Posted on 04/19/2015 12:30:23 PM PDT by NYer
In the course of the Christological meditations collected in Behold the Pierced One (1984), Joseph Ratzinger (the future Pope Benedict XVI) made what might be called a modest proposal with regard to twice-married Catholics and the Eucharist.
His suggestion has rarely been mentioned during the heated debate over divorced and remarried Catholics receiving Communion. But it may offer a bridge of sorts those Catholics who cant receive; it might also deepen Eucharistic devotion among all Catholics, which is not exactly robust these days.
In his inimitable and scholarly way, Benedict discusses the fathomless gift that is the Eucharist, and then asks: If this is how things are, what are we to say of the many Christians who believe and hope in the Lord, who yearn for the gift of his body but cannot receive the sacrament?
According to Benedict, there was a tendency in the early days of Catholicism to think of those banned from the sacrament as simply being outside the communion of the Church. But in the Middle Ages, figures like William of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris, began to pay more attention to the distinction between external and interior communion.
William affirmed that the Church never wishes to deprive anyone of interior communion. When she wields the sword of excommunication, it is solely for the purpose of applying medicine to this spiritual communion. William adds that it sometimes happens that an excommunicated person who was barred from the sacrament progresses further along the path of patience and humility than if he were able to receive communion.
Following William, Saint Bonaventure upheld the necessity of Church law in cases like excommunication, while adding, I assert that no one can be, and no one may be, excluded from the communion of love as long as he lives on earth. Excommunication is not such an exclusion.
Obviously, sacramental communion with the Church is a central feature of the Catholic faith. Still, as Benedict points out, a person excluded from the Eucharist still exists within the ecclesial bond of love. Christs healing love works outside judicial boundaries. His action is, of course, not limited to the sacraments. And in the case of the ex-communicate, we can understand how, paradoxically, the impossibility of sacramental communion, experienced in a sense of remoteness from God. . .can lead to spiritual progress.
Benedict then mentions the surprising (to me and probably to almost all Catholics as well) case of St. Augustine: Here I am struck by a consideration of a more general and pastoral kind. When Augustine sensed his death approaching, he excommunicated himself and undertook public penance. In his last days he manifested his solidarity with public sinners who seek for pardon and grace through the renunciation of communion.
In citing this extraordinary episode, Benedict is not advocating a Jansenist approach to the Eucharist, whereby people in a state of grace abstain from communion simply because it is too good for them. That would be to misunderstand the sacrament.
But he does permit this line of thought to raise two questions: Do we not often take reception of the Eucharist too lightly? And further: Might not this kind of spiritual fasting be of service, or even necessary, to deepen and renew our relationship to the Body of Christ?
To put it more bluntly: for many Catholics today, isnt the Holy Mass like a birthday party where everybody deserves a piece of birthday cake? How does this attitude contribute to anyones spiritual progress? And how does it help divorced and remarried Catholics (whose first marriages have not been declared null), who think they are being denied something which should be theirs as a matter of course?
Benedict points out that in the ancient Church there was a kind of remedy for this attitude: a universal fast from the Eucharist on Good Friday: This renunciation of communion on one of the most sacred days of the Churchs year was a particularly profound way of sharing in the Lords Passion. . . .Today too, I think, fasting from the Eucharist [on a day of penance like Good Friday], really taken seriously and entered into, could be most meaningful.
A day of Eucharistic fasting in preparation for Easter could be a pastoral opening toward those who cannot receive. The problem of divorced and remarried Catholics, Benedict argues, would be less acute against the background of voluntary spiritual fasting, which would visibly express the fact that we all need that healing of love which the Lord performed in the ultimate loneliness of the Cross.
Since the Magisterium encourages frequent reception of the Eucharist, a proposal like this would have to be considered very carefully. But instead trying to help twice-married Catholics by demoting the mystery of the Eucharist, might it not be better to retrieve an old discipline that deepens it?
Ping!
**Since the Magisterium encourages frequent reception of the Eucharist, a proposal like this would have to be considered very carefully. But instead trying to help twice-married Catholics by demoting the mystery of the Eucharist, might it not be better to retrieve an old discipline that deepens it?**
A Spiritual Communion can be very deep. Try it.
twice-married Catholics
Why only twice? Proposing a change in doctrine to accommodate divorce and remarriage bring up the question: How many? Is there a limit to the number of times a man may marry and divorce, remarry and divorce, and so forth?
What I think will happen one day, a cloistered religious order will be formed for those, so that they can offer each other support chastely, yet abstain from sex withing their illicit marriage.
My understanding is that this would remove both obstacles to communion:
- there is no sex outside of the continuing original marriage(s);
- there is no public scandal as the cloistered life is a public statement of chastity.
At the same time, the valid desire of the two people who became loving partners, often without an intention to commit a sin,— the desire to continue caring for each other, especially in the old age, would be met.
If it's not allowed for "twice" married then it is not allowed for any other multiple.
In my humble opinion the problem isn’t the divorce. The problem is the marriage itself or committing sin during the marriage.
Too often people fail to listen to God when choosing their partner.
Recalling an earlier conversation we had on this topic ... ping!
I know what this author, George Sim Johnston, means when he says we tend to treat Communion as a piece of birthday cake that everyone has a right to. I experienced this within myself, once, when I had violated the (already trivial) fast by popping a peanut M&M in my mouth on the way to church.
I thought "Oh shoot, now I can't receive Communion." And then I thought, "What will people think if they notice I didn't go up? Will they wonder whether I'm in mortal sin?" In other words, an attack of spiritual vanity.
So I stayed behind, and --- because Communion at a weekday Mass in our little Day Chapel is like a Chinese fire drill --- I did feel peculiarly isolated even though I was praying for Spiritual Communion.
Our Eucharistic tendency of "come one, come all" has tended to degrade reception of Our Lord to the level of a public utility.
I'm going to think carefully about Ratzinger and Augustine.
Good point.
Peanut M&Ms. Mmmm... [wanders off in a hazy sugar daze]
Wait a minute... What were you doing with peanut M&Ms on the way to church?? Mom never let ME have candy before church!!
Did you bring enough to share with EVERYONE??
sitetest
I thought perhaps your acquaintance who has been troubled about not being able to receive the eucharist might derive some value from this article.
Thank you. You are very thoughtful.
I had one little peanut M&M in my pocket. Just flipped it in my mouth without thinking.
I won’t detail my pathetic sins.
.....And as the present Pope would say, “who am I to judge?”
BTTT!
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