression of women and getting half the globe of men addicted to pornography.  Yes, I have a pretty good guess where such a man resides.  God could have forgiven all of his sins by repentance, baptism or confession.  But there’s no evidence that Hugh wanted any of those.  No, I don’t know for sure, but I’m going to follow a preponderance of evidence.  I write this post not to rip on Hefner, but to bring sobriety to the living that God can forgive any sin in the confessional, so go to confession.

Finally, Fr. Longenecker mentioned Divine Mercy, and I agree that next to the Bible, there is no greater written revelation of the Love and Mercy of God than the Divine Mercy Diary of the 20th century nun, St. Faustina of Poland.

But he left out the part where St. Faustina was also given a vision of a highly-populated hell so that people might understand that we face a populated hell and that this aspect of Our Faith is an intricate part of what Divine Mercy saves us from.  In the Divine Mercy Diary, St. Faustina had to describe the human souls already in hell:

Each soul undergoes terrible and indescribable sufferings, related to the manner in which it has sinned. There are caverns and pits of torture where one form of agony differs from another. I would have died at the very sight of these tortures if the omnipotence of God had not supported me. Let the sinner know that he will be tortured throughout all eternity, in those senses which he made use of to sin. I am writing this at the command of God, so that no soul may find an excuse by saying there is no hell, or that nobody has ever been there, and so no one can say what it is like. I, Sister Faustina, by the order of God, have visited the abysses of hell so that I might tell souls about it and testify to its existence. I cannot speak about it now; but I have received a command from God to leave it in writing. The devils were full of hatred for me, but they had to obey me at the command of God. What I have written is but a pale shadow of the things I saw. But I noticed one thing: that most of the souls there are those who disbelieved that there is a hell. When I came to, I could hardly recover from the fright. How terribly souls suffer there! Consequently, I pray even more fervently for the conversion of sinners. I incessantly plead God’s mercy upon them. O my Jesus I would rather be in agony until the end of the world, amidst the greatest suffering, than offend You by the least of sin.—St. Faustina, Divine Mercy Diary 741

Notice again that according to Jesus’ revelation to St. Faustina, “most of the souls [in hell] are those who disbelieved that there is a hell.”  We can conclude in all fairness that the same destiny awaits the souls of clerics and theologians who lead lay people to the same practical conclusion (even if not theological error) by teaching them: “There is a hell, but we are not sure if anyone is in it.”

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on THE HELL YOU SAY, YES I DO

THE FILIAL CORRECTION NOW HAS 216 SCHOLAR, PRIEST AND BISHOP SIGNERS

Featured Image
a katz / Shutterstock.com
Diane Montagna

NEWS

Filial Correction an act of loyalty to Pope: organizer responds to Opus Dei

ROME, October 4, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) — The number of signatories of the “filial correction,” charging Pope Francis with permitting the spread of seven heresies, at least by omission, has risen to 216. That is up from 40 when the letter was delivered to the Pope’s residence at Santa Marta on August 11, and 62 when the document was made public on September 24.

But the Correction has also met with criticism, including from Opus Dei.

On September 30, the Vicar General of the Prelature, Msgr. Mariano Fazio of Argentina, accused the authors in an interview with La Nación of attacking the pope, sowing disunity and using the “totally wrong method.”

“If it is a filial relation, a son does not ‘correct’ his father in public,” Msgr. Fazio said.

The second in command of Opus Dei continued: “Any faithful, bishop, cardinal, lay person has the right to tell the pope what he sees fit for the good of the Church. But it seems to me that he has no right to do so publicly and to scandalize the whole Church with these manifestations of disunity.”

We spoke to Joseph Shaw, Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy at St. Benet’s Hall, Oxford University. Professor Shaw, who serves as spokesman for the filial correction authors, responded to charges that he and the other signatories are airing the Church’s dirty laundry in public. We also discussed why it was necessary to make the Correction public, and in what sense Catholics are called to always “be with the Pope.”

