Distinguished canonist Ed Peters, at his indispensable blog In The Light Of The Law, has posted in the wake of what we must now call…
The Maltese Fiasco
The Bishops of Malta issued a dreadful set of guidelines for the implementation of the objectively ambiguous bits of Amoris laetitia, Ch. 8. These are the bits that the Four Cardinals (Brandmüller, Burke, Caffarra, Meisner) – and the rest of the rational, honest world – want clarified. The Four Cardinals submitted five formal questions or Dubia to the Holy Father and to the CDF. Since its release, Amoris laetitia has caused confusion, anxiety, division and conflicting practices throughout the Church. The diverging practices – if prolonged – have the potential of doing long-lasting damage to the unity of the Church and to souls.
The Maltese Bishops, with their Maltese Fiasco, have essentially said that anyone can go to Communion if they want to according to their conscience, but they don’t seem to think that their conscience must be in conformity with the Deposit of Faith perennial safeguarded by the Church. Moreover, this wasn’t the Fiasco for tiny Malta, alone. The Maltese Fiasco was published also in the Vatican’s increasingly disappointing newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano.
Prof. Peters does not have a combox open. The combox here is open, but moderation is ON.
Let’s have a look, with my patented emphases and comments:
The Maltese directive makes answering the dubia urgent
When highly placed Italian prelates declare that only a blind man cannot see [Card. Caffarra, one of the Four – my trans. HERE] that confusion is the ecclesiastical order of the day, and that such confusion has as its fundamental source Pope FrancisAmoris laetitia, matters have reached crisis level. Catholics who have not followed the intense three-year debate over (among other things) admitting to holy Communion divorced-and-remarried Catholics who are living as married persons should stop reading this post and go get caught up on current events. But for those sufficiently aware of the doctrinal and disciplinary issues at stake I offer some observations in the wake of this weekends developments. [This is not just about Communion for the divorced and remarried. It’s about the very possibility of intrinsically evil acts, about Christology, about the Eucharist, about Ecclesiology.]
The bishops of Malta, by declaring that divorced-and-remarried Catholics who are living as if they were married cannot be precluded from participating in the Eucharist have done grave violence to the unbroken and unanimous ecclesiastical tradition barring such Catholics from reception of holy Communion withoutand let me stress this, withoutdoing violence to the actual text of FrancisAmoris laetitia. That, folks, is the central problem. [“cannot be precluded”… That puts priests is a dreadful position! That endangers souls.]
Amoris does notagain, let me repeat, does not [Peters’ emphasis that time!]declare ministers of holy Communion bound to give the sacrament to divorced-and-remarried Catholics living as if married. Francis phrasing in several key passages of Amoris is (I have argued) malleable enough to allow bishops such as Chaput and Sample to reiterate the traditional Eucharistic discipline or, as the Buenos Aires bishops did, simply to pass ambiguous criteria down to local pastors to sort as best they can. But precisely because key passages of Amoris are also flexible enough to allow bishops to do as the Maltese have done and require Church ministers to distribute the Eucharist to Catholics who engage in public and permanent adultery (CCC 2384)not to mention conferring absolution on penitents who express no purpose of amendment in regard to such conductthis, without doing violence to the actual text of Amoris,[NB] one cannot but agree with Cdl. Caffarra and others that this hitherto unimaginable sacramental disunity is rooted directly in Amoris laetitia. [Did you get that? People without any intention of amending their lives are already demanding absolution from priests: “Pope Francis says…!”]
This ability of Amorissimultaneously to sustain orthodox, non-committal, and heterodox interpretations in matters of the gravest ecclesiastical import is exactly why the Four Cardinals dubia so urgently need answeringif not by Francis himself (and no one can force Francis hand) then at least by Francis right-hand man in matters of faith and morals, Cdl Muller of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, to whom the dubia was also (few seem to have noticed) addressed.
Of course, the stakes involved in the dubia jumped dramatically over the weekend, not simply by the Maltese bishops making plain what sort of sacramental abuses Amoris could tolerate within its terms, but by the decision, taken at who-knows-what level, to publish the Maltese document in LOssevatore Romano, that instrument for spreading the teachings of the successor of Peter. Obviously the pope is not the editor of LOR and it is possible that the decision to publish the Maltese document took Francis unawares. [True enough… the editor, Vian, might have gone ahead without checking upstairs. But does that seem plausible to you?] But insofar as LOR is unquestionably the popes newspaper people will be watching to see whether, directly or indirectly, there appears some distancing between Francis and the Maltese approach to sacraments for divorced-and-remarried Catholics.
I pray there does appear such papal distancing; [Do I hear and “Amen!”?] I pray that the Maltese bishops repent of their failure to exercise vigilance so that abuses do not creep into ecclesiastical discipline especially regarding the celebration of the sacraments (Canon 392 § 2); [“Amen!”?] and I pray that the teachings of Christ and his Church penetrate our mind and hearts more deeply. [I say again, “Amen!”?]
The Maltese Fiasco.
I fear that this is not the end, dear readers.
Please, God, let me be wrong.