The provisions of “Amoris Laetitia” allow people in irregular
marriage situations access to the sacraments only if they recognize
their situation is sinful and desire to change it, according to the
cardinal who heads the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts.
The fact that such a couple also believes changing the situation
immediately by splitting up would cause more harm and forgoing sexual
relations would threaten their current relationship does not rule out
the possibility of receiving sacramental absolution and Communion, said
Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio, president of the pontifical council
which is charged with interpreting canon law.
The intention to change, even if the couple cannot do so immediately,
“is exactly the theological element that allows absolution and access
to the Eucharist as long as — I repeat — there is the impossibility of
immediately changing the situation of sin,” the cardinal wrote.
Cardinal Coccopalmerio’s short booklet, “The Eighth Chapter of the
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia,” was published in
Italian by the Vatican publishing house and presented to journalists
Feb. 14. It includes material compiled from articles and speeches the
cardinal has given about the pope’s document on marriage and family
life.
The cardinal was unable to attend the presentation because of a
meeting at the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, said Salesian Father
Giuseppe Costa, director of the Vatican publishing house.
“To whom can the church absolutely not concede penance and the
Eucharist (because) it would be a glaring contradiction?” the cardinal
asked in the book. “To one who, knowing he or she is in a state of
serious sin and having the ability to change, has no sincere intention
of carrying it out.”
Cardinal Coccopalmerio quoted “Amoris Laetitia” to make his point:
“Naturally, if someone flaunts an objective sin as if it were part of
the Christian ideal, or wants to impose something other than what the
church teaches … such a person needs to listen once more to the Gospel
message and its call to conversion.”
Father Maurizio Gronchi, a theologian and consultant to the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, told reporters Feb. 14
Cardinal Coccopalmerio’s reading of “Amoris Laetitia” is the same as the
bishops of Malta, Germany and the church region of Buenos Aires,
Argentina.
Those bishops have issued guidelines that include the
possibility of eventually allowing divorced and civilly remarried
Catholics access to the sacraments without first requiring an annulment
of their sacramental marriage or a firm commitment to abstaining from
sexual relations.
Dozens of other bishops around the world, including Archbishop
Charles J. Chaput of Philadelphia, head of the U.S. bishops’ ad hoc
committee for implementing “Amoris Laetitia,” have insisted church
teaching prohibits persons in an objective state of mortal sin from
receiving the Eucharist and those who, in the eyes of the church, are
not married to a person they are having sex with are in such a state of
sin.
Father Costa told reporters the cardinal’s book is not “the Vatican
response” to the challenges posed by U.S. Cardinal Raymond L. Burke and
three retired cardinals to the supposed lack of clarity and potential
misunderstanding of “Amoris Laetitia.” Rather, he said, it is an
“authoritative” reading of the papal document and a contribution to the
ongoing discussion.
In his document, Pope Francis affirms the constant teaching of the
Catholic Church on the indissolubility of marriage and the sinful state
of those who cohabit and those who form a second union while one or both
of them are still bound sacramentally in marriage to another person,
Cardinal Coccopalmerio wrote.
The only time such persons would not be in a state of mortal sin, he
wrote, is if they were ignorant of church teaching, were unable to
understand church teaching or “knew the norm and its goodness, but were
unable to act as the norm indicates without incurring another fault.”
Cardinal Coccopalmerio cited the case of a woman who enters into a
relationship with a man who, along with his small children, was
abandoned by his wife. The woman knows the relationship is not in
accordance with church teaching, but leaving the man and his small
children would devastate him and leave the children without a maternal
figure.
In writing that the church could admit such a couple to the
sacraments with the “verification of two essential conditions — that
they desire to change that situation, but they cannot act on their
desire,” the cardinal said the verification must be done with “attentive
and authoritative discernment” under the guidance of a priest.
Does “welcoming the sinner justify the person’s behavior and renounce doctrine?” the cardinal asked. “Certainly not.”
Father Gronchi told reporters “Amoris Laetitia” is not reaching out
to couples who are “peaceful and tranquil” while living in situations
that are not in harmony with the Gospel, rather it is offering guidance,
hope and the possibility of sacramental grace to couples who know they
are in sinful situations and want to change.
The papal document and the cardinal’s book are “not saying, ‘amnesty
for all,'” Father Gronchi said. “It’s about indicating possible paths to
conversion, not to amnesty.”