LifeSite: Professor Shaw, Msgr. Fazio has accused the authors and signatories of the “filial correction” — particularly those who are members of Opus Dei — of attacking the Pope and scandalizing the whole Church, saying that “a son should not ‘correct’ his father in public.” In Genesis 9:23, we read about Noah’s sons (Shem and Japheth) “covering the nakedness of their father” out of respect for him, and this was in a private setting. Does Msgr. Fazio have a point? Are the authors and organizers of the “filial correction” scandalizing the Church?

Dr. Shaw: Scandal is a complex concept which should be used with care. Scandal is given when a person’s words or actions cause others to sin. It can be deliberate—‘formal scandal’—or inadvertent—‘material scandal.’ It is also possible for people to ‘take scandal’ without justification, such as the Pharisees who accused Our Lord of blaspheming, when in reality he merely spoke the truth.

As far as ordinary Catholics are concerned, when we see something which is apparently bad happening within the Church, we must be aware that knowledge of this bad thing by a wider audience may cause people to sin: it may undermine their faith, cause them to neglect their religious duties, or, if not Catholic, harden them to the truths of the Gospel. For this reason we can say not only that it is a scandal if, say, a priest is too fond of drink, but also that a person revealing such a thing causes scandal.

However, the situation is complicated by the fact that revealing a private vice is also wrong because it is detraction: it endangers the priest’s good name, which is a very serious matter.

When the bad things happening in the Church are not so much private failings as serious injustices to others, and especially when they begin to be reported, there is an instinct to seek to protect the Church’s reputation by denial, by seeking to explain them away, or by covering them up. What has become very evident in recent decades, however, is that, understandable as this instinct is, it should be resisted. First and foremost, it works against justice. Secondly, it actually causes scandal, because those who become aware of the reality of the situation and of Catholics’ reactions to it are put off the Church because of our apparent indifference to justice. Thirdly, even in the narrowest terms of dealing with bad publicity, it is very often counter-productive, especially in the longer term.

These are hard-learnt lessons of the clerical sex-abuse crisis, perhaps the most expensive education Catholics have had in history.

Non-Catholics, especially serious-minded non-Catholic Christians suspicious of the role of the Pope in the Church, will be scandalised very deeply by the impression that, when a Pope speaks and writes in ways apparently at variance with the Church’s earlier teaching, faithful Catholics remain silent. It will confirm for them the caricature of Catholics as brain-washed slaves of the Pope.

Catholics with respect for the Papal office are vulnerable in a different way, since when they see what appears to be a Pope offering a way out from difficult moral teachings, they will be tempted to ignore those teachings in their own lives: often, indeed, tempted to go much further than anything directly justified by the Pope’s words. These Catholics’ scandal will be deepened by the silence of faithful Catholics, especially pastors and academics known for their earlier defence of these teachings.

There is no question, in this situation, of the signatories ‘revealing their father’s nakedness’: the fact to which they draw attention is evident to all. Indeed, the appearance of a discrepancy between Pope Francis’ indications about the correct interpretation of Amoris laetitia, and the teaching of Pope St. John Paul II and the tradition in general, is something emphasized above all by those who present themselves as supporters of Pope Francis. The only question which remains is whether Catholic pastors and academics would give the impression, in turn, of acting like weather-vanes, and simply change their beliefs to suit the prevailing officially-sanctioned view: keeping ready to change back again under the next pope as necessary. It would certainly cause a scandal if no Catholics were prepared at least to ask some insistent questions about what is going on.

Perhaps critics of the signatories mean, however, that the Correctio causes scandal by revealing divisions in the Church, which would better be covered up. Again, however, these divisions have been emphasised by the Pope’s supposed partisans, who have criticised those still basing their views on the teaching of Pope St John Paul II when, according to them, it has been overturned. What is needed, where there are divisions, is respectful dialogue and a resolution of differences.

If we are to speak of filial obligations, we should remember that the Father to whom ultimate loyalty is due is our heavenly Father. When it comes to popes, we also owe loyalty not only to the current holder of the papal office, but to all the popes who have carried out their office of teaching the faith given to them by that Heavenly Father. The Correctio is an act of loyalty and duty towards our Heavenly Father and our human fathers in the faith, most especially those popes who have transmitted the teaching on marriage and the Eucharist given by Jesus Christ Himself in obedience to His Father.

