VATICAN CITY (AP) —
Cardinals from around the world delved head-on Thursday into one of the
most vexing issues facing the church, how to find ways to provide better
pastoral care for divorced and remarried Catholics who are forbidden
from receiving Communion and other church sacraments.
German Cardinal
Walter Kasper, a pre-eminent theologian who has called for "openings
and changes" in dealing with these Catholics, delivered a two-hour
keynote speech to the two-day meeting, which is serving as preparation
for an October summit of bishops on family issues.
Church
teaching holds that unless the first marriage is annulled, or declared
null and void by a church tribunal, Catholics who remarry cannot receive
Communion or other sacraments because they are essentially living in
sin and committing adultery. Such annulments are often impossible to get
or can take years to process, a problem that has left generations of
Catholics feeling shunned from their church.
Pope
Francis has called for a more merciful approach to the problem while
remaining loyal to church doctrine. He called Thursday for pastoral care
for families that is "intelligent, courageous and full of love" but
also doesn't delve into case-by-case options to get around doctrine.
Kasper
frequently cited the Bible as a source of inspiration in a signal,
almost Protestant in nature, that the answer to the problem lay in
scripture. He told reporters that Francis had asked him to pose
questions to the 150 cardinals to begin a debate on the issue.
"We
cannot change the doctrine," Kasper said. "It's a question of applying
the doctrine to concrete situations." He cited a case he was involved
with regarding a remarried Catholic mother whose daughter was preparing
for her First Communion, but she herself couldn't receive Communion
because her first marriage was never annulled.
"The
mother wants to live the faith. She educated her daughter in the faith.
She went to confession because her marriage had failed. But is not a
remission of sin possible in this case?" he asked.
There
is an active debate over whether the ancient Christian church allowed
divorced and remarried Catholics to receive Communion after a period of
penitence, which Kasper cited.
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