In 2010 he was named a cardinal by Pope Benedict XVI and soon
thereafter become Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic
Signatura.
In 2014 Pope Francis removed Cardinal Burke from his position
as Prefect and named him chaplain to the Order of Malta.
During the
Extraordinary Synod of Bishops, held in Rome in October 2014, Cardinal
Burke strongly criticized the mid-term report (Relatio post disceptationem),
stating that it "lacks a solid foundation in the Sacred Scriptures and
the Magisterium" and that it "gives the impression of inventing a
totally new ... revolutionary, teaching on marriage and the family."
He
added that he thought a statement of clarification from Pope Francis "is
long overdue."
More recently, in September of this year, Cardinal Burke and three other cardinals—Carlo Caffarra, Walter Brandmüller and Joachim Meisner—sent a request for clarification to Pope Francis regarding sections of chapter 8 of the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia.
More recently, in September of this year, Cardinal Burke and three other cardinals—Carlo Caffarra, Walter Brandmüller and Joachim Meisner—sent a request for clarification to Pope Francis regarding sections of chapter 8 of the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia.
The letter stated,
in part, that "we the undersigned, but also many Bishops and Priests,
have received numerous requests from the faithful of various social
strata on the correct interpretation to give to Chapter VIII of the
Exhortation" and asked the Holy Father "as supreme Teacher of the faith,
called by the Risen One to confirm his brothers in the faith, to
resolve the uncertainties and bring clarity..."
In a November 15, 2016 interview with Edward Pentin of National Catholic Register, Cardinal Burke explained that the "five critical points" in the dubia submitted
to Pope Francis "have to do with irreformable moral principles" and
that if there was "no response to these questions, then I would say that
it would be a question of taking a formal act of correction of a
serious error."
Catholic World Report recently spoke with Cardinal Raymond Burke on
the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception (Dec. 8th) at the Shrine of
Our Lady of Guadalupe in La Crosse, Wisconsin, which he founded while
serving as Bishop of La Crosse from 1994 to 2003.
CWR: In early 2004, when then-Massachusetts Senator
John Kerry was running for President and you were just beginning your
ministry as Archbishop of St. Louis, Missouri, you said Kerry should be
refused Communion because of his pro-abortion stance. You also said
you’re always getting into trouble. Are you still getting yourself into
trouble?
Cardinal Burke: I suppose that's true, but I trust it’s good trouble.
CWR: When was last time a Pope was rebuked?
Cardinal Burke: As far as I know, and I'm not an expert
in this, it was John XXII. He was corrected for a wrong teaching he had
on the beatific vision.
CWR: And who did that?
Cardinal Burke: There was a bishop involved and some Dominican Friars…
CWR: Is there a Scriptural basis for rebuking a pope?
Cardinal Burke: The classic Scriptural basis is St.
Paul's rebuking of Peter [in Galatians 2:11ff] for his accommodation of
the Judaizers in the early Christian Church. Saint Paul confronted Peter
to his face because he would be requiring things of the Gentile
Christians that are not inherent to the Christian faith. And Peter
actually agreed with that, but when he was with the Judaizers he would
feign the other position and so Paul corrected him, as he said, to his
face.
CWR: Why do you think Amoris Laetitia chapter 8 is so ambiguous?
Cardinal Burke: The reason for its ambiguity, it seems
to me, is to give latitude to a practice which has never been admitted
in the Church, namely the practice of permitting people who are living
publicly in grave sin to receive the Sacraments.
CWR: It seems that you have, in some ways, become the
champion of Canon 915, thinking back to the controversy over Kerry and
even before him to some politicians in La Crosse, Wisconsin, where you
were bishop from 1994 to 2003. [Editor's note: Canon 915 of the Code of Canon Lawstates:
"Those who have been excommunicated or interdicted after the imposition
or declaration of the penalty and others obstinately persevering in
manifest grave sin are not to be admitted to holy communion." For more
background see Dr. Edward Peter's page about the Canon.)
Cardinal Burke: And that's certainly a very good thing of which to be the champion.
CWR: What was the initial reason for you to submit the dubia to Pope Francis?
Cardinal Burke: Some of us had raised these questions
to Pope Francis in the correspondence before this because of their
gravity. But then there is also the growing confusion in the Church, in
many quarters and parts of the Church, and the plea from both priests
and laity, that the cardinals, who are the chief advisors to the Pope,
needed to fulfill their responsibility by seeking clarification about
some matters which are, as long as they remained in doubt, a source of
great confusion and eventual spiritual harm in the church.
CWR: There's a lot of talk that Amoris Laetitia is
deliberately ambiguous and that's because the divorced and remarried
already find themselves in rather ambiguous situations. How do you
respond to that?
Cardinal Burke: For those who are divorced and
remarried, or I should say divorced and living in an irregular
matrimonial union, if they truly understand the Catholic faith, the
solution to that is not some confused approach, but the solution is to
know the truth about the marriage to which one is bound, and once one
knows that truth to live in accord with it. That is the only approach
that can bring the faithful who find themselves in such a situation
peace both with God and within the Church. This isn’t new; these
situations have existed throughout the Church's history. There are
always complex aspects to the situation, but the only way to address
them is by acknowledging and living the truth.
CWR: Why isn’t the truly pastoral situation just to allow them to receive Communion?
Cardinal Burke: Because it doesn't respect the truth,
and there can't be any possible truly pastoral situation that doesn't
honor the truth taught by Christ Himself in the Gospel. So that if I'm
bound to someone in a marriage and I'm living in a marital way with
someone else, in adultery, pastoral care should be directed to helping
me free myself from the sin of adultery. It's no help to me whatsoever
and a positive harm to me to tell me, “That's all right, go ahead, and
you can live that way and still receive the Sacraments.”