The “filial correction” has drawn considerable attention in both Catholic and secular media. Why did the authors and organizers of the correction go public with it? And why is it not a “display of disunity,” as the Argentinian Vicar General of Opus Dei suggests? 

Those Catholics concerned about the direction of the debate about remarriage and Communion, and related issues, have made repeated attempts to express these concerns in ways which would not create a public impression of opposition to the person of the Pope. The ‘Filial Appeal’, signed by 800,000 people, was part of a debate called for by Pope Francis before he had composed Amoris. The letter of the ‘13 Cardinals’ and the ‘45 academics and pastors’ appeal to Cardinals’ were, alike, not intended to be public documents. Obviously, in this way these initiatives observed both the letter and the spirit of Matthew 18:15-17 on speaking first to one’s brother in private.

The ‘dubia’ of the four cardinals, like the Correction, was only made public when Pope Francis declined to discuss the matter with the cardinals in any way. This is not the history of a group of Catholics who wish to attack either the person of the present Pope or the Papal office.

It should also be emphasised that Canon 212 permits and encourages lay Catholics not only to manifest their concerns to their superiors, but also to each other. The latter is necessary where there is a danger to the Faith and of scandal to ordinary Catholics which is not being addressed by the proper authorities: in this case, the Holy Father. This is clearly the case where the authorities have declined to respond to a non-public appeal.

Disunity is being displayed in a very public way by Bishops’ Conferences, such as those of Germany and Poland, issuing contrasting guidelines for the application of Amoris, not by those who, concerned about this disunity, appeal for an act of the Magisterium which would bring it to an end.

It is true that the Correction is more strongly worded than previous initiatives: this reflects the escalating seriousness of the situation, and the absence of a response from Pope Francis to the earlier documents.

Can you point to a passage in Scripture, a Doctor or Father of the Church, or perhaps even a famous piece of Literature, that illustrates your point?

Both Testaments of Scripture are replete with examples of subordinates criticising superiors in public. The criticism of the leaders of Israel by prophets and priests, from the public humiliation of King Saul by Samuel, the denunciation of King Ahab by Elijah, and the attack on Herod the Tetrarch by St John the Baptist, are in general the criticism of official, and usually divinely sanctioned, authority, by persons who may have been inspired by God, but who lacked institutional standing. This pattern is taken to its logical extreme by the condemnation of the Elders by the prophet Daniel when only a child (Dan 13:45ff). Our Lord made the situation clear when, while eviscerating the Chief Priests, Scribes, and Pharisees, he acknowledged nonetheless that they held ‘the seat of Moses’, a position which meant that people should listen to them as speaking with authority, despite all their shortcomings (Matthew 23:2-3).

Private remonstrations also take place, a notable example being the prophet Nathan’s criticism of King David, but even this was not intended as a way to hush things up. Nathan speaks of God’s coming punishment of David: ‘For thou didst it secretly: but I will do this thing in the sight of all Israel, and in the sight of the sun.’ (2 Sam 12:12). In the other cases, it is fair to assume that the prophets realised that the time for private discussion had passed (Matthew 18:15-17). We may take it that this was also so in the famous confrontation of St Peter by St Paul (Gal 2:11).

Commenting on that last passage, St Thomas Aquinas wrote: ‘Where there is a proximate danger to the faith, prelates must be rebuked, even publicly, by subjects. Thus, St. Paul, who was subject to St. Peter, rebuked him publicly.’ (Commentary on the Epistle to the Galations 2:14)

It should be emphasised that when an inferior criticises a superior, he takes a great risk, as demonstrated in a number of the cases mentioned. He does this not only out of zeal for justice, but out of love of the superior. This is a theme particularly developed by Shakespeare, in the Winters Tale, and even more famously in King Lear. In the latter Lear banishes Cordelia and the Duke of Kent for speaking of truth and justice when he wanted flattery. They alone, however, are later revealed as loyal subjects.

It is not criticism which is most to be feared by those in positions of authority, but flattery. As Pope Francis expressed it: ‘The hypocrite is capable of destroying a community. While speaking gently, he ruinously judges a person. He is a killer.’

