Cardinal George Pell has come to the support of the four cardinals who have submitted dubia about the interpretation of Amoris Laetitia.
Following an address to an audience in London, the Australian
cardinal was asked whether he agreed with the questions the cardinals
had asked Pope Francis. He replied: “How can you disagree with a
question?” He added, however, that the questions were “significant.”
During his talk, Cardinal Pell had spoken at length about the proper
understanding of conscience in relation to moral law.
While
acknowledging the primacy of conscience, he cited the concern of Blessed
John Henry Newman about a “miserable counterfeit” of conscience that
promotes “the right of self-will.”
A conscience must be properly informed, the cardinal said. “When a
priest and a penitent are trying to discern the best way forward in what
is known as the internal forum,” he said, they should always refer to
the moral laws set forth by the Church.
“The idea that you can somehow
discern that moral truths should not be followed or should not be
recognized is absurd,” he said.
Cardinal Pell pointedly remarked that Catholics are sometimes advised
to follow their own consciences on questions involving sexual morality.
It is telling, he said, that the same advice is not given to those who
harbor racist attitudes, or who deny an obligation to assist the poor.
For those who are interested in understanding the Church’s teachings on moral issues, Cardinal Pell strongly recommended Veritatis Splendor and Evangelium Vitae,
two “great encyclicals” of St. John Paul II. Critics of Pope Francis
have observed that those two encyclicals were largely overlooked in Amoris Laetitia.
Cardinal Pell said that many faithful Catholics have been “unnerved”
by recent developments within the Church.
He said this was a result of
the widespread confusion about the authority of moral law.