CWR: If a couple—where at least one has had been previously
married and there was no declaration of nullity granted for the previous
bond—came to you and said, “Look, we've been married for 20 years.
We're in a stable relationship, we've got four children together and
they're living good lives. We go to church every Sunday and the children
are in Catholic schools. Why should we be denied Communion, never mind
Confession?” what would you say to them?
Cardinal Burke: Because one or the other of them is
bound to a prior marriage and therefore they're not free to enter
another marriage or live in a marital way with another party. If they,
for some reason, for example, raising children or some other valid
reason, need to continue to live under the same roof, then they are
called obviously to live chastely and that is as brother and sister.
CWR: Are there others, besides the four cardinals who submitted the dubia to Pope Francise, who support what you’re saying?
Cardinal Burke: Yes.
CWR: And they’re not speaking out because…?
Cardinal Burke: For various reasons, one of which is
the way the media takes these things and distorts them making it seem
that anyone who raises a question about Amoris Laetitia is disobedient to the Pope or an enemy of the Pope and so forth. So they...
CWR They're keeping their heads down.
Cardinal Burke: Yes, I suppose.
CWR: One prelate has accused you and your fellow cardinals of being in heresy. How do you respond to that?
Cardinal Burke: How can you be in heresy by asking
honest questions? It’s just irrational to accuse us of heresy. We're
asking fundamental questions based upon the constant tradition of the
Church’s moral teaching. So I don't think there's any question that by
doing that we've done something heretical.
CWR: Some critics say you are implicitly accusing the Pope of heresy.
Cardinal Burke: No, that's not what we have implied at
all. We have simply asked him, as the Supreme Pastor of the Church, to
clarify these five points that are confused; these five, very serious
and fundamental points. We’re not accusing him of heresy, but just
asking him to answer these questions for us as the Supreme Pastor of the
Church.
CWR: In raising these questions you've been accused
implicitly by the Pope and explicitly by others of legalism, of being
Pharisees and Sadducees. [Smiles, chuckles] You smile because you get
this all the time. Why is this not legalism?
Cardinal Burke: Simply because we are not asking the
questions as a merely formal exercise, we're not asking questions about
positive ecclesiastical law, that is, laws that are made by the Church
herself. These are questions that have to do with the natural moral law
and the fundamental teaching of the Gospel. To be attentive to that
teaching is hardly legalism. In fact, it is, as Our Lord Himself taught
us, the way of perfection to which we’re called. That's why He Himself
said that He didn't come to abolish the law but to fulfill it [Matt
5:17].
CWR: Bishop Athanasius Schneider, O.R.C., the Auxiliary Bishop
of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary in Astana, Kazakhstan and titular
bishop of Celerina, who has written an open letter of support for the four cardinals and their dubia, has also said that the Church is in a de facto schism. Do you agree with that?
Cardinal Burke: There is a very serious division in the
Church which has to be mended because it has to do with, as I said
before, fundamental dogmatic and moral teaching. And if it's not
clarified soon, it could develop into a formal schism.
CWR: Some people are saying that the pope could separate
himself from communion with the Church. Can the pope legitimately be
declared in schism or heresy?
Cardinal Burke: If a Pope would formally profess heresy he would cease, by that act, to be the Pope. It’s automatic. And so, that could happen.
CWR: That could happen.
Cardinal Burke: Yes.
CWR: That’s a scary thought.
Cardinal Burke: It is a scary thought, and I hope we won’t be witnessing that at any time soon.
CWR: In hindsight, with all of the controversy that has
surrounded this, should you have kept these concerns to yourself and
just waited for His Holiness to answer your dubia?
Cardinal Burke: No, not at all, because the faithful
and priests and bishops have the right to have these questions answered.
It was our duty as cardinals, when the Pope made it clear that he would
not respond to them, to make them public so that the priests and the
lay faithful who had these same doubts might know that their doubts are
legitimate and that they deserve a response.
CWR: Some consider you to be an enemy of Pope Francis. How do you see yourself in relation to him?
Cardinal Burke: I am a Cardinal of the Church, and one
of the Pope’s principal co-workers. I have absolute respect for the
Petrine office. If I didn’t care about him and his exercise of the
Petrine office, I would just remain silent and let everything go as it
is. But because in conscience I believe he has an obligation to clarify
these matters for the Church, I made it known to him, not just on this
occasion, but on other occasions. The publication of the dubia was done with complete respect for his office. I am not the enemy of the Pope.
CWR: Back to this question about the Pope committing
heresy. What happens then, if the Pope commits heresy and is no longer
Pope? Is there a new conclave? Who's in charge of the Church? Or do we
just not even want to go there to start figuring that stuff out?
Cardinal Burke: There is already in place the
discipline to be followed when the Pope ceases from his office, even as
happened when Pope Benedict XVI abdicated his office. The Church
continued to be governed in the interim between the effective date of
his abdication and the inauguration of the papal ministry of Pope
Francis.
CWR: Who is competent to declare him to be in heresy?
Cardinal Burke: It would have to be members of the College of Cardinals.
CWR: Just to clarify again, are you saying that Pope Francis is in heresy or is close to it?
Cardinal Burke: No, I am not saying that Pope Francis
is in heresy. I have never said that. Neither have I stated that he is
close to being in heresy.
CWR: Doesn't the Holy Spirit protect us from such a danger?
Cardinal Burke: The Holy Spirit inhabits the Church.
The Holy Spirit is always watching over, inspiring and strengthening the
Church. But the members of the Church and, in a pre-eminent way, the
hierarchy must cooperate with the promptings of the Holy Spirit. It is
one thing for the Holy Spirit to be present with us, but it is another
thing for us to be obedient to the Holy Spirit.