Posted on 02/08/2015 10:33:21 AM PST by marshmallow
Some frank answers from Cardinal Burke during a French TV interview that will be broadcasted on Sunday, February 8th.
We present here some extracts of Cardinal Raymond Burke's comments given during an interview conducted by Lionel Feuerstein, Karine Comazzi, Patrice Brugeres, Nicolas Berthelos and Claire Aubinais for the 13H15 le dimanche episode of French Television channel, France2.
The complete interview will be broadcasted on Sunday, February 8 on FranceTV.info.
Cardinal Burke: I cannot accept that Communion can be given to a person in an irregular union because it is adultery. On the question of people of the same sex, this has nothing to do with marriage. This is an affliction suffered by some people whereby they are attracted against nature sexually to people of the same sex.
Question: If perchance the pope will persist in this direction, what will you do?
Cardinal Burke: I shall resist, I can do nothing else. There is no doubt that it is a difficult time; this is clear, this is clear.
(Excerpt) Read more at sspx.org ...
Bump to that!
Definitely!
Clergymen like Cardinal Burke are why I will keep to my Catholic faith...
It is essential to remember that Communion-for-adulterers and Communion-for-pro-aborts are both THE SAME ISSUE.
The bishops (the vast majority) who insist that Communion must be given to Joe Biden or Nancy Pelosi are the same ones who are agitating for Communion for adulterers.
Wuerl, Dolan, O’Malley, CHAPUT, Cupich, Gomez, DiNardo—all but about a dozen American bishops—all insist that Communion must be given to pro-aborts.
They DO NOT CARE that doing so is always a MORTAL SIN.
Cardinal Burke laid this issue out with excruciating thoroughness sever years ago:
Amen!
God bless and keep y’all, too.
Ditto!
This is significant. The Cardinal is very publicly drawing a line in the sand. I see no way to interpret this other than as a fairly direct warning to the Pope.
Catholic Ping!
I think you are not distinguishing between keeping your faith and "going to Church". Whether or not there are a few good clergyman left should not affect your faith, morals and beliefs. I would still believe as a Catholic even if I were the last Catholic on the earth, or if there were not one acceptable liturgy left.
(I pray also for the conversion or swift removal of all the confused (or worse) clergy who are trying to change the teachings of the Church.)
The question is: what does he mean by “resist”? A la Archbishop Lefebvre?
Amen! I Stand with Cardinal Burke.
Doing and Saying the Truth, the Right Thing is not Always Easy, But it is what A good Catholic is Called to Do!
I Stand with You Cardinal Burke! Giving the Eucharist to those who are not in Communion with the Church is a Great Sin for both the Giver and the Receiver. Adultery, Homosexuality, Abortion are all Mortal sins against God, thus those who support them are far from communion with the Church and need to be called out and isolated/protected against even greater sins.
Included my Priest and Deacon in on my facebook post for this article...
Thanks!
My 93 yo MIL states that God will “take” any Pope about to commit a heresy. She believes that is has happened in the past. She loves Pope Francis...rme. She believes everything said about him is just the liberal media projecting.
For more context and guidance, here is what Fr. Z wrote:
When would we have to resist the Pope? Wherein Fr. Z Rants.
“What do we do when legitimate authority gets something important wrong?
We respectfully resist legitimate authority.
Pope Francis does or doesnt do, A, B or C. He doesnt, for example, wear proper pontifical garb, as tradition and decorum require, in the proper moments. I think that is wrong. However, while this is important, I dont think it is important enough to resist him. His not putting on this or that vestment is not enough to merit resistance.
However, what if Pope Francis were to say that the divorced and civilly remarried without declaration of nullity could be admitted to Holy Communion, without any other clarifications?
I have in mind a well-known text by Jesuit St. Robert Bellarmine (+1612), Doctor of the Church, in his work De Romano Pontifice:
Just as it is lawful to resist the pope that attacks the body, it is also lawful to resist the one who attacks souls or who disturbs civil order, or, above all, who attempts to destroy the Church. I say that it is lawful to resist him by not doing what he orders and preventing his will from being executed.
Do I think that Pope Francis would do something so grave as to merit resistance? I dont think so. I pray not.
