A Question of Rights
Divorce, Remarriage, & a Church of Compassion
By James E. Biechler
"I don't see how ARCC can
consider itself a Catholic organization. The Catholic Church has always
been completely opposed to divorce and remarriage, yet your organization's
charter claims that a Catholic has the right not only to get out of a marriage
that has broken down but to enter a new marriage. Do you really think the
church could ever agree to such a radical position?"
--T. A. D., Franklin, WI
Your question does not give
us a clue as to whether you think it might be more in keeping with Jesus's
gospel message of the love and forgiveness of God were the church to modify
its position and embrace those whose marriages have failed. "Divorce is
a very great evil, Nora," says Bogart playing the hard-hitting editor in
"Deadline, U.S.A." No thinking person regards divorce as anything but a
serious misfortune, both for the spouses and for their children. When ARCC
adopted Article 30 of its charter it was not thinking that divorce was
anything but a personal and social disaster. This, New Testament scholars
agree, was the position of Jesus and it has always been the position of
the church.
You are not quite correct,
however, in your implication that the church has always taken an absolutist
position on the indissolubility of marriage. The church dissolves hundreds
of valid marriages every year. This is not the same as the thousands of
declarations of nullity which Catholic tribunals around the world issue
every year. Many people do not distinguish between the declaration of a
church court that two people were, in fact, never validly married, despite
external appearances, because one or both were incapable of marital consent
or responsibilities, and the dissolution of a true marriage by papal or
episcopal authority. It is erroneous to assert that true and valid marriage
has always been regarded as indissoluble by the church. Over the centuries
the church has made into juridical statute what the New Testament saw as
a pastoral and prophetic witness to the Jewish and Roman world. The church
has made a New Testament ideal into an unbreakable law. No imagination
is required to grasp the magnitude of the suffering this has caused pious
God-fearing people over the years.
The problem we face, and
this is the problem which ARCC's charter addresses, is the need to uphold
the ideal of "two in one flesh" which is the image of the unity of Christ
and his church, and the reality and complexity of human decision and fallibility.
No institution in the world has stood for a marriage ideal as lofty as
that of the Catholic Church. Your question suggests that you, too, hold
to that ideal and are proud to associate yourself with its institutional
preservation. But what are we to do when, despite our best efforts our
Christian friends and even our own children find themselves in destructive
relationships? Are they to be henceforth condemned to social isolation,
to lives without intimacy, to deprivation of the Eucharist? Is the schizophrenic
alienation of their children to be made even worse by the church's rejection
of their parents? Is it not true to our experience, that remarriage after
divorce has often resulted in loving and supportive relationships for spouses
and children? Can the church not be an instrument of God's peace in healing
the hearts broken by marital anguish? Reread the story of Jesus and the
Samaritan woman in John's gospel, chapter 4. Although Jesus does not show
any approval of the woman's multiple marriages, neither does he suggest
that she is outside the pale of salvation. His pastoral solicitude embraces
her and her community.
Given the church's long concern
for the institution of marriage it should be no great problem for it to
open its arms to those who, despite their best intentions and earnest hopes,
find themselves in irretrievably broken marriages. A pastoral declaration
to this effect, after a period of marital assistance or counseling, would
assure the community that everything possible has been done to salvage
the relationship. The call to peace and freedom, which is the gospel of
Jesus Christ, would permit the reconstruction of lives broken by failed
relationships. After all, the contemporary experience of serious and commited
Catholics in this matter is precisely their acknowledgement that mistakes
were made, these are regretted, they are forgiven by friends, family and
God, and broken lives must be reconstructed. For most people, living the
very best life possible means living in loving intimacy with another person,
it means a community of life and mutual relationship. "It is not good for
human beings to be alone," says Genesis.
A modification of church
policy on the matter of divorce and remarriage would undoubtedly require
careful explanation by the church's pastors. Far from being a cause of
scandal or disbelief, a pastoral rather than a juridical approach to broken
marriages should be a source of joy and relief to millions of people, many
actually alienated from the church by a policy they cannot understand,
a policy which seems to many to be excessively rigid and legalistic. A
change in the church's official approach would simply be a return to an
earlier policy.
We all agree that the ideal
is one marriage "till death do us part." It is a beautiful ideal, it is
realized with gratitude by millions of Christians, it needs constant theological
support by the church's teachers and pastors. But when the ideal, though
ardently struggled for, is not attained, should we not open our hearts
and our arms with the lavish forgiveness and acceptance which Jesus taught
us to show toward one another? If we did this without being judgmental
and without an air of superiority perhaps we would find Christians always
more ready to forgive one another and there would be fewer broken marriages
and divorces in the world.
Dr. Biechler, an emeritus
professor of religion, is a member of ARCC's board of directors. He also
holds a licentiate in canon law and is a longtime member of the Canon Law
Society of America.
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