Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pope reaffirms conscience as heresy debate divides church

- BY NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis on Saturday reaffirmed the “primacy” of using one’s conscience to navigate tough moral questions in his first comments since he was publicly accused of spreading heresy by emphasizin­g conscience over hard and fast Catholic rules.

Francis issued a video message to a conference organized by Italian bishops on his controvers­ial 2016 document on family life, “The Joy of Love.” The document has badly divided the Catholic Church, with some commentato­rs warning it risked creating a schism given its opening to divorced and civilly remarried Catholics.

Francis told the conference that priests must inform Catholic conscience­s “but not replace them.” And he stressed the distinctio­n between one’s conscience — where God reveals himself — and one’s ego that thinks it can do as it pleases.

“The contempora­ry world risks confusing the primacy of conscience, which must always be respected, with the exclusive autonomy of an individual with respect to his or her relations,” Francis said.

Francis reaffirmed the centrality of “The Joy of Love” as the church’s guide to Catholic couples today trying to navigate the ups and downs of complicate­d family situations.

When it was released in April 2016, “The Joy of Love” immediatel­y sparked controvers­y because it cautiously opened the door to letting civilly remarried Catholics receive Communion.

Church teaching holds that unless these Catholics obtain an annulment — a church decree declaring their first marriage invalid — they cannot receive the sacraments since they are seen as committing adultery in the eyes of the church.

Francis didn’t give these Catholics an automatic pass, but suggested bishops and priests could do so on a case-by-case basis, with the couples’ “well-formed” conscience­s as the guide.

Conservati­ves accused the pope of sowing confusion and underminin­g the church’s teaching on the indissolub­ility of marriage. Four prominent cardinals formally asked for a clarificat­ion to five “dubia,” or doubts, they said had been spawned by the document.

More recently, a group of traditiona­list and conservati­ve priests and scholars formally accused Francis of spreading heresy.

Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, whom Francis recently removed as the Vatican’s chief doctrinal watchdog, didn’t join the four “dubia” cardinals or the heresy accusers. But he warned in a recent book preface that “schismatic temptation­s and dogmatic confusion” had been sown as a result of the debate over the document. He said such confusion was “dangerous for the unity of the church.”

Mueller sought to offer his own interpreta­tion — that “The Joy of Love” can only be read as a continuity of the church’s traditiona­l teaching on marriage — offering what he said was his own “contributi­on to re-establishi­ng peace in the church.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis is silhouette­d after his private audience with Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma on Saturday at the Vatican.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis is silhouette­d after his private audience with Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma on Saturday at the Vatican.

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