Posted on 03/12/2012 6:20:51 PM PDT by Mandingo Conservative
The Maryland priest who denied communion to a lesbian at her mothers funeral is being stripped of his priestly faculties and placed on administrative leave, according to a letter from the Archdiocese signed by auxiliary Bishop Barry Knestout...
According to a source close to the incident who spoke with LifeSiteNews, Johnsons lesbian lover physically blocked Fr. Guarnizo from speaking further with Johnson when she abruptly left the sacristy following this introduction. When Johnson presented herself for Communion, the priest refused to give it to her, although she ended up receiving from an extraordinary minister.
It was later revealed that Johnson is also a Buddhist.
(Excerpt) Read more at lifesitenews.com ...
Such wise advice!!!!
Well I’m not a Christian but it seems like he did the right thing. Either you follow all of the teachings of the Bible or none, but not some. I didn’t read the whole story but it seems like she was trying to precipitate a confrontation.
1 Corinthians 11:27-29 Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord.
But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup.
For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not discerning the Lord’s body.
The real Catholics are SSPX, other traditionalists in the Church, a small proportion of practicing “New Catholics”. These are true to the faith.
The priest did right, obviously. His befuddled accusers will have to answer to a higher authority.
If a sinning Catholic can’t have communion, neither can someone who is both a sinner by Catholic doctrine NOR a Buddhist.
Bump for your writing style and content. It is superb.
Omigod, I thought they would back this guy up. What has become of the Church?
I’m wondering about the earliest witness report, where it was said that Father G suffers migraine headaches and that he had an onset of one following the private meeting, causing him to be unable to continue with communion and to call for another priest to escort the procession to the cemetery and take over the buriel service.
If that should be true, and if two weeks of problems with others should be true then I am concerned for his health quite apart from the story in the headlines.
There is more to this story and discretion is a trademark of Church investigations. Perhaps there are two different issues at play- health may be one. Regardless, any investigation suspends until a question is resolved, but does not exactly “strip” one of priestly duties until resolved.
It has already been proven that Father G did the right thing on communion, UNLESS, in that Diocese the bishop forbade it of his priests therein.
David Wilkerson’s prophesies are coming to pass in regards to the falling away of Protestants and Catholic Churches.
Is his bishop a flit??
That's not a hard prophesy to make considering Paul makes the same prophecy in multiple place in his epistles.
If this happened to our pastor he would be celebrating Mass with 100 Knights of Columbus and 500 parishioners blocking the way from anyone who tried to keep him from it.
If this happened to our pastor he would be celebrating Mass with 100 Knights of Columbus and 500 parishioners blocking the way from anyone who tried to keep him from it.
Certainly the entire congregation should withhold any further financial contributions until the Priest is restored.
(1)The refusal to give communion to a lesbian (which from the information I have read on various threads) was sound, and the correct thing to do.
(2)If I read the article correctly, I believe they said he started at the parish last March. Dollars to donuts, the folks working in the parish, parish council,etc have a liberal element and that is what is driving this agenda.
My old parish had a similar situation (minus the lesbian) and they tormented our parish priest with letters to the bishop for three years. When our priest finally was made convener to a new parish, I decided to take up roots and follow him to his new parish. It is a 45 minute trip one way, but well worth it.
If the Priest doesn’t receive an apology and a complete restoration of his duties, I hope he’ll consider “swimming the Bosphorus!”
Here is another good source of rational, informed analysis on this issue:
Three recent questions in the wake of the lesbian/Communion controvery
March 13, 2012
I get paid to explain canon law in the calm context of the graduate classroom, where things like definitions, nuance, history, and values can be reflected upon by well-informed peers (or at least by students who do the readings!) But I never let my students forget that canon law is fundamentally a legal system, and that legal systems deal with real people, and that real people can make a sorry mess of their lives and the lives of others in pretty short order. So, if the recent lesbian/Communion controversy affords us an unlooked-for opportunity, perhaps even a necessity, to explain some of the working of canon law, so be it. Im game.
Here, I consider the three common questions about this case. Sometimes, yes, the questions are rhetorical and seem designed more to taunt than to inquire, but to the degree they nevertheless help surface issues that others might find instructive, lets look at them.
Isnt it just splitting hairs to describe Fr. Guarnizo as being on administrative leave when everyone knows he is suspended?
We are talking canon law, right? Well, canon law is an ancient legal system that, over many centuries, has developed numerous terms of art. Canon law is not secret, but neither is it simple. Those who want to discuss canon law intelligently must understand and observe canonical definitions, or risk talking nonsense. In any case, it is not incumbent on canon lawyers to run around explaining their terms to everyone under the sun who wants to express an opinion about this canonical issue or that. Instead, it is incumbent on those many others to find out (or at least to take some guidance on) how canon law uses certain words before pronouncing judgment.
