09 January 2017, The Tablet

Vatican's doctrinal chief dismisses idea of 'fraternal correction' of Pope


Cardinal Muller said it harms the Church for cardinals to so publicly challenge the Pope


The Catholic Church is "very far" from a situation in which the Pope is in need of "fraternal correction" because he has not put the faith and Church teaching in danger, said Cardinal Gerhard Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

In an interview today (9 January) with the Italian news channel, TGCom24, Cardinal Muller said Pope Francis' document on the family, Amoris Laetitia, was "very clear" in its teaching.

In the document, the cardinal said, Francis asks priests "to discern the situation of these persons living in an irregular union - that is, not in accordance with the doctrine of the Church on marriage - and asks for help for these people to find a path for a new integration into the Church according to the condition of the Sacraments [and] the Christian message on matrimony."

In the papal document, he said, "I do not see any opposition: On one side we have the clear doctrine on matrimony, and on the other the obligation of the Church to care for these people in difficulty."

The cardinal was interviewed about a formal request to Pope Francis for clarification about Amoris Laetitia and particularly its call for the pastoral accompaniment of people who are divorced and civilly remarried or who are cohabiting. The request, called a "dubia", was written in September by US Cardinal Raymond Burke, patron of the Knights of Malta, and three other cardinals. They published the letter in November after Pope Francis did not respond.

In an interview following the letter's publication, Cardinal Burke said the Pope must respond to the "dubia" because the issue directly impacts the faith and the teaching of the Church. If there is no response, he said, a formal "correction of the Pope" would be in order.

Cardinal Muller told the Italian journalists that "a possible fraternal correction of the Pope seems very remote at this time because it does not concern a danger for the faith," which is the situation St Thomas Aquinas described for fraternal correction. "It harms the Church" for cardinals to so publicly challenge the Pope, he added.

In his letter on the family, Pope Francis affirmed Church teaching on the indissolubility of marriage, but he also urged pastors to provide spiritual guidance and assistance with discernment to Catholics who have married civilly without an annulment of their Church marriage. A process of discernment, he has said, might eventually lead to a determination that access to the Sacraments is possible.

The possibility reflects a change in Church teaching on the indissolubility of marriage and the sinfulness of sexual relations outside a valid marriage, argue Cardinals Burke; Walter Brandmuller, a German and former president of the Pontifical Commission for Historical Sciences; Carlo Caffarra, retired archbishop of Bologna, Italy; and Joachim Meisner, retired archbishop of Cologne, Germany.

In the TGCom24 interview, Cardinal Muller said, "everyone, especially cardinals of the Roman Church, have the right to write a letter to the Pope. However, I was astonished that this became public, almost forcing the Pope to say 'yes' or 'no'" to the cardinals' questions about what exactly the Pope meant in Amoris Laetitia.

"This, I don't like," Cardinal Muller said.


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