Again: ‘The hypocrite always uses language to flatter,’ ‘feeding into one’s vanity.’

Msgr. Fazio has said that Opus Dei, like all Catholics, “is always with the Pope.” Do you agree that it is always important to “be with the Pope”?

Of course I agree that we Catholics must always be with the Pope. But we must understand correctly what “to be with the Pope” really means. “To be with,” understood in a correct sense, means to love: that, of course, also implies to help and support, provided that our help and support are in favour of words and actions that are true and just. Now, not all words and actions that come from a Pope are necessarily and absolutely true and just. So, in case they aren’t, true love may justly express itself in the form of a correction. To correct someone who is wrong is a necessary part of human love. To omit a correction when it is necessary would indeed be a grave sin. We know that, under certain conditions, the Pope is infallible (this is noted in the Correction). But it is clear on a number of grounds that we are not dealing with infallible teaching in Amoris Ch. 8, and indeed, early in AmorisPope Francis distances what he is doing from a contribution to the Magisterium, writing (section 3):

Since “time is greater than space”, I would make it clear that not all discussions of doctrinal, moral or pastoral issues need to be settled by interventions of the magisterium.

Commemorantes tempus superius esse quam spatium, confirmare volumus non cunctas doctrinales, morales vel pastorales disputationes per magisterii declarationes esse absolvendas.

So it states says that not only these questions are now not addressed with a magisterial kind of statement on the doctrinal level, but also on the moral and pastoral level. It is clear, then, that we have here, properly speaking, no new magisterium, neither doctrinal nor pastoral. It follows, then, that we must go on giving our full assent and support, in these matters, to the really existingMagisterium, settled by the previous Popes, and contrast any kind of opposition to it, whether it comes from theologians or from the Pope himself as a private doctor. It is not enough to say that his opinions are formally contained in a document of the magisterium, when the document itself states explicitly that it is renouncing to make magisterial statements both on a doctrinal and pastoral level.

Is there anything else you would like to add?

Something profoundly worrying about criticisms on the signatories of the Correction specifically for speaking out about problems which every informed Catholic already knows about, is the mindset it reveals, one focused not on the truth, but on appearances. It is strongly reminiscent of the mindset at work in abusive families, where children are taught to pretend things are all right, when they are not: certain topics are not to be broached, certain facts are not to be referred to. This attitude can be enforced not by the abusive parent directly, but by other family members who are trying to keep up appearances and hold the family together. It is nevertheless profoundly unhealthy, and indeed is linked to psychological disorders in the children.

We should fear any such attitude, however well-intentioned, invading the Church. If there are problems, we should talk about them, and not pretend they do not exist.

 
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

WHEN YOU LIVE IN A TIME OF RAMPANT HERESY YOU HAVE TO LIVE WITH THE POSSIBILITY OF MARTYRDOM

The monks England couldn’t break

To the Protestant establishment’s fury, exiled Benedictines kept popping up at crucial moments in history

A strange sight greeted those assembled at Tyburn one January morning in 1601. The executions of two Catholic priests – Mark Barkworth and the Jesuit, Roger Filcock – and one Catholic lay woman, Anne Line, were set to provide the day’s spectacle.

First to be hanged was Anne Line, who had been sentenced to death for assisting Catholic clergy. Having watched her fate, Barkworth stepped forward, fully conscious of the butchery that awaited him for the treason of having been ordained a Catholic priest in mainland Europe.

However, the gathered throng must have been momentarily taken aback, for Barkworth had somehow procured a Benedictine habit and was tonsured. Such an attire had not been worn in England since before Elizabeth I had ascended the throne more than 40 years earlier but there, before the mob, stood a Benedictine monk.

Any hesitation caused by such a spectacle was not enough to save Barkworth – in fact, some cruel wretch even shouldered the monk’s body weight during his hanging to ensure that he was fully conscious for the subsequent drawing and quartering. Yet Barkworth’s death marked the start of an English Benedictine presence that remains to this day.

