Il
Card. Burke ribadisce, in una recente intervista al quotidiano tedesco, Die
Welt (il testo, in lingua tedesca, è leggibile qui e qui), il suo pensiero sul Sinodo e non risparmia – a giusto titolo – le sue
critiche al suo “collega”, il card. Marx, che all’inizio dell’anno si era
espresso in maniera decisamente eterodossa e di cui anche noi avevamo dato
conto (v. qui).
Cardinal Burke criticizes
German cardinal’s ‘ridiculous’ claim that German Church is not a ‘subsidiary of
Rome’
ROME, April 24, 2015
(LifeSiteNews.com) – In an interview today with the prominent German newspaper,
Die Welt, Cardinal Raymond Burke criticized Cardinal Reinhard Marx, who
suggested German Catholic dioceses are not a “subsidiary of Rome” on the
question of Communion for ‘remarried’ couples.
“I have not read Marx'
declaration verbatim, but of course formulations like 'subsidiary of Rome' are
ridiculous,” said Burke. “We are all oriented toward Peter, that is the unity
of the Catholic Church. 'Subsidiaries’ – that is the language of business, that
does not belong to the Church. That is where obedience counts.”
When asked about his
resistance at the Extraordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family in Rome against
effectively allowing a secular divorce for the Catholic Church, Burke
responded: “Because we are not allowed to. We are bound to the teaching of the
Church and her disciples. But, some synod fathers – and prominently among them
Cardinal Walter Kasper – wanted to change exactly that.”
The interviewer claimed
that Pope Francis himself supported the change, saying Burke “had resisted
several times the path of opening toward the remarried and the homosexuals that
has been supported by Pope Francis.” He asked Cardinal Burke what he would do
if the pope “decides now against the indissolubility of marriage.”
Cardinal Burke replied:
“I would have to go to the pope and tell him my conscientious reasons that I
wish to follow the truth and in the same time wish to be an obedient servant of
the Church. Obedience is such a high virtue.”
“I would have to speak
in this case with the Holy Father, how I can stay loyal to the truth and in the
same time not call off my obedience. But that is the reason why I speak so
clearly because the Holy Father shall know that not all think like Cardinal
Kasper.”
Cardinal Burke invited
and called his audience to stand firm in the Faith, and to defend “the natural
law, upon which the Church leans, because there is also now much confusion.”
Burke referred here to the gender debate, and he said: “We are either man or
woman, masculine or feminine, and true happiness stems from accepting and
developing our sexual nature.” He continued: “The homosexual tendency is a form
of suffering that afflicts certain people. […] But I do not believe that
homosexuality is genetically caused. It depends much upon the environment. In
my parish, I had homosexual couples who were very unhappy about their sexual
life.”
Cardinal Burke stressed
that one wants to strengthen virtues like loyalty and self sacrifice, “but this
may not lead to a support of such sexual acts” as in homosexual relationships.
He said: “A marital bond is only possible between people of different sexes.
From the point of view of the Church, there can not exist a marriage between
homosexuals.”
The cardinal also reminds the secular world at the end of his interview with Die Welt of the important role of the Catholic Church for the whole world: “Because she [the Church] keeps alive the consciousness of the dignity of man, because she respects life, the creation, because she holds sacred marriage and the family, because she knows repentance and forgiveness. A Lutheran recently said to me: 'We on our part have abolished the indissolubility of marriage, but I have always hoped that you Catholics will uphold it.”
The cardinal also reminds the secular world at the end of his interview with Die Welt of the important role of the Catholic Church for the whole world: “Because she [the Church] keeps alive the consciousness of the dignity of man, because she respects life, the creation, because she holds sacred marriage and the family, because she knows repentance and forgiveness. A Lutheran recently said to me: 'We on our part have abolished the indissolubility of marriage, but I have always hoped that you Catholics will uphold it.”
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