The archbishop says that the prohibitions contained in the Ten Commandments “admit of no exceptions in the objective.” Acknowledging that some cases are difficult, he denies that the solution will be found in breaking divine law. “Generally speaking,” he says, “no one is forced to act in an evil manner against the commandments of God.”
Archbishop Sample encourages pastoral work with Catholics who are divorced and remarried, to help them understand and accept the Church’s teaching. He says: “As difficult as it can be, and as much of a cross it might be for us at a time in our life, God’s grace enables us to overcome our struggles, even with sin.”
In his pastoral letter, the archbishop says, he relied heavily on the teaching of St. John Paul II, especially in Veritatis Splendor, where the Pontiff explained the importance of absolute truth and the necessity of recognizing and avoiding all intrinsically evil acts.
Speaking more generally about the challenge of promoting Church teaching, Archbishop Sample says:
I am afraid that we continue to reap the bad fruit of decades now of poor catechesis on the very nature of marriage and family life. How else can we explain the acceptance of a redefinition of marriage on the part of so many Catholics?