Barkworth himself had been trained as a priest at the English College, Valladolid, but, on his way to England as a missionary, he had been received as a novice at the Benedictine monastery of Santa Maria in Irache, and was told he would die a martyr, in the Benedictine habit. Many of the first wave of Englishmen to become Benedictines after the Reformation similarly entered the religious life in Spain, while another sizeable body entered the Cassinese congregation in Italy. What both groupings had in common was that they received permission to return to England as missionaries.

The significance of what they represented was not lost on them: as several monks testified at their martyrdoms, they were from the same order as the first missionary to England, St Augustine of Canterbury, “from whom,” as George Gervase, executed in 1608, put it, “England acknowledged that she had received the Christian faith”.

Like the other missionary clergy who had been secretly entering England since the 1570s, these missionary monks brought with them the Catholic Reformation. Imbued with the zeal of a movement then sweeping Catholic Europe and, increasingly, far-flung parts of the globe from Asia to America, they were agents for the transfer of religious and intellectual ideas gaining ground in mainland Europe.

But nor were they solely about the new: they also tracked down the last surviving monk of Westminster Abbey. By the start of the 17th century, the infirm Sigebert Buckley lived under a form of house arrest. In 1607, he aggregated two of the new monks to him, thereby ensuring the continuity of the English Benedictines from the medieval period. As the new monastic movement grew and the monks re-founded the English Benedictine Congregation in 1619, this symbolic act took on greater significance.

It meant that the English Benedictines of the 17th century could lay claim to the old monastic properties which the Order had once enjoyed. As such, the English Benedictines throughout the period elected priors of, for example, Durham, Canterbury and Ely cathedrals, ready for the moment when England – as they believed, inevitably – returned to the Catholic faith.

This did not stop the monks forming new houses in exile, three of which remain to this day. St Gregory’s, founded at Douai in northern France in 1606, is now better known as Downside Abbey; St Laurence’s, founded in the town of Dieulouard in Lorraine in 1608, is now Ampleforth Abbey; St Edmund’s, Paris, founded in 1616, is now settled at Woolhampton, Berkshire, as Douai Abbey.

Perhaps the grandest of the monastic foundations in exile, the Abbey of Ss Adrian and Denis, situated in the small town of Lamspringe, near Hildesheim in Lower Saxony from 1643, has no surviving successor. Its church was purportedly one of the best examples of baroque architecture in that region, emphasising the monks’ commitment to the Catholic Reformation.

Unusually, these houses had few resident monks, the majority of their membership working on the English mission. Yet proscription and exile did not stop the monks’ involvement in the nation’s history. For example, John Huddleston is believed to have sheltered the future Charles II in 1651 during his escape from parliamentarian forces who had recently executed his father, King Charles I. Huddleston afterwards became a monk and, on his return to England, resided at Somerset House, serving as chaplain to Henrietta Maria (Charles I’s wife), then Catherine Braganza (Charles II’s wife). Purportedly, he received Charles II into the Catholic Church on his deathbed.

In other words, these monks, despite their official proscription, were in and around at vital moments in the nation’s narrative. Their story is not just of Catholic importance but also provides a more vivid and accurate account of England’s history.

James Kelly is Sweeting Fellow in the History of Catholicism at Durham University and principal investigator of the Arts and Humanities Research Council-funded Monks in Motion project

The monks England couldn’t break

To the Protestant establishment’s fury, exiled Benedictines kept popping up at crucial moments in history

A strange sight greeted those assembled at Tyburn one January morning in 1601. The executions of two Catholic priests – Mark Barkworth and the Jesuit, Roger Filcock – and one Catholic lay woman, Anne Line, were set to provide the day’s spectacle.

First to be hanged was Anne Line, who had been sentenced to death for assisting Catholic clergy. Having watched her fate, Barkworth stepped forward, fully conscious of the butchery that awaited him for the treason of having been ordained a Catholic priest in mainland Europe.

However, the gathered throng must have been momentarily taken aback, for Barkworth had somehow procured a Benedictine habit and was tonsured. Such an attire had not been worn in England since before Elizabeth I had ascended the throne more than 40 years earlier but there, before the mob, stood a Benedictine monk.