His Eminence Raymond Card. Burke has given an interview to a French TV station. He was asked a question along these lines. The site of the SSPX has a translated partial transcript. Excerpt on France TV Info:
Cardinal Burke: I cannot accept that Communion can be given to a person in an irregular union because it is adultery. On the question of people of the same sex, this has nothing to do with marriage. This is an affliction suffered by some people whereby they are attracted against nature sexually to people of the same sex.
Question: If perchance the pope will persist in this direction, what will you do?
Cardinal Burke: I shall resist, I can do nothing else. There is no doubt that it is a difficult time; this is clear, this is clear.
Question: Painful?
Cardinal Burke: Yes.
Question: Worrisome?
Cardinal Burke: Yes.
Question: In your opinion, can we say today that the Catholic Church as an institution is threatened?
Cardinal Burke: The Lord has assured us, as He has assured St. Peter in the Gospel, that the powers of evil will not prevail, non praevalebunt as we say in Latin, that the forces of evil will not have victory over the Church.
Question of the end: Is the Pope still your friend?
Cardinal Burke (with a smile): I would not want to make the pope an enemy for sure. That is fine for now. [from the context: That is enough for this interview].
It seems to me that Card. Burkes response was correct and appropriate. He didnt say that that is what is going on now, that he is resisting the Pope now. He was asked a hypothetical question that all Catholics should be able to answer.
This is not a new question and answers to the question are not new. In Acts 5:29 Peter says, We ought to obey God, rather than men. In Galatians 2:11 Paul says, But when Cephas [Peter] was come to Antioch, I withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed. Through the centuries great Fathers and Doctors of the Church along with many prominent theologians have pondered the hypothetical situation of a Pope who goes off the rails and what the faithful ought to do in response. They conclude that if even a Pope errs in some matter, they must be resisted for the sake of avoiding scandal, defending the Faith, and the salvation of souls.
So, in Card. Burkes response, there is nothing terribly new. He is merely stating what all Catholics ought to know and ought to do.
Should it happen, quod Deus avertat, that even the Holy Father try to change clear Catholic teaching founded in the clear words of Christ Himself or the clear teaching of the Magisterium rooted Scripture and Tradition, then the Catholic faithful would have to resist him in that matter. For example, were a Pope to attempt to ordain a woman, he must be resisted. Were a Pope to attempt to marry two men or approve of such a thing, he must be resisted.
However, I dont believe that we will ever see such a situation.
I am with Benedict XVI on this one. Before Joseph Ratzinger was elevated to the See of Peter he explained something about the working of the Holy Spirit in the election of a Pope. I, like Ratzinger, do not think that the Holy Spirit directly chooses the Pope, just as I do not think that the Holy Spirit dictated word for word the Scriptures which we hold to be divinely inspired. God leaves a lot of room for human insights and will. What the Holy Spirit does do, however, is ensure in His providence, that the Pope who is elected isnt going to be a total disaster for the Church. Similarly, just as I believe that the Holy Spirit guides and works within the mind and will of Popes in their governance of the Church and in teaching, I dont think the Holy Spirit tells them directly what to do. Popes remain men, subject to the problems all men have. Popes can err in judgment. They can weaken in will. They can become infirm, ill, and even become demented or otherwise off their rockers. In that situation, I firmly believe that the Holy Spirit, in that role of preserving the Church against the attacks of Hell and in guaranteeing the Rule of Faith and the Magisterium, would intervene. What might the Holy Spirit do to prevent disaster? Thats hard to say. However, I wouldnt rule out that the souls of hypothetical Pope Nutcase or Pope Loonytoon would suddenly be called forth from this earthly vale of tears to their eternal reward before Gods throne, were they about to gravely damage the Church in a fundamental way. The stakes would have to be pretty high, and only the Holy Spirit would grasp those stakes. Moreover, just as the human body and mind can take a lot of punishment and wounds, so too the Body of Christ the Church. A good father doesnt stop junior from running simply because he might fall and skin a knee or, even better, just because he has fallen and skinned a knee. So too, God the Holy Spirit.”
Let us continue daily prayer which includes praying for all clergy.
+1
I join in your prayer.
It *did* happen, apparently, in the case of Pope Sixtus V (who was about to promulgate an error-ridden—including errors in faith—version of the Bible as “the editio typica” [only standard usage] bible of the Catholic Church, before he died very suddenly and mysteriously, days before the promulgation was to take place).
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