Posted on 10/24/2014 3:58:51 PM PDT by ebb tide
Cardinal Vincent Nichols has said that the lives of Catholics who cohabitate outside of marriage are marked by real goodness.
In a pastoral letter to the Diocese of Westminster reflecting on the family synod, Cardinal Nichols said: A central principle for this pastoral care emerged clearly: that in trying to walk alongside people in difficult or exceptional situations, it is important to see clearly and with humility all the good aspects of their lives. That is what comes first. From this point, we learn to move together towards conversion and towards the goodness of life that God has for us and that Jesus opens for us all. This positive approach flows right through the synod report and I hope will increasingly shape our attitude towards each other.
He continued: This is especially true with regard to individuals who, for example, have decided to live together without marriage, or for Catholics in second marriages. These realities are part of their journey in life and while not in keeping with the pattern the Lord asks of us, their lives are often marked by real goodness. This is the basis for our care of them, for our approach to them, our invitation to them, to come closer to the Church and deepen their faith and attend carefully to its call. We say this confidently because it is within the call of our faith, the call of Jesus to each one of us, expressed in the truth of the Gospel and treasured in the Church, that our deepest happiness is to be found.
Cardinal Nichols also said the Church should never identify people by their sexual orientation and should treat gay Catholics with respect. He said: There has been much talk about how the synod reflected on the situation of people of a same-sex attraction. There was no suggestion that the teaching of the Church might somehow give approval to the notion of same-sex marriage or that its teaching on sexual morality is to change. However two things were very clear. The first is that we should never identify people by their sexual orientation. Every person is endowed with unique dignity, both as an individual and as a Christian. This dignity is always, always to be respected. Secondly, it is the teaching of the Church that they are not only to be respected but also always accepted, with compassion and with sensitivity (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2358). This teaching has to be translated into loving care, in our daily life in the Church, in our parishes, and indeed in society.
The cardinals pastoral letter can be read in full below:
My brothers and sisters in Jesus Christ,
Today I would like to tell you a little about the recent Extraordinary Synod of Bishops held in Rome on the theme of the pastoral challenges facing the family in the context of evangelisation. I was privileged to take part in this two week meeting. I found it a rich and moving experience.
You may have heard or read that this Synod has been about changing the teaching of the Church on marriage, family life or sexual morality. This is not true. It was about the pastoral care that we try to offer each other, the motherly love of the Church, especially when facing difficult moments and experiences in family life.
You may have heard that the Synod represented a defeat for Pope Francis or that he was disappointed at its outcome. This is not true. At the end of our meeting Pope Francis spoke at length about his joy and satisfaction at its work. He told us to look deeply into our hearts to see how God had touched us during the Synod, and to see how we may have been tempted away from the promptings of the Holy Spirit. The Synod, he insisted, has been a spiritual journey, not a debating chamber.
In fact, the very word synod means making a walk or a journey together. Thats what we did. Our journey was an exploration of all the problems facing the family today, from the effects of war, immigration, domestic violence, polygamy, inter-religious marriages, to cohabitation, the breakdown of marriage, divorce and the situation of those who have ended a valid marriage and entered another union, another marriage. The vastness of the picture and the suffering it represented was, at times, overwhelming.
We also looked at the great joy of family life and the importance of marriage at its heart. We listened to husbands and wives speaking of the difficulties they had overcome, the struggles they face and the deep joy they experience in their mature marriages and family lives. They were moving moments. A lovely description of the family was offered: the family as a sanctuary of holiness with emphasis always on the sharing of prayer at the heart of family life.
Pope Francis set the tone. He asked us to look reality in the eye; to speak openly from the heart; to listen humbly and respectfully to each other. This is what we did. There was no rancour, no contestation. There were disagreements, of course. But he told us to live through the experience with tranquility and trust. And we did. It was a marvellous experience of the Church as a family and of the Church, at this level, hard at work, trying to follow the promptings of the Holy Spirit and express them in carefully chosen words.
During the Synod we worked on various documents which were trying to catch the views and desires of all the participants. By the end I believe we got there. So the Synod ended with a Synod Report on which we voted, paragraph by paragraph. The votes indicated, quite simply, where agreement was more or less total and where it was not. This Report now forms the starting point for the next Synod on the family, to take place in a years time. The theme of this next Synod, in October 2015, takes us on from where we left off: The Vocation and Mission of the Family Today.