Any hesitation caused by such a spectacle was not enough to save Barkworth – in fact, some cruel wretch even shouldered the monk’s body weight during his hanging to ensure that he was fully conscious for the subsequent drawing and quartering. Yet Barkworth’s death marked the start of an English Benedictine presence that remains to this day.

Barkworth himself had been trained as a priest at the English College, Valladolid, but, on his way to England as a missionary, he had been received as a novice at the Benedictine monastery of Santa Maria in Irache, and was told he would die a martyr, in the Benedictine habit. Many of the first wave of Englishmen to become Benedictines after the Reformation similarly entered the religious life in Spain, while another sizeable body entered the Cassinese congregation in Italy. What both groupings had in common was that they received permission to return to England as missionaries.

The significance of what they represented was not lost on them: as several monks testified at their martyrdoms, they were from the same order as the first missionary to England, St Augustine of Canterbury, “from whom,” as George Gervase, executed in 1608, put it, “England acknowledged that she had received the Christian faith”.

Like the other missionary clergy who had been secretly entering England since the 1570s, these missionary monks brought with them the Catholic Reformation. Imbued with the zeal of a movement then sweeping Catholic Europe and, increasingly, far-flung parts of the globe from Asia to America, they were agents for the transfer of religious and intellectual ideas gaining ground in mainland Europe.

But nor were they solely about the new: they also tracked down the last surviving monk of Westminster Abbey. By the start of the 17th century, the infirm Sigebert Buckley lived under a form of house arrest. In 1607, he aggregated two of the new monks to him, thereby ensuring the continuity of the English Benedictines from the medieval period. As the new monastic movement grew and the monks re-founded the English Benedictine Congregation in 1619, this symbolic act took on greater significance.

It meant that the English Benedictines of the 17th century could lay claim to the old monastic properties which the Order had once enjoyed. As such, the English Benedictines throughout the period elected priors of, for example, Durham, Canterbury and Ely cathedrals, ready for the moment when England – as they believed, inevitably – returned to the Catholic faith.

This did not stop the monks forming new houses in exile, three of which remain to this day. St Gregory’s, founded at Douai in northern France in 1606, is now better known as Downside Abbey; St Laurence’s, founded in the town of Dieulouard in Lorraine in 1608, is now Ampleforth Abbey; St Edmund’s, Paris, founded in 1616, is now settled at Woolhampton, Berkshire, as Douai Abbey.

Perhaps the grandest of the monastic foundations in exile, the Abbey of Ss Adrian and Denis, situated in the small town of Lamspringe, near Hildesheim in Lower Saxony from 1643, has no surviving successor. Its church was purportedly one of the best examples of baroque architecture in that region, emphasising the monks’ commitment to the Catholic Reformation.

Unusually, these houses had few resident monks, the majority of their membership working on the English mission. Yet proscription and exile did not stop the monks’ involvement in the nation’s history. For example, John Huddleston is believed to have sheltered the future Charles II in 1651 during his escape from parliamentarian forces who had recently executed his father, King Charles I. Huddleston afterwards became a monk and, on his return to England, resided at Somerset House, serving as chaplain to Henrietta Maria (Charles I’s wife), then Catherine Braganza (Charles II’s wife). Purportedly, he received Charles II into the Catholic Church on his deathbed.

In other words, these monks, despite their official proscription, were in and around at vital moments in the nation’s narrative. Their story is not just of Catholic importance but also provides a more vivid and accurate account of England’s history.

James Kelly is Sweeting Fellow in the History of Catholicism at Durham University and principal investigator of the Arts and Humanities Research Council-funded Monks in Motion project

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on WHEN YOU LIVE IN A TIME OF RAMPANT HERESY YOU HAVE TO LIVE WITH THE POSSIBILITY OF MARTYRDOM

OBFUSCATION IS THE NAME OF THE GAME PLAYED BY FRIENDS OF FRANCIS

Amoris Laetitia, Featured, Life Site News

Filial Correction: “It’s about clearly unorthodox interpretations being favoured”

Filial Correction: “It’s about clearly unorthodox interpretations being favoured”

 

 

[ EMPHASIS IN RED TYPE BY ABYSSUM ]

 

October 2, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) — Five Catholic heavyweights, one of them a signer of the Filial Correction to Pope Francis, are challenging an argument put forward by two Catholic academics who claim that a major criticism of the Pope’s exhortation Amoris Laetitia (AL) is based on a faulty Vatican-rendered translation from Latin to English.

