Non-Devout Biden

0
38
non-devout-biden

You are not signed in as a Premium user; we rely on Premium users to support our news reporting.
Sign in or Sign up today!


CLICK TO WATCH THE VIDEO


 

TRANSCRIPT

Joe Biden is tearing apart pro-life and pro-Catholic policies enacted under President Trump. Biden’s public support of same-sex unions and abortion places him not only in grave sin but also automatic excommunication. Biden, however, rarely receives pushback from priests saying, “It’s not a position that I’ve found anywhere else, including from the Holy Father, who gives me Communion.”

Bishop Thomas Paprocki, prelate for the diocese of Springfield, Illinois, clarified the Biden confusion to Church Militant.

Paprocki: “Canon 915 says those who obstinately persist in manifest, grave sin should not be admitted to the sacraments. That’s not written in optional language. It’s pretty clear. It’s prescriptive language. They should not be admitted to Holy Communion.”

Several bishops and even cardinals like Wilton Gregory, however, have publicly stated they will not deny Biden communion.

Paprocki, “There may be a possibility in the next four years you’ll have some places where he can receive Communion and some places where he can’t. Unless, as I said, he’s just going to seek out those places and call them ahead of time and ask them, ‘Are you going to give me Communion?’ so that he can avoid confrontation.”

Paprocki proposes bishops began accepting lay dissent following Vatican II.

Paprocki: “Antinomianism is basically a mindset that doesn’t want to follow laws. It thinks laws are too constrictive and constrict our freedom. We should be allowed to do whatever we want to do, in a sense.”

Paprocki affirms that Biden’s policies place his own immortal soul in peril and jeopardize the practice of faith of others.

Paprocki:

It’s an existential threat a number of ways — it’s existential threat in the way we do some of the important things that we do. There are those who would like to relegate our free exercise of religion in the First Amendment to simply being freedom of worship — that you can believe what you want privately, in your own thoughts. You can go to church but then, outside of the church, you can’t do anything to express your faith.

Many Catholics feel they can act as they please and still be in good standing with God and His Church. But bishops like Paprocki remind the faithful some actions do endanger the soul.

— Campaign 32075 —

Have a news tip? Submit news to our tip line.




We rely on you to support our news reporting. Please donate today.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here