Cardinal Gerhard Müller, the Vatican’s doctrinal chief, has made one
of his strongest statements yet on the controversial question of
Communion for the divorced and remarried.
In an interview with the Italian magazine Il Timone, Cardinal Müller,
prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, was asked
whether the teaching reaffirmed by Pope St John Paul II’s Familiaris
Consortio is still valid.
St John Paul said that the divorced and remarried cannot take
Communion, except possibly when they try to live “in complete
continence”.
Cardinal Müller said of this condition: “Of course, it is not
dispensable, because it is not only a positive law of John Paul II, but
he expressed an essential element of Christian moral theology and the
theology of the sacraments.”
In Familiaris Consortio, St John Paul said that the prohibition was
based on Scripture and the intrinsic link between the Eucharist and
marriage: to live in a sexual relationship “objectively contradict[s]
that union of love between Christ and the Church which is signified and
effected by the Eucharist”.
The cardinal told Il Timone that this made Communion for the
remarried impossible: “For us marriage is the expression of
participation in the unity between Christ the bridegroom and the Church
his bride. This is not, as some said during the Synod, a simple vague
analogy. No! This is the substance of the sacrament, and no power in
heaven or on earth, neither an angel, nor the pope, nor a council, nor a
law of the bishops, has the faculty to change it.”
Parts of the interview have been translated into English
by Matthew Sherry for the newspaper L’Espresso. In it, Cardinal Müller
also says the Pope’s apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitia must be read
“in the light of the whole doctrine of the Church”.
St John Paul was one of several popes, including Benedict XVI, to
reaffirm the doctrine on Communion for the remarried. It has also been
taught by theologians, Church fathers, early councils, and in recent
decades by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Recently, the two bishops of Malta said
that, instead, the remarried should receive Communion if they discerned
that they were “at peace with God”.
They claimed that their advice was
based on Amoris Laetitia. The bishops of Germany have approved Communion for the remarried in some cases, in their document on Amoris Laetitia.
In the new interview, Cardinal Müller says: “Amoris Laetitia must
clearly be interpreted in the light of the whole doctrine of the
Church.” He added: “I don’t like it, it is not right that so many
bishops are interpreting Amoris Laetitia according to their way of
understanding the Pope’s teaching. This does not keep to the line of
Catholic doctrine.”
He said that many people needed to study more doctrine on the office
of the bishop, which was not to offer novel accounts of papal teaching.
“The bishop, as teacher of the Word, must himself be the first to be
well-formed so as not to fall into the risk of the blind leading the
blind,” the cardinal said.
He also warned against “sophistries” and
“casuistry” which would diminish Church teaching on marriage.