Dr. Robert Fastiggi and Dr. Dawn Eden-Goldstein argue that critics of Pope Francis’ teaching on marriage and family “misread and distort what Pope Francis actually says.” They have used their translation to cast doubt on the recent Filial Correction that accused Pope Francis of propagating heresy.

Fastiggi is a Professor of Systematic Theology at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, Michigan, and Eden-Goldstein is a Professor of Dogmatic Theology at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Cromwell, Connecticut.

In their September 26 La Stampa article titled Does Amoris Laetitia 303 Really Undermine Catholic Moral Teaching?, the authors provide what they say is a more accurate translation of Amoris Laetitia (AL) paragraph 303. They argue that critics have raised alarm “precisely upon what the Latin text does not say.”

At issue is paragraph 303 where Pope Francis speaks about “irregular couples” living in a situation that does not “correspond objectively to the overall demands of the Gospel.”

The official Vatican English translation reads:

Yet conscience can do more than recognize that a given situation does not correspond objectively to the overall demands of the Gospel. It can also recognize with sincerity and honesty what for now is the most generous response which can be given to God, and come to see with a certain moral security that it is what God himself is asking amid the concrete complexity of one’s limits, while yet not fully the objective ideal. In any event, let us recall that this discernment is dynamic; it must remain ever open to new stages of growth and to new decisions which can enable the ideal to be more fully realized.

Catholic philosopher Dr. Josef Seifert logically deduced from this paragraph that if Pope Francis believes that adultery — to quote the exhortation — “is what God himself is asking” of couples in “irregular” situations, then there is nothing stopping any other intrinsically evil act, such as contraception and homosexuality, from eventually being justified.

It was for this reason that he calledAmoris Laetitia a ticking “theological atomic bomb” that has the capacity to destroy all Catholic moral teaching.

But Fastiggi and Eden-Goldstein believe that critics “misread and distort” what Pope Francis is actually saying in AL 303. They say that the Vatican mistranslated the word “oblationem,” which means sacrificial offering, as well as the Latin word for “exemplar,” which they say is poorly rendered as an “ideal.”

They suggest that their superior translation “shows that Pope Francis is clearly not saying that conscience may rightly discern that an objectively immoral act is not immoral.”

Instead, he is noting that in some complex and irregular situations a person’s conscience will recognize that God is asking for a generous response, indeed an oblationem, or offering, that moves in the right direction even though it does not completely rectify the objective irregularity of the situation.

… It is very clear from the Latin text of Amoris laetitia 303 that Pope Francis is describing how conscience can discern that God himself is asking for a small step in the right direction in the midst of a mass of impediments and limitations. The Holy Father is not saying that God himself is asking certain people “to continue to commit intrinsically wrong acts such as adultery or active homosexuality.” This is a most unfortunate reading of the text by Seifert. Instead Pope Francis is saying that in certain difficult situations God is asking for a “generous response” (liberale responsum), an offering (oblationem)—that is, a step in the right direction.

Dr. Joseph Shaw, one of the organizers of the Filial Correction, said that looking for a more orthodox interpretation of the Pope’s teaching in AL casts doubt on the significance of the Correction.

“What’s at issue is no longer about squeezing out possible orthodox meanings from these passages,” he told LifeSiteNews. “It’s about clearly unorthodox interpretations being favoured.”

“The Correctio makes very clear that Amoris Laetitia could be interpreted in different ways. The problem we are addressing derives from interpretations, which themselves do not have this ambiguity, which are contrary to the Faith, and which have been favoured by the Pope in non-magisterial ways,” he added.

Shaw said the Filial Correction shows “beyond reasonable doubt” that the Pope desires his exhortation to be read and applied in “ways that are, in fact, heretical.”