Central to the work of the Synod that has just ended was the desire to strengthen and reinvigorate the pastoral practice of the Church. A central principle for this pastoral care emerged clearly: that in trying to walk alongside people in difficult or exceptional situations, it is important to see clearly and with humility all the good aspects of their lives. That is what comes first. From this point, we learn to move together towards conversion and towards the goodness of life that God has for us and that Jesus opens for us all. This positive approach flows right through the Synod Report and I hope will increasingly shape our attitude towards each other.
This is especially true with regard to individuals who, for example, have decided to live together without marriage, or for Catholics in second marriages. These realities are part of their journey in life and while not in keeping with the pattern the Lord asks of us, their lives are often marked by real goodness. This is the basis for our care of them, for our approach to them, our invitation to them, to come closer to the Church and deepen their faith and attend carefully to its call. We say this confidently because it is within the call of our faith, the call of Jesus to each one of us, expressed in the truth of the Gospel and treasured in the Church, that our deepest happiness is to be found.
There has been much talk about how the Synod reflected on the situation of people of a same sex attraction. There was no suggestion that the teaching of the Church might somehow give approval to the notion of same-sex marriage or that its teaching on sexual morality is to change. However two things were very clear. The first is that we should never identify people by their sexual orientation. Every person is endowed with unique dignity, both as an individual and as a Christian. This dignity is always, always to be respected. Secondly, it is the teaching of the Church that they are not only to be respected but also always accepted, with compassion and with sensitivity (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2358). This teaching has to be translated into loving care, in our daily life in the Church, in our parishes, and indeed in society.
But Pope Francis went a little further. He spoke of the Church composed of sinners ..that has doors wide open to receive the needy, the penitent and not only the just. He spoke about the duty of pastors always to welcome into the Church those in difficult situations or in trouble. Then he corrected himself saying that we, as pastors, were not simply to welcome them but to go out and find them, just as the Good Shepherd did for those who had drifted away.
At the end of the Synod, in his closing address, Pope Francis said this: Dear brothers and sisters, now we still have one year to mature, with true spiritual discernment, the proposed ideas and find concrete solutions to so many difficulties and innumerable challenges that families must confront; to give answers to the many discouragements that surround and suffocate families May the Lord accompany us and guide us in this journey for the glory of His Name.
So that is what we must do. I hope, in a while, I will be able to put before you ways in which your prayer and reflection on these themes can be a contribution to this ongoing work of renewal in the life of the Church, in response to the unfailing love of Jesus, under the leadership of Pope Francis and always in union with him.
Ping
Sin? What’s that?
Jesus died on the cross just for the heck of it, you know!
Is the Bible still the handbook of this outfit?
Oh geesh. And to think I just made a comment today about a certain doctor and how he shouldn’t be shacking up. It’s also true of the one nurse. All the better to spread disease.
Closet Episcopalian Alert.
Wheeeeeee!
*facepalm*
I thought we had some bad Bishops, Archbishops and Cardinals here in the US. However, Western Europe has a near monopoly of Catholic and mainline Protestant clergy who don’t seem to know their ass from a hole in the ground. I am a sinner but at least I know what is sinful. So many of these clergy have decided to make up their own rules.
Won’t be long now before we are requested to see “the goodness” of scissors in the neck of partially born babies rather than dismembering in the womb. Signed, A disgruntled Catholic.
Pope Francis giving Nichols the red hat on February 22, 2014
unbelievable isn’t it...I suppose we need to do away with the sacrament of confession, since none of us are sinners, and we have real goodness in our immorality...
I’m getting the feeling that a good number of Bishops see devout Catholics as “the problem.”
Is he trying to get a new stream of contributions?
There are four outcomes of promiscuity outside real marriage:
live babies,
dead babies,
broken hearts
and hardened hearts.
Cohabiting couples, IMHO, always seem to contain someone whose heart is breaking because they would like to be officially married. And thus, by definition, the other person is hardening his or her heart against the sincere yearnings of someone they purport to love.
And, of course, there is plenty of evidence that children of cohabitors are far more at risk than children of married parents for abuse, instability, poverty.
Is there some goodness in cohabiting families? Could be. But there is also sin in this condition of life. And if the couple is truly Christian, they will know that, if they are truly honest with themselves.
Most people that shack up are doing it for welfare payments. They have no intention of getting married in or outside a church. Obama funds dry up for them. Better to shack up and lie to the government and keep the welfare payments coming in.
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