Montreal Gazette

A SECOND CHANCE

Mercy for the remarried

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Pope Francis declared on Wednesday that divorced Catholics who remarry, as well as their children, deserve better treatment from the church, warning pastors against treating these couples as if they were excommunic­ated.

Catholic teaching considers divorced Catholics who remarry are living in sin and are not allowed to receive communion, leaving many of these people feeling shunned by their church.

Francis’s emphasis on mercy in church leadership has raised hope among many such Catholics that he might lift the communion ban. Catholics who divorce after a church marriage but don’t take up a new union, such as a second marriage, can receive communion.

In his latest remarks on divorce, Francis didn’t go that far. But he insisted on an attitude change in the church. “How do we take care of those who, following the irreversib­le failing of their family bond made a new union?” he said.

“People who started a new union after the defeat of their sacramenta­l marriage are not at all excommunic­ated, and they absolutely must not be treated that way,” Francis told pilgrims and tourists at his first general audience after a summer break. “They always belong to the church.” The church, he said, must be one of “open doors.”

The pope acknowledg­ed that church teaching considers “taking up a new union” after divorce wrong.

Francis wondered how the church can insist that the children of these failed marriage be raised by their parents “with an example of convinced and practised faith, if we keep them (the parents) far from the community life (of the church) as if they were excommunic­ated?”

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