“Whether the passages that are quoted from Amoris Laetitia could, by abstracting them from their context in this papacy and reading them in an alternative ecclesiastical universe, be read and applied in ways that involve no heresies is not a question that the Correction seeks to address. The authors of the Filial Correction are concerned only to respond to the ecclesial emergency caused by the Pope’s actual propagation of positions which are, in fact, heretical,” he added.

Professor of philosophy Dr. Peter Kwasniewski said that simply because a text can be translated in a more orthodox light does not solve the real problem of the text.

“This proposed better translation simply moves the text from being indisputably heterodox to being disputably orthodox. That is, the new translation admits of an orthodox reading, but it does not preclude the heterodox reading that has been the operative principle of most implementations of Amoris Laetitia,” he told LifeSiteNews.

“The two theologians are acting as if just because it now can be read in an orthodox way, therefore, it’s OK. Whereas the truth is, a theological proposition should not admit of a heterodox reading, and this one does,” he added.

Seifert told LifeSiteNews that he did not find Fastiggi and Eden-Goldstein’s argument convincing.

“I do not see any essential difference between the Latin and official English text. Besides, I do not think that the Pope wrote the Latin (which seems to me to be pretty badly carried out). And it is unlikely that the Latin is the original text,” he said.

While the Latin text has become the authoritative text of the exhortation, it is generally acknowledged that Latin was not the original language of composition. This could account for the fact that the Latin version was not officially released by the Vatican until after various vernacular had already been released.

Dr. Christian Brugger, Senior Fellow of Ethics at the Culture of Life Foundation in Washington D.C., concluded after a detailed examination of the Latin text that Fastiggi and Eden-Goldstein’s proposed translation that would render AL 303 in a more orthodox light “is not justified by the text.”

In a small treatise on the matter sent to LifeSiteNews, Brugger said the Latin is clear that the “oblationem” or offering that “God himself is asking” of couples living in irregular situations refers back to the recognition that their state “is objectively at variance with the universal command of the Gospel.”

“So the text teaches that conscience not only can recognize the failure of my objectively adulterous second union to meet Jesus’ universal command; it also can recognize that this statum — this objectively adulterous state — is the best I can give here and now; and that with a ‘firma conscientia’ I can achieve ‘a certain moral certitude’ that God is asking me to make an ‘oblatio’ of this statum however far from the objective model of Gospel morality it may depart,” he said.

Brugger said the overall meaning of the text is clear.

“When the text refers to persons in civil unions not yet living up to the perfect objective demands of Gospel chastity, it is referring to civilly ‘remarried’ divorcees who are living in a sexually active marital-type relationships with someone other than their valid spouses,” he said.

“It is these couples that the text is presently freeing to return to Holy Communion without requiring a radical emendation of life,” he added.

Eduardo Echeverria,  Professor of Philosophy and Systematic Theology at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, has also penned an article in which he argues that the proper interpretation of AL 303 comes from reading it in light of the entire exhortation.

“In sum, this logic of pastoral reasoning (as found in AL), in respect of the divorce and civilly married, is such that it appears to lead to the conclusion that God’s very will for these persons is that they are free to have sexual intimacy for the good of a faithful and stable but ‘invalid marriage’ because that benefits the children. This couple, according to Francis’ logic, is not living in a state of adultery, of grave habitual sin, and hence in contradiction to God’s law (Mt 19: 3-9),” he wrote in an article appearing in Catholic World Report.

“This conclusion has fostered confusion in the Church,” he added.

Read the full article atLife Site News

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

GOD BLESS AMERICA !!!

MY KIND OF AN AMERICAN
http://rense.com/general96/clarkhunt.jpg
Clark Hunt, CEO and Owner of the Kansas City Chiefs

Mr. Hunt called a meeting with all of his Coaches, Players and field staff and firmly told them,
“You are all simply paid performers on a stage and that field is my stage!
You will stand, with your hand over your heart and with respect, when our Country’s National Anthem is being played or
you will no longer be a Kansas City Chief, a Coach for the Kansas City Chiefs or have any association with the Chiefs Organization!
I will immediately fire you, no matter who you are!”
You can make your political statements off the field, but when you’re employed by me and I’m signing your check,
I demand that you make our fans proud and not embarrass them.”
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on GOD BLESS AMERICA !!!