Posted on 09/26/2014 2:40:12 PM PDT by NYer
Italian writers have finally gotten to the section by Archbp. Cyril Vasil, SJ, in The Book, that is, the “Five Cardinals” book in defense of the Catholic teaching on marriage.
Available now in the UK: HERE
Sandro Magister has an entry today in which he focuses on Archbp. Vasil’s essay “Separation, Divorce, Dissolution of the Bond, and Remarriage: Theological and Practical Approaches of the Orthodox Churches. There is an extensive excerpt too.
Magister’s introductory comments:
The example of the Orthodox Churches that allow second marriages is an argument enlisted by those who want the Catholic Church to set aside the ban on communion for the divorced and remarried, with Cardinal Walter Kasper in the lead.
Pope Francis gave them a big nudge with the sibylline parenthesis that he opened and closed in a conversation with journalists on the return flight from Rio de Janeiro on July 28, 2013:
But also a parenthesis the Orthodox have a different practice. They follow the theology of what they call oikonomia, and they give a second chance, they allow it. But I believe that this problem and here I close the parenthesis must be studied within the context of the pastoral care of marriage.
The commonly held idea is that second and even third marriages are celebrated sacramentally in the Orthodox Churches, and communion is given to the divorced and remarried. And this in continuity with the merciful practice of the Church in the early centuries.
But the reality is very far from these fantasies. Second marriages entered into the practice of the Eastern Churches in a later era, toward the end of the first millennium. They entered under the invasive influence of civil legislation, of which the Church was the executrix.
In any case, second and third marriages were never considered a sacrament. They were allowed under various more or less expansive forms in this or that area of Orthodoxy. The dissolution of first marriages was almost always for these Churches the simple transcription of a sentence of divorce issued by the civil authority.
The Orthodox Churches themselves do not help to specify this practice of theirs in a theologically and juridically clear form. The proof of this is the serious difficulty in which pastors in the Catholic Church find themselves in coming to grips with mixed marriages in which the Orthodox party comes from a marriage that has been dissolved on both the civil and religious level.
This knowledge gap is filled in, in the text reproduced further below, by an authority in this field, Archbishop Cyril Vasil (in the photo), a 49-year-old Slovak Jesuit, secretary of the Vatican congregation for the Oriental Churches and a former dean of the faculty of canon law at the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome.
The text is an extract from the extensive and well-documented article that Vasil dedicated to the theme in this multi-author book to be released in early October in the United States and Italy.[...]
The book, conceived of as a contribution to the upcoming synod on the family, has ignited lively reactions on account of the presence among its authors of cardinals Gerhard L. Müller, prefect of the congregation for the doctrine of the faith, Walter Brandmüller, Raymond L. Burke, Velasio De Paolis, and Carlo Caffarra, all of them severely critical of the ideas of their colleague Kasper. Who has counterattacked by asserting that Francis had agreed with him on his proposals and therefore the target of the polemics is not me, but the pope. [Which claim is nothing short of ridiculous.]
But while the five cardinals had already presented their positions in previous statements – presented again in the book with their explicit cooperation, unlike the inventions [like those of Vecchi] that the media chimes in with Kaspers remonstrations – Vasils article on divorce and second marriages in the Eastern Churches is an absolute novelty, on a matter among the least known and most misunderstood, and yet of extraordinary significance and relevance.
This essay by Archbp. Vasil could have the effect of a nuke on any discussion of oikonomia during the upcoming Synod. It’s effects will probably be felt after the Synod as well.
I also direct your attention back to something on oikonomia which I posted HERE.
Ping!
Oink in noma? a pig that should be in Oklahoma?
Or just miss Dis Lexiy hitting me?
I seriously doubt the post by the “orthodox monk” is legitimate.
Any priest who marries after ordination is immediately and automatically defrocked.
Let alone one who has divorced and remarried.
Which priest? Which bishop?
It would be widely known and talked about everywhere.
Yet the post talks as if it is standard practice.
The opposite is true, it is unheard of.
I misread it as oinkonomia.
But that was after reading about the couple in Britain who were thrown off a bus for singing the peppa pig song to their daughter.
/ groan.
It’s Friday, the weird end of the week..
More of the myth that Orthodox marriages after divorce are any different that Roman Catholic marriages after “annulment.”
If they have to lie to prove their point, they’ve already lost the argument.
Precisely, but the truth is not their friend.
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