FAQ
–
Can one
passively attend non-Catholic funerals or weddings? No.
Non-Catholic
event
Brothers,
Has the Church ever infallibly defined that it is sinful to go to a
non-Catholic wedding or funeral? If it has not been infallibly defined, where
have Popes taught about this issue? Thanks so much and keep up the good
work!
-Anne
MHFM: It
wouldn’t be, strictly speaking, the subject of a dogmatic definition, but
rather disciplinary laws or instructions which are tied up with faith. In the years prior to Vatican II, the
idea of “passive attendance” developed whereby one could attend
non-Catholic services as long as one didn’t actively participate; in
other words, the liberal idea was taught that one could go to Protestant churches,
schismatic churches, and perhaps even Jewish synagogues, etc., for the funeral
or wedding of a relative or friend, as long as one didn’t “actively
participate.” This was
clearly a bad and compromisingly development. To refute it, we will cite Pope Pius
IX’s encyclical, Graves ac diuturnae.
Speaking of the “Old Catholic” heretics and schismatics, Pius IX says:
Pope Pius IX, Graves ac diuturnae
(# 4), March 23, 1875: “They
[the faithful] should totally shun their religious celebrations, their
buildings, and their chairs of pestilence which they have with impunity
established to transmit the sacred teachings. They should shun their writings and all
contact with them. They should not
have any dealings or meetings with usurping priests and apostates from the
faith who dare to exercise the duties of an ecclesiastical minister without
possessing a legitimate mission or any jurisdiction.”
(This is a new quote
which comes from our new book, The Truth
about What Really Happened to the Catholic Church after
Vatican II. We also talked
about it on our radio program.) Obviously if one must “totally
shun” their religious celebrations and their buildings, then one cannot
attend non-Catholic services, funerals or weddings for any reason, let alone to
pacify friends, relatives or co-workers and give non-Catholics the false
impression that non-Catholic lives can lead to salvation or that non-Catholic
weddings are pleasing to God.
Also, one definitely
should not go to the wedding reception or the funeral events after the
services. To do so is to give the
non-Catholics the same false impression: that their marriage is pleasing to God
or that people can be saved as non-Catholics. A true Catholic should completely
shun all events associated with non-Catholic funerals and weddings, including
the reception events afterward.
Pope Pius XI, Mortalium Animos #9, Jan.
6, 1928: “Everyone knows that John himself, the Apostle of love,
who seems to reveal in his Gospel the secrets of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and
who never ceased to impress on the memories of his followers the new
commandment ‘Love one another,’
altogether forbade any intercourse with those who professed a mutilated and
corrupt form of Christ’s teaching: ‘If any man come to you and bring not this doctrine, receive him not
into the house nor say to him: God speed you’ (II John
10).”
www.mostholyfamilymonastery.com
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