Posted on 09/10/2014 6:16:15 PM PDT by ebb tide
Antwerp Bishop Johan Bonny has published a long letter on the upcoming Synod of Bishops urging the assembly to have the courage to bring the Churchs moral teachings more in line with the lived experience of the laity.
"The Church must step away from its defensive, antithetical stance and seek anew the path of dialogue" on moral issues, he wrote in the 22-page letter posted on his dioceses website in five languages.
More
Read the letter in full
"It must dare once again to start with 'life' and then move on to 'teaching'. The Church has nothing to lose in this regard, Bonny said, noting many lay people ignored or rejected some doctrinal or moral decisions made by the Vatican.
There is a gap between the moral teachings of the Church and the moral insights of the faithful, the letter said, which was partly due to the failure to develop the collegiality between bishops and the Vatican decided virtually unanimously at the Second Vatican Council.
Bishops found themselves caught between their desire to minister to the faithful in the new pastoral manner and loyalty to popes who stressed the primacy of the magesterium, he said.
The Council had also stressed the importance of personal conscience, but since the 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae banning artificial birth control, it had been sidelined, the letter said. The synod should restore conscience to its rightful place in the teaching of the Church.
The 5-19 October meeting should not be a Platonic synod focused on safe doctrinal debate and bipolar thinking in terms of regular and irregular situations. Instead, it should try to accompany people like unwed mothers, same-sex unions, cohabiting couples or couples who resort to IVF after failure to conceive.
Bonny also said the Church must ask itself if the ban on communion for the divorced and remarried properly reflects what Jesus intended with the Eucharist. We have to bear in mind that a large company of publicans and sinners were at table with Jesus, he wrote.
The letter was praised in Belgium as a courageous act, especially because of the theological and pastoral argumentation backing up its arguments. "A lot of people think like Bonny. Only it's hard to be the first to say such things publicly," said Rik Torfs, rector of the Catholic university KU Leuven. Its important that someone from the official Church clearly states his opinion about the way the Church deals with certain matters, said Josian Caproens, head of the Interdiocesan Pastoral Council.
Ping
The only good thing I see coming out of this synod is that all the bishops who are really closet Protestants are coming out of the closet so that the next pope will know exactly who they are and can clean house... If he has the guts to do it.
Another wolf in a bishop costume.
If he’s not a Protestant/Modernist/apostate himself.
No, the Church needs to keep its moral teachings in line with that of Jesus Christ.
Thanks for posting this. These (Hell is paved with the skulls of bad) Bishops are always calling for dialogue. So, the City of God should dialogue with the City of Man? The Vicar of Christ should dialogue with demons? God should dialogue with the Devil? What happened to the one-way monologue, of Truth to the world?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.