Posted on 12/17/2018 10:14:58 AM PST by ebb tide
I do not know Fr. Don LaCuesta or the Hullibarger family nor do I know what LaCuesta said in his homily at last weeks funeral for 18-year-old Maison Hullibarger (who had killed himself some days before) or how LaCuesta said what he said (reports here and here). Such caveats, however, in light of my treatments of other issues related to the canon law on Church funerals, might qualify me to make some objective comments on the controversy erupting in the wake of LaCuestas funeral homily wherein, it seems, Maisons life was not celebrated and doubts about his entry into heaven were expressed. Three points need to inform discussion of this controversy.
First, until just a generation ago and for many centuries before, controversy over homilies delivered at the Catholic funerals of suicides was unheard of for the simple reason that Church law forbade all funerals for suicides, so, no funeral homilies on suicide could have been preached. See 1917 CIC 1240 § 1, n. 3. With the appearance of the Johanno-Pauline Code, however, the prohibition of funerals for suicides was dropped (see 1983 CIC 1184). True, a qualified restriction on funerals for those who die in manifest sin remains (and suicide is unquestionably a grievous sin, see CCC 2280-2281), but the nearly-universal pastoral practice is to accord funerals to suicides in light of legitimate questions about, among other things, the likely-diminished psychological freedom enjoyed by someone who suddenly kills himself (CCC 2282) and in deference to the doctrinally-sound hope that, in ways unknown to us, God may save such persons (CCC 2283).
Second, nothing in liturgical or canon law suggests that Catholic funerals are intended to serve as celebrations of ones life. Instead the primary focus of funeral rites is on the paschal mystery of Christ. Rite of Funerals, Intro., n. 1. Per the USCCB, At the funeral liturgy, the Church gathers with the family and friends of the deceased to give praise and thanks to God for Christs victory over sin and death, to commend the deceased to Gods tender mercy and compassion, and to seek strength in the proclamation of the Paschal Mystery. The funeral liturgy, therefore, is an act of worship, and not merely an expression of grief. Some brief words of remembrance of the deceased are permitted (usually just before the end of the funeral Mass) but these are to be brief and nothing like a eulogy or celebration of a life now sadly gone.
Third, while every Catholic should die in hope of salvation, none (absent private revelation) dies with the certainty of salvation, a fact that, in turn, obliges the family, friends, and the wider Christian community of the deceased to pray for the departedno matter how they diedand to avoid attitudes that discourage prayers for the dead such as happens with the modern mindset that, basically, everybodys good and we all go to heaven. This sort of thinking, a species of presumption (CCC 2092), has become common among clergy and laity and has impacted attitudes toward death, judgment, and the meaning of funerals. For example, a cleric of the Archdiocese of Chicago holds that For a priest to even hint that the person [who kills himself] might not be in heaven is grossly wrong. This priests claim, of course, is precisely what is grossly wrong, but it is consistent with his condemnation of others who view suicide as a mortal sin, supposedly because That [assessment] has been categorically denied by church leadership. Again, this clerics claim is rubbish but years of such sloppy talk has seduced many into a superficially comfortable, but doctrinally indefensible and pastorally dangerous, way of thinking about deathwhether by suicide or otherwise.
At this point, though, without specific knowledge of what LaCuesta actually said, my citing to canons on homilies in general (including those norms that call for the doctrine of the Church to be preached therein, such as Canons 769-769) and to rubrics that call for funeral homilies to be brief and phrased so as to avoid offending those who mourn, per the Rite), would be of little avail. The Archdiocese of Detroit has restricted LaCuestas faculties for preaching at funerals (I imagine, per Canon 764) and one trusts that, in taking such action against LaCuesta, they had access to more specific information about his homily than was available in main stream media reports. If LaCuesta said the right thing the right way, he should be defended; if he said the right thing the wrong way, he should be corrected; if he said the wrong thing the wrong way, he should be chastised.
Meanwhile, those seizing upon this young mans devastating choice, his familys unimaginable grief, and the as-yet uncertain remarks of a homilist, to misrepresent Christian teaching against self-murder, to presume the salvation of anyone, and to minimize the need to assist the dead with our prayers, should cease their harmful talk.
Ping
*... among other things, the likely-diminished psychological freedom enjoyed by someone who suddenly kills himself (CCC 2282) and in deference to the doctrinally-sound hope that, in ways unknown to us, God may save such persons (CCC 2283).*
I must agree. This concept IS doctrinally, indisputably, valid. To judge others by their life/death is intrinsically wrong for us mere mortals. We have only One Judge...
Comments?
We are reaping the past decades of terrible catechesis and feel good theology.
Telling the truth is so radical at this juncture in the church that if Christ returned right now, he would have difficulty with the interpretation some of our hierarchy have given His words.
Fortunately, for every Arius, there is an Athanasius, and for every sodomitical rebel, there is a Peter Damian.
But all of it depends on prayer, reparation and penance.
irishjuggler wrote:
The full text for Fr’s sermon was posted this morning. See:
https://canonlawblog.wordpress.com/2018/12/17/god-bless-fr-lacuesta/
Thanx 4 posting link.
Rock on, Irish Juggler...
None of this would be a problem if the Church went back to the sensible solution of not having funeral masses for those who commit suicide.
Has the Church ever celebrated Judas’ suicide?
Could it be because the Church better understands that the driving factor to suicide is the illness known as depression?
Correction: understands better.
I found it to be a beautiful, uplifting homily. The “bishop” disciplining this priest is a barbarian non-believer.
Could it be because the Church better understands that the driving factor to suicide is the illness known as depression?
Update from Dr Peter’s found here:
https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2018/12/17/god-bless-fr-lacuesta/
Thank-you for the update and link.
Just a comment I asked a priest about in the Archdiocese.
Apparently the room was full of high school kids, I think the fact that the priest didn’t want to “celebrate his decision” in front a parade teenagers who also may have some members contemplating suicide should be considered.
The parents were following some elaborate plans that their suicide Son had in mind.
Funerals shouldn’t be a spectacle, especially when the one doing the suicide had given instructions that it should be.
Can’t quote the source though, so this is anecdotal at best.
We can and must judge ACTIONS. Suicide is gravely wrong, the stuff of mortal sin. We do well to warn others against it.
We cannot and must not attempt to judge souls, for good or ill. However virtuous or sinful we may think another person to be, judging the state of his soul is for God alone. We simply do not know. Thus we pray for our brethren, and even our enemies, both living and dead.
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