Saturday, July 21, 2018

Leila Miller / Catholic Answers attempt to baptize No-Fault

Image result for leila miller


I’m sure Leila Miller is a wonderful person and her new book is an
excellent and much needed aid in the war on divorce, but her fundamental
error in her latest Catholic Answers divorce piece perpetuates the
revolution she seeks to counter. She clearly communicates that the
decision to divorce may be judged by private conscience when in fact the
Church teaches that only public authority can permit a civil divorce action since marriage pertains to the public good.

Intentions alone cannot determine legitimacy when engaging in a
canonically public act that directly affects another. Civil divorce uses state power to physically counteract irrevocable contract rights to the conjugal life. If one spouse is to use this power against the other licitly, it can only be done by permission of the local bishop if he foresees “a civil sentence is not contrary to divine law” (c. 1692) - AKA concluding “after having weighed the special circumstances” that civil divorce is the “only possible way” (CCC 2383). To act without permission is “grave sin.” (3rd Council of Baltimore n.126). Leila knows permission is required to divorce, but neglected this key fact in her article. She and others seem more comfortable with a “divorce malo / bishop bueno” stance. Church politics keeps almost all from admitting the truth about bishop’s complete abandonment of separation justice in the United States. Until this lawlessness is remedied, the vicious divorce revolution will continue unabated no matter how many books are written.

Her citing separation canons 1151-55 is good, but without their proper
explanation and because of their institutional denial, they amount to nothing more than an American loophole/workaround. This need for due process and justice flows from the essence of marriage. “Spouses have the [grave] duty and right to preserve conjugal living unless a legitimate cause excuses them.” (c. 1151). A prolonged/permanent separation can’t be legitimate unless by decree of local ordinary.

It is an axiom of law that no one may be the judge of their own case, but
Leila omits this fact when she says: “A dear friend of mine saw no other
possible option but to file for civil divorce from her husband of many
years..”I wonder if the husband, kids & relatives shared that conclusion?
Canon 1696 says “Cases concerning the separation of spouses also pertain to the public good; therefore the promoter of justice must always
take part in them..” IOW, the “divorce court” is supposed to take place on
Church property! Prolonged separation w/o due process is fundamentally unjust which is why No-Fault is always gravely immoral and fault must be established by the public authority beforehand.

Leila is saying if YOU unilaterally judge that your spouse & kids are to be subject to godless permanent state action, then that’s tolerable. This is tantamount to saying the defendant is not allowed any involvement in their own proceedings.

“Here’s an example of how this distinction plays out in real life:”
Because I did not intend to own your car, but merely judged that I had a
really good reason to drive it to Miami and back 2X w/o your consent, then that’s OK. Sorry about the interior..

During an abortion, the baby does not care what the intentions of the
mother are.

This is why Dr. Donald P. Asci, Professor of Theology, Franciscan
University while reflecting the words of John Paul II says “The immorality of divorce derives precisely from that choice and cannot be eliminated by any good intentions or circumstances accompanying the choice.” IOW, *No-Fault* is always evil, every time. Divorce w/ bishop’s permission is
simply state enforcement of a Church separation decree. This is the only type of “divorce” that can be tolerated. Pope Leo XIII said in Arcanum #30 - if you let divorce get out of the cage, it's all over. 2018 Catholic America gives divorce free range. Private conscience is not the arbiter.

If you think in your case that divorce is “the only possible way,” and you
have right intentions, the baptized still need one more thing - bishop’s
permission. Anything less simply perpetuates the status quo of “who are we to judge?”

This means no public justice, no law, no real contract and the innocent
suffer at the hands of good "intentions."

Leila asks “How can something be a grave offense against the natural law
(in other words, an intrinsic evil) and yet sometimes be morally licit? It
seems a contradiction.” That’s because it is. Civil divorce on own authority is ALWAYS intrinsic evil. One can only suspend contract rights with particular permission from the bishop (after canonical due process).

Leila answers “The answer lies in our language limitation. We are using
(and confusing) the same word, “divorce,” for two different concepts, two different intents, and two different courses of action.” No, only one course of action. Divorce = using state power to enforce a permanent separation of a family, every time, no matter what anyone’s intentions are.
The meaning of divorce on this level can be defined only by articulating the immediate effect intellectually grasped and willed by the person who chooses to divorce. (Asci)


Leila, the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Get permission.

- John Farrell









Tuesday, May 22, 2018

10 Pre-Cana questions that are never asked



1. When spouses do not agree on whether to use NFP (periodic continence), who breaks the tie?

A. Agenesic NFP is immoral because it places the secondary ends of marriage as primary. (Casti 59). If there is serious reason to avoid pregnancy, then complete abstinence is the solution. "There is no possible circumstance in which husband and wife cannot, strengthened by the grace of God, fulfill faithfully their duties and preserve in wedlock their chastity unspotted." Casti Connubii 61

2. If there is a just reason to separate/divorce (with the bond remaining), what process makes the separation legitimate?


A. a separation decree from the local ordinary. The 3rd Council of Baltimore decree #126 states that:
"We command all (i.e. baptized) married persons that they must not go to the civil courts to obtain a separation from bed and board without previously receiving permission from the ecclesiastical authority. Should anyone attempt this, let him know that he incurs the guilt of grave sin and that he is to be punished as the bishop shall decide." Still binding today.

3. Does an illegitimate separator remain a Catholic in good standing?

A. Yes, however publicly joining or separating apart from Church is manifest grave sin.

4. Does the Church govern the common conjugal life, or  does the state govern it?


A. Divine law + canon law. Canon 1059

5. Do you agree with St. Thomas Aquinas' definition of marital debt? http://www.newadvent.org/summa/5064.htm


A. "husband and wife are mutually bound to the payment of the marriage debt." Grave matter.

6.. Under what conditions does the wife not have to be submissive to her husband?


A. Submissive in all conditions, except when those are "inconsistent with Christian piety." - Trent  "if not in harmony with right reason or with the dignity due to wife" - Casti Connubii

7. Under what conditions does the husband not have to love his wife?

A. He must love always, in headship and truth.

8. Is marriage based on Justice?


A. Yes. "Do not defraud" 1 Corinthians 7:5


9. What did Pope Leo XIII mean when he wrote "marriage is the contract itself" in Arcanum 23?


A. The marriage contract is the exchange of a right. “Marital consent is an act of the will by which each party gives and accepts a perpetual and exclusive right over the body for acts which are of themselves suitable for the generation of children." Canon 1081.2 of 1917 code. The "good of the spouses" is not essential to consent (or annulment!). The essence of marriage is immutable.


10. Will we qualify for an annulment later?


A. Nope. Because the bonum coniugum (good of the spouses) is integral & perfective, but not essential to marriage, the only grounds for a defective consent annulment are 1. Ignorance of where babies come from 2. Mental derangement (insanity) 3. Physical impotence. PS - "good of the spouses" cannot be objectively consummated which is one reason it cannot be an object of consent. One cannot legally consent to what cannot be defined.