In a recent interview with Corriere della Sera, the Vatican's head
official on doctrinal matters discussed the importance of personal
pastoral care for divorced re-married persons, while adhering to Church
teaching.
“We must try a combination of general principles and particular,
personal situations. Finding solutions to individual problems, though
always on the foundation of Catholic doctrine,” Archbishop Gerhard
Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, told
Gian Guido Vecchi of the Italian daily in an interview published Dec.
22.
“You cannot adjust the doctrine to the circumstances: the Church is not a
political party which does surveys to look for consent. A true,
pastoral dialogue is necessary. There are different situations, which
are to be evaluated in different ways.”
The archbishop's comments follow months of back-and-forth between
himself and bishops from his native Germany who have suggested that
divorced and remarried Catholics could receive Communion under certain
circumstances.
In November, Archbishop Müller wrote a letter to the emeritus archbishop
of Freiburg clarifying that “no pastoral directions are sanctioned
which are in opposition to Church teaching,” and he had made the same
point in an essay published at L'Osservatore Romano the preceding month.
In his Corriere della Sera interview, the archbishop explained, “the
truth is that we cannot clarify these situations with a general
statement. On those divorced and civilly remarried, many think the Pope
or a synod can say: of course, receive Communion. But this is not
possible.”
He added that this is because a “valid, sacramental marriage is
indissoluble: this is the Catholic practice, reaffirmed by Popes and
Councils, in fidelity to the Words of Jesus. And the Church has not the
authority to relativize the Words and Commandments of God.”
Archbishop Müller added that while the sacraments have a “medicinal
aspect” and are not restricted to “the perfect,” an irregular marriage
is an “objective obstacle to receiving the Eucharist.” This is “not a
punishment” and the bar on divorced and re-married persons receiving
Communion does not keep them from attending Mass.
He affirmed that annulments can be granted, adding that in many places,
Christian tradition “has lost its meaning” and there is a “total
confusion” about who man is and what is his purpose and dignity.
The archbishop also discussed Church structures in the wake of Pope
Francis' Nov. 24 apostolic exhortation “Evangelii gaudium”, in which he
discussed a “conversion of the papacy” and suggested that bishops'
conferences could be given a greater role, including “genuine doctrinal
authority.”
He said the interpretation of “some” who believe the exhortation means
the Pope “wishes to promote a certain autonomy of local Churches, a
tendency to distance themselves from Rome” “is not possible” and would
be “the first step towards autocephaly.”
Archbishop Müller clarified that “the Catholic Church is composed of
local Churches, but it is One. 'National' churches do not exist … the
presidents of bishops' conferences, while important, are coordinators,
nothing more, not vice-popes!”
He emphasized that both the Roman Pontiff and individual bishops are of
“divine right, instituted by Jesus Christ,” while patriarchates and
bishops' conferences are established by the Church, by man.”
“Each bishop has a direct and immediate relationship with the Pope. We
cannot have a decentralization in the conferences, as there would be the
peril of a new centralism: in which the president has all the
information and the bishops are submerged in documents.”
The archbishop added that Pope Francis' statements in “Evangelii
gaudium” were in the context of Bl. John Paul II's encyclical on
ecumenism, and that the Church must find a “practical equilibrium”
between the errors of conciliarism or Gallicanism on the one hand, and a
certain curialism on the other.
The interview continued with a brief discussion of the Society of St.
Pius X, which was founded by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in 1970 to form
priests, as a response to what he described as errors that had crept
into the Church following the Second Vatican Council. Its relations with
the Holy See became strained in 1988 when Archbishop Lefebvre
consecrated four bishops without the permission of Pope John Paul II.
The illicit episcopal ordinations resulted in the five being
excommunicated, though in 2009 Benedict XVI, acting through Cardinal
Giovanni Re, remitted the automatic excommunication from the four
surviving bishops. After that time, doctrinal discussions between the
Society and Rome were conducted, until the discussions effectively broke
down in 2012.
Asked about the position of the Society of St. Pius X, Archbishop Müller
said that while “the canonical excommunication” was revoked, “the
sacramental one remains, de facto, for the schism: because they have
removed themselves from communion with the Church.”
“Having said that, we do not close the door, ever, and invite them to
reconcile. But they also must change their approach, accepting the
conditions of the Catholic Church and the Supreme Pontiff as the
definitive criterion of belonging (to it).”
The final question posed to the archbishop by Corriere della Sera was
about Pope Francis' Sept. 11 meeting with Fr. Gustavo Gutierrez, the
“founder” of liberation theology, whom the doctrine head said “has
always been orthodox.”
Archbishop Müller and Fr. Gutierrez are friends, and in conclusion he
said he had learned from Fr. Gutierrez “to broaden the horizons, to find
an equilibrium,” and “to open up to a concrete experience: to see
poverty and also the joy of the people.”