The word suspension denotes a canonical penalty imposed only upon guilt for a canonical crime (c. 1333). In the not-too-distant past, some ecclesiastical officials, including bishops, misused the word suspension to describe what may be more accurately described as administrative leave (more about that in a sec), but when they did so, canonists, publicly and privately, corrected that misuse of terms and, for some time now, the mistaken use of suspension seems to have faded out among ecclesiastical leadership. Deo gratias. Only to reappear now among some bloggers. Sigh.
But: if you are talking canon law, and you describe a cleric as suspended, you have described him as being guilty of a canonical crime. Therefore, those describing Fr. Guarnizo as suspended are canonically defaming him. Whether they know it or not.
Now, about administrative leave. Canon law, a living legal system serving a living Church, is trying to catch up to some recent developments in, among other things, the theology of holy Orders, which developments have brought about, among things, the eclipse of the Pio-Benedictine category of simplex priest, leaving a hole in the law, or at least in its terminology, to describe a priest who is not under a penalty (c.o.), nor irregular for orders (c. 1044), nor restricted pursuant to a penal process (c. 1722). This category of priest undoubtedly exists (because faculties for preaching, confessions, sacramental acts, and so on, can undoubtedly be restricted or taken away without any suggestion of guilt, etc.), but the 1983 Code does not give us a neat term to denote such priests. Until such time, if any, as the Legislator chooses to give us such a term, the phrase administrative leave seems to cover that gap fairly well, or at least, it does so among people who know what they are talking about.
In short, the phrase administrative leave protects the reputation of the cleric in question; the term suspension marks him as a canonical criminal.
So, are priests supposed to help lesbian Buddhists commit sacrilege against Our Lord by giving them holy Communion?
Deep breath, Ed .Okay. Lets break this down.
Lesbian. First, the Church regards the homosexual/lesbian condition as disordered in somewhat the same way that one may regard alcoholism as a disorder. According to our tradition, one may not deny holy Communion to an individual suffering from a disorder, so, those Catholics calling for the banning of a lesbian from Communion are violating our tradition (not to mention our canon law). That said, however, it is possible to deprive one of holy Communion who engages in conduct that amounts to canonically verified obstinate perseverance in manifest grave sin (c. 915), as canon law uses each of those terms. I have said from the beginning of this mess, verifiable conduct, not asserted status, is the only question relevant here. Now, if someone wants to make the case that all five (per c. 18) of those banning conditions were canonically satisfied a few minutes before Mass one day, they are free to try. I think they would fail in the attempt, but thats just my opinion. In any case, at least such persons would be talking about what is relevant here, the law on holy Communion, and not just using rhetorical questions as cudgels.
Buddhists. Buddhists have no right to holy Communion; baptized persons, in accord with law, have the right to holy Communion (c. 912, etc.). This woman was baptized Catholic. The presumption is, therefore, that she had a right to Communion, and the burden is on those who would deny her same to prove that she is no longer permitted by law to receive holy Communion, here, on the grounds that she is a Buddhist. That is a heavy burden of proof, of course, and one not likely sustainable in a short conversation before Mass one day, and one made even more difficult in the wake of a Notification handed down in April 2006 regarding the formal act of defection and its relation to, among other things, the canonical crime of apostasy (cc. 751, 1364), and in turn its impact on the application of wider canon law to such individuals. In short, canonists know that a Catholics claim to be a Buddhist, and a Catholics being canonically recognized as being a Buddhist, are very distinct things. Those who are not canonists may be excused not being aware of the difference, but not for ignoring it once it is pointed out to them.
Given all the hoopla this lady has generated about herself, wouldnt it be fair to say that if she presents herself for Communion again, she should be denied?
Yes. With one caveat common among the doctors who have discussed these situations for several centuriesin contrast to most bloggers who have been aware of these questions for maybe several days.
Notoriety (of the type needed for denial of the Eucharist) in one place is not necessarily notoriety in another. Like other human communities, the cyber-community exaggerates how widely known are matters of interest to it. I would not want to see a priest unaware of this womans profile, etc., and giving her Communion, being torn to shreds by Catholic hotheads for desecrating the Eucharist. This is one more reason why Canon 915 (and a half-dozen other relevant norms) are so narrowly drawn: the primary responsibility for approaching holy Communion worthily rests with the individual (c. 916).
This, mind, from someone who has labored for years, and who will continue to do so, to get Canon 915 enforced properly. + + +
I don’t know if you are aware of this woman—Charlotte I.—but she outlines the actual psychology behind “education” in America and who funded it. Everything she says is backed up by many other authors-—like John Taylor Gatto and BK Eakman, etc. etc. etc.
It is worth your time if you have never listened to this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzAX_jgCf_w&feature=related
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