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Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
COMMUNION RECEPTION
LETTER TO THE BISHOPS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
CONCERNING THE RECEPTION OF HOLY COMMUNION
BY THE DIVORCED AND REMARRIED MEMBERS
OF THE FAITHFUL
Your Excellency
1. The International Year of the Family is a particularly important
occasion to discover anew the many signs of the Church's love and
concern for the family(1) and, at the same time, to present once more
the priceless riches of Christian marriage, which is the basis of the
family.
2. In this context the difficulties and sufferings of those faithful in
irregular marriage situations merit special attention(2). Pastors are
called to help them experience the charity of Christ and the maternal
closeness of the Church, receiving them with love, exhorting them to
trust in God's mercy and suggesting, with prudence and respect,
concrete ways of conversion and sharing in the life of the community of
the Church(3).
3. Aware however that authentic understanding and genuine mercy are
never separated from the truth(4), pastors have the duty to remind
these faithful of the Church's doctrine concerning the celebration of
the sacraments, in particular, the reception of the Holy Communion. In
recent years, in various regions, different pastoral solutions in this
area have been suggested according to which, to be sure, a general
admission of divorced and remarried to Eucharistic communion would not
be possible, but the divorced and remarried members of the faithfus
could approach Holy Communion in specific cases when they consider
themselves authorised according to a judgement of conscience to do so.
This would be the case, for example, when they had been abandoned
completely unjustly, although they sincerely tried to save the previous
marriage, or when they are convinced of the nullity of their previous
marriage, although unable to demonstrate it in the external forum or
when they have gone through a long period of reflexion and penance, or
also when for morally valid reasons they cannot satisfy the obligation
to separate.
In some places, it has also been proposed that in order objectively to
examine their actual situation, the divorced and remarried would have
to consult a prudent and expert priest. This priest, however, would
have to respect tueir eventual decision to approach Holy Communion,
without this implying an official authorisation.
In these and similar cases it would be a matter of a tolerant and
benevolent pastoral solution in order to do justice to the different
situations of the divorced and remarried.
4. Even if analogous pastoral solutions have been proposed by a few
Fathers of the Church and in some measure were practiced, nevertheless
these never attained the consensus of the Fathers and in no way came to
constitute the common doctrine of the Church nor to determine her
discipline. It falls to the universal Magisterium, in fidelity to
Sacred Scripture and Tradition, to teach and to interpret authentically
the depositum fidei.
With respect to the aforementioned new pastoral proposals, this
Congregation deems itself obliged therefore to recall the doctrine and
discipline of the Church in this matter. In fidelity to the words of
Jesus Christ(5), the Church affirms that a new union cannot be
recognised as valid if the preceding marriage was valid. If the
divorced are remarried civilly, they find themselves in a situation
that objectively contravenes God's law. Consequently, they cannot
receive Holy Communion as long as this situation persists(6).
This norm is not at all a punishment or a discrimination against the
divorced and remarried, but rather expresses an objective situation
that of itself renders impossible the reception of Holy Communion:
"They are unable to be admitted thereto from the fact that their state
and condition of life objectively contradict that union of love between
Christ and his Church which is signified and effected by the Eucharist.
Besides this, there is another special pastoral reason: if these people
were admitted to the Eucharist, the faithful would be led into error
and confusion regarding the Church's teaching about the indissolubility
of marriage"(7).
The faithful who persist in such a situation may receive Holy Communion
only after obtaining sacramental absolution, which may be given only
"to those who, repenting of having broken the sign of the Covenant and
of fidelity to Christ, are sincerely ready to undertake a way of life
that is no longer in contradiction to the indissolubility of marriage.
This means, in practice, that when for serious reasons, for example,
for the children's upbringing, a man and a woman cannot satisfy the
obligation to separate, they 'take on themselves the duty to live in
complete continence, that is, by abstinence from the acts proper to
married couples'"(8). In such a case they may receive Holy Communion as
long as they respect the obligation to avoid giving scandal.
5. The doctrine and discipline of the Church in this matter, are amply
presented in the post-conciliar period in the Apostolic Exhortation
Familiaris Consortio. The Exhortation, among other things, reminds
pastors that out of luve for the truth they are obliged to discern
carefully the different situations and exhorts them to encourage the
participation of the divorced and remarried in the various events in
the life of the Church. At the same time it confirms and indicates the
reasons for the constant and universal practice, "founded on Sacred
Scripture, of not admitting the divorced and remarried to Holy
Communion"(9). The structure of the Exhortation and the tenor of its
words give clearly to understand that this practice, which is presented
as binding, cannot be modified because of different situations.
6. Members of the faithful who live together as husband and wife with
persons other than their legitimate spouses may not receive Holy
Communion. Should they judge it possible to do so, pastors and
confessors, given the gravity of the matter and the spiritual good of
these persons(10) as well as the common good of the Church, have the
serious duty to admonish them that such a judgment of conscience openly
contradicts the Church's teaching(11). Pastors in their teaching must
also remind the faithful entrusted to their care of this doctrine.
