17 January 2017, The Tablet

Bishop urges priests to help divorced and remarrieds to return to sacraments


Priests reminded that Catholics who had suffered divorce may have 'lost' their first marriage but not their hope in Jesus.


Under certain circumstances and after long prayer and a profound examination of conscience, some divorced and civilly remarried Catholics may return to the sacraments, said the bishops of Malta.

With “an informed and enlightened conscience”, a separated or divorced person living in a new relationship who is able “to acknowledge and believe that he or she is at peace with God”, the bishops said, “cannot be precluded from participating in the sacraments of reconciliation and the Eucharist.”

The Maltese “Criteria for the Application of Chapter VIII of Amoris Laetitia”, Pope Francis' apostolic exhortation on the family, was published on 13 January after being sent to all of the country’s priests by Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and Bishop Mario Grech of Gozo.

The bishops urged their priests to recognise how "couples and families who find themselves in complex situations, especially those involving separated or divorced persons who have entered a new union" may have "'lost' their first marriage," but not their hope in Jesus.

"Some of these earnestly desire to live in harmony with God and with the church, so much so, that they are asking us what they can do in order to be able to celebrate the sacraments of reconciliation and the Eucharist," the bishops wrote.

Without an annulment, the bishops said, couples living in a new relationship should be encouraged to abstain from sexual relations since the Church does not consider their new union a marriage. Sometimes, however, the couple will find practising the virtue of “conjugal continence” impossible.

Scicluna and Grech urged priests to devote time to such couples, guiding them in a reflection on their first union, their contributions to its failure, the impact on their children and a host of other questions.

“This discernment acquires significant importance since, as the Pope teaches, in some cases this help [from the Church] can include the help of the Sacraments,” the Malta document said. “While exercising our ministry, we must be careful to avoid falling into extremes: into extreme rigour on the one hand and laxity on the other,” the bishops wrote to their priests.


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