By Maike Hickson
Carlo Cardinal Caffarra |
Therefore, the two books together
form a pastoral as well as doctrinal refutation of the "Kasper
proposal," as it had been first endorsed by Francis I at the College of
Cardinals meeting in February of 2014 and as it has been promoted far and wide
ever since, not least at the last 2014 Synod of Bishops on Marriage and the
Family.
In order to give a revealing
glimpse of this effort of eleven princes of the Church to demonstrate that
there is an alternative approach to the laxer and more lenient way of Cardinal
Kasper, we will pick out a few of the eleven contributions. Important to note
is that these cardinals – among them Carlo Cardinal Caffarra, Robert Cardinal
Sarah, and Paul Josef Cardinal Cordes – come from different parts of the world
and thereby are able to give a fuller insight into the moral crisis as well as
an adequate response to it.
Cardinal Caffarra of Italy is
perhaps the author who is the most attentive to doctrinal matters in this book.
He bases his argumentation on the fundamental truth of our own sinfulness and
our need for being forgiven by God. God, in His love for mankind,
"provided for all creation – the human person in the first place – in
Christ the Redeemer of man by means of his sacrifice on the Cross" (p. 1),
Caffarra reminds us. The "death of Jesus for the remission of our
sins" was God's eternal plan (2). Caffarra reminds the reader also that it
depends upon the free will of each person whether he will be at all and finally
united with God or not. He says: "In committing moral evil, man imprisons
himself" (3). Cardinal Caffarra stresses the importance that man sincerely
convert and ask God for forgiveness in order to be able to receive God's
generous forgiveness. God, therefore, requires our cooperation. Our conversion
needs a confession and then a firm resolution of amendment, meaning to
recognize our own sins and then to decide not to commit them in the future.
True mercy, in Caffarra's
understanding, means, then, to tell the sinner that he is living in sin and
that he needs to convert: "In other words: it must be said that man must
convert, and from what actions and attitudes, that is, vices he
must turn away" (7). Therefore: "Mercy without [any requirement for]
conversion is not divine mercy" (7). Caffarra also insists that one needs
to acknowledge the existence of sin and evil, that "in general there are
such things as en erring life and a just life, such things as good and evil
that precede and judge our free choices" (8). With it, the Italian
cardinal reminds us of the necessity of speaking the truth, and of the danger
of pretending that there is no sin to be rejected and permanently shunned. When
applied to the problem of the "remarried" divorcés, this doctrinal
explanation makes clear to the sinner that he sincerely has to change his life
and has to stop committing the sin of adultery. With it, Caffarra has made his
own strong stand in relation to the "Kasper proposal," according to
which – in Kasper's indulgent view – those living in the state of adultery
should be somehow still admitted to the Sacraments.
The German cardinal Paul Josef
Cordes is known for his defense of the traditional moral teaching of the Church.
In his contribution to the book, he presents a summary of his position. In
presenting the Church's history with regard to the indissolubility of marriage,
Cardinal Cordes shows that there is no chance for a change of her traditional
doctrine and practice. He says:
“This review of Church history
gives little reason to hope that the most recent attempts and opinions [to
change the Church's moral teaching] have now found the "philosopher's
stone." Even though their proponents are brimming with self-confidence,
like men on a mission, and can be assured of the applause of the media, any
careful and thoughtful observer will be skeptical about their suggestions.”
(20)
Cordes also repeats his reproach
of the German bishop Franz-Josef Bode, who, earlier this year, had claimed that
the Church should now take much more into account the "concrete
experiences of people," claiming that "doctrine and life must not be
completely separate from one another" (21). Cordes, in his strong rebuke
of this claim, criticizes the idea of taking those Catholics who live in a
irregular state as the standard for the Church:
“Finally, it would be quite
paradoxical to set aside these unequivocal instructions and to try to assign to
a small group of Church members, who are living in a spiritually lamentable yet
objectively irregular situation, the role of being a source of faith. Bishop
Bode's call for a change of perspective is therefore neither original nor
helpful.” (22)
Two other important voices of the
book may also be briefly presented here. They come from Eastern Europe and
Africa, both giving a different perspective upon the current problems in the
Church.
Dominik Cardinal Duka |
In strong words, Cardinal Duka
candidly names things by their true names and reminds us of the importance of
keeping our word, especially with regard to the vows of marriage. As seldom
seen, he describes how base any breakup of a marriage is:
“What do we call a person who has
not been faithful to his oath [or vow], who has not kept his given word, who
does not remain at his post but flees like a coward? If we speak about the
break-up of marriage, we have to realize that this is one of the most profound
crises: […] It is a betrayal.” (43)
Yet God called us to keep our
word, since he Himself kept His own word, as Duka says:
“God gave His word and kept it; He
kept it on the Cross in Jesus Christ. […] The Cross is the exaltation of
faithful love. The Cross is the exaltation of keeping one's word, of the oath
that God gave to mankind [.]” (43)
John Cardinal Onaiyekan |
“It is in this context that we
should place the tendency to see marriage in a completely different way from
what humanity has been used to. This explains why homosexuality and same-sex
unions are being vaunted as normal, perhaps even as the preferred option. This
is the world we have now around us, with its secularist approach to human
society in total disregard for God, even if God is not being explicitly denied.”
(64)
Cardinal Onaiyekan also expresses
his indignation that now, such manipulative, subversive forces are even to be
found within the Church herself, that these errors "are now invading our
Church":
“Efforts to introduce changes in
Church doctrine and practice are being persistently inflicted on our Church,
not only by fringe theologians on the margins of the Church, but sometimes by
people quite high up in the ecclesiastical realm.”
An African colleague of Onaiyekan,
Robert Cardinal Sarah (of Guinea) reminds us in his own contribution to
the Eleven Cardinals Book of a trenchant quote from G.K. Chesterton: "Take
away the supernatural, and what remains is the unnatural." In his own
presentation, Cardinal Sarah shows the consequences of the loss of the
supernatural for the most vulnerable ones, the unborn children in the womb. He
has thus formulated these strong and piercing words:
“As for the unborn child, he is
often regarded as a threat, to the point where it is necessary to protect
oneself from him and to wage against him the most merciless chemical warfare.”
(102)
It is to be hoped that these
voices from around the world, coming from princes of the Church with many years
of pastoral care, as well as doctrinal study, will be heard at the upcoming
Synod on the Family. May their voices have weight and push back the forces of
modern society that have invaded the Church and are now trying to eclipse the
Truth of Christ – at the expense of the most vulnerable ones: the children,
born and unborn.
Source: LifeSiteNews
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