“This
is not normal” — so say Donald Trump’s critics as he prepares to assume
the presidency. But the American republic is only the second-oldest
institution facing a distinctively unusual situation at the moment.
Pride of place goes to the Roman Catholic Church, which with less
fanfare (perhaps because the papacy lacks a nuclear arsenal) has also
entered terra incognita.
Two weeks ago, four cardinals published a so-called dubia
— a set of questions, posed to Pope Francis, requesting that he clarify
his apostolic exhortation on the family, “Amoris Laetitia.” In
particular they asked him to clarify whether the church’s ban on
communion for divorced Catholics in new (and, in the church’s eyes,
adulterous) marriages remained in place, and whether the church’s
traditional opposition to situation ethics had been “developed” into
obsolescence.
The dubia began as a private letter, as is usual with such requests for doctrinal clarity. Francis offered no reply.
It became public just before last week’s consistory in Rome, when the
pope meets with the College of Cardinals and presents the newly-elevated
members with red hats. The pope continued to ignore it, but took the
unusual step of canceling a general meeting with the cardinals (not a few of whose members are quiet supporters of the questioners).
Francis canceled because the dubia had him “boiling with rage,”
it was alleged. This was not true, tweeted his close collaborator, the
Jesuit father Antonio Spadaro, though he had previously tweeted and then
deleted a shot of the wizard Gandalf, from “Lord of the Rings,”
growling his refusal to “bandy crooked words with a witless worm.”
Read the rest here.
Ugh. what a farce. Still, glad to see cardinals not putting fingers in their ears and instead demanding clarity. They should press the question!
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