This does not mean that the Church does not take to heart the situation
of these faithful, who moreover are not excluded from ecclesial
communion. She is concerned to accompany them pastorally and invite
them to share in the life of the Church in the measure that is
compatible with the dispositions of divine law, from which the Church
has no power to dispense(12). On the other hand, it is necessary to
instruct these faithful so that they do not think their participation
in the life of the Church is reduced exclusively to the question of the
reception of the Eucharist. The faithful are to be helped to deepen
their understanding of the value of sharing in the sacrifice of Christ
in the Mass, of spiritual commu nion(13), of prayer, of meditation on
the Word of God, and of works of charity and justice(14).
7. The mistaken conviction of a divorced and remarried person that he
may receive Holy Communion normally presupposes that personal
conscience is considered in the final analysis to be able, on the basis
of one's own convictions(15), to come to a decision about the existence
or absence of a previous marriage and the value of the new union.
However, such a position is inadmissable(16). Marriage, in fact,
because it is both the image of the spousal relationship between Christ
and his Church as well as the fundamental core and an important factor
in the life of civil society, is essentially a public reality.
8. It is certainly true that a judgment about one's own dispositions
for the reception of Holy Communion must be made by a properly formed
moral conscience. But it is equally true that the consent that is the
foundation of marriage is not simply a private decision since it
creates a specifically ecclesial and social situation for the spouses,
both individually and as a couple. Thus the judgment of conscience of
one's own marital situation does not regard only the immediate
relationship between man and God, as if one could prescind from the
Church's mediation, that also includes canonical laws binding in
conscience. Not to recognise this essential aspect would mean in fact
to deny that marriage is a reality of the Church, that is to say, a
sacrament.
9. In inviting pastors to distinguish carefully the various situations
of the divorced and remarried, the Exhortation Familiaris Consortio
recalls the case of those who are subjectively certain in conscience
that their previous marriage, irreparably broken, had never been
valid(17). It must be discerned with certainty by means of the external
forum established by the Church whether there is objectively such a
nullity of marriage. The discipline of the Church, while it confirms
the exclusive competence of ecclesiastical tribunals with respect to
the examination of the validity of the marriage of Catholics, also
offers new ways to demonstrate the nullity of a previous marriage, in
order to exclude as far as possible every divergence between the truth
verifiable in the judicial process and the objective truth known by a
correct conscience(18).
Adherence to the Church's judgment and observance of the existing
discipline concerning the obligation of canonical form necessary for
the validity of the marriage of Catholics are what truly contribute to
the spiritual welfare of the faithful concerned. The Church is in fact
the Body of Christ and to live in ecclesial communion is to live in the
Body of Christ and to nourish oneself with the Body of Christ. With the
reception of the sacrament of the Eucharist, communion with Christ the
Head can never be separated from communion with his members, that is,
with his Church. For this reason, the sacrament of our union with
Christ is also the sacrament of the unity of the Church. Receiving
Eucharistic Communion contrary to ecclesial communion is therefore in
itself a contradiction. Sacramental communion with Christ includes and
presupposes the observance, even if at times difficult, of the order of
ecclesial communion, and it cannot be right and fruitful if a member of
the faithful, wishing to approach Christ directly, does not respect
this order.
10. In keeping with what has been said above, the desire expressed by
the Synod of Bishops, adopted by the Holy Father John Paul II as his
own and put into practice with dedication and with praiseworthy
initiatives by bishops, priests, religious and lay faithful is yet to
be fully realized, namely, with solicitous charity to do everything
that can be done to strengthen in the love of Christ and the Church
those faithful in irregular marriage situations. Only thus will it be
possible for them fully to receive the message of Christian marriage
and endure in faith the distress of their situation. In pastoral action
one must do everything possible to ensure that this is understood not
to be a matter of discrimination but only of absolute fidelity to the
will of Christ who has restored and entrusted to us anew the
indissolubility of marriage as a gift of the Creator. It will be
necessary for pastors and the community of the faithful to suffer and
to love in solidarity with the persons concerned so that they may
recognise in their burden the sweet yoke and the light burden of
Jesus(19). Their burden is not sweet and light in the sense of being
small or insignificant, but becomes light because the Lord - and with
him the whole Church - shares it. It is the task of pastoral action,
which has to be carried out with total dedication, to offer this help,
founded in truth and in love together.
United with you in dedication to the collegial task of making the truth
of Jesus Christ shine in the life and activity of the Church, I remain
Yours devotedly in the Lord
Joseph Card. Ratzinger
Prefect
+ Alberto Bovone
Titular Archbishop of Caesarea in Numidia
Secretary
During an audience granted to the Cardinal Prefect, the Supreme
Pontiff John Paul II gave his approval to this letter, drawn up in the
ordinary session of this Congregation, and ordered its publication.
Given at Rome, from the offices of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, 14 September 1994, Feast of the Exaltation of
the Holy Cross.
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