Responsum of the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith to a dubium regarding the blessing
of the unions of persons of the same sex,
15.03.2021
Responsum of the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith to a dubium regarding the blessing
of the unions of persons of the same sex
TO THE QUESTION PROPOSED:
Does the Church have the power to give the
blessing to unions of persons of the same sex?
RESPONSE:
Negative.
Explanatory Note
In some ecclesial contexts, plans and proposals
for blessings of unions of persons of the same
sex are being advanced. Such projects are not
infrequently motivated by a sincere desire to
welcome and accompany homosexual persons, to
whom are proposed paths of growth in faith, “so
that those who manifest a homosexual orientation
can receive the assistance they need to
understand and fully carry out God’s will in
their lives”[1].
On such paths, listening to the word of God,
prayer, participation in ecclesial liturgical
actions and the exercise of charity can play an
important role in sustaining the commitment to
read one's own history and to adhere with
freedom and responsibility to one's baptismal
call, because “God loves every person and the
Church does the same”[2], rejecting all unjust
discrimination.
Among the liturgical actions of the Church, the
sacramentals have a singular importance: “These
are sacred signs that resemble the sacraments:
they signify effects, particularly of a
spiritual kind, which are obtained through the
Church’s intercession. By them men are disposed
to receive the chief effect of the sacraments,
and various occasions of life are
sanctified”[3]. The Catechism of the Catholic
Church specifies, then, that “sacramentals do
not confer the grace of the Holy Spirit in the
way that the sacraments do, but by the Church’s
prayer, they prepare us to receive grace and
dispose us to cooperate with it” (#1670).
Blessings belong to the category of the
sacramentals, whereby the Church “calls us to
praise God, encourages us to implore his
protection, and exhorts us to seek his mercy by
our holiness of life”[4]. In addition, they
“have been established as a kind of imitation of
the sacraments, blessings are signs above all of
spiritual effects that are achieved through the
Church’s intercession”[5].
Consequently, in order to conform with the
nature of sacramentals, when a blessing is
invoked on particular human relationships, in
addition to the right intention of those who
participate, it is necessary that what is
blessed be objectively and positively ordered to
receive and express grace, according to the
designs of God inscribed in creation, and fully
revealed by Christ the Lord. Therefore, only
those realities which are in themselves ordered
to serve those ends are congruent with the
essence of the blessing imparted by the Church.
For this reason, it is not licit to impart a
blessing on relationships, or partnerships, even
stable, that involve sexual activity outside of
marriage (i.e., outside the indissoluble union
of a man and a woman open in itself to the
transmission of life), as is the case of the
unions between persons of the same sex[6]. The
presence in such relationships of positive
elements, which are in themselves to be valued
and appreciated, cannot justify these
relationships and render them legitimate objects
of an ecclesial blessing, since the positive
elements exist within the context of a union not
ordered to the Creator’s plan.
Furthermore, since blessings on persons are in
relationship with the sacraments, the blessing
of homosexual unions cannot be considered licit.
This is because they would constitute a certain
imitation or analogue of the nuptial blessing[7]
invoked on the man and woman united in the
sacrament of Matrimony, while in fact “there are
absolutely no grounds for considering homosexual
unions to be in any way similar or even remotely
analogous to God’s plan for marriage and
family”[8].
The declaration of the unlawfulness of blessings
of unions between persons of the same sex is not
therefore, and is not intended to be, a form of
unjust discrimination, but rather a reminder of
the truth of the liturgical rite and of the very
nature of the sacramentals, as the Church
understands them.
The Christian community and its Pastors are
called to welcome with respect and sensitivity
persons with homosexual inclinations, and will
know how to find the most appropriate ways,
consistent with Church teaching, to proclaim to
them the Gospel in its fullness. At the same
time, they should recognize the genuine nearness
of the Church – which prays for them,
accompanies them and shares their journey of
Christian faith[9] – and receive the teachings
with sincere openness.
The answer to the proposed dubium does not
preclude the blessings given to individual
persons with homosexual inclinations[10], who
manifest the will to live in fidelity to the
revealed plans of God as proposed by Church
teaching. Rather, it declares illicit any form
of blessing that tends to acknowledge their
unions as such. In this case, in fact, the
blessing would manifest not the intention to
entrust such individual persons to the
protection and help of God, in the sense
mentioned above, but to approve and encourage a
choice and a way of life that cannot be
recognized as objectively ordered to the
revealed plans of God[11].
At the same time, the Church recalls that God
Himself never ceases to bless each of His
pilgrim children in this world, because for Him
“we are more important to God than all of the
sins that we can commit”[12]. But he does not
and cannot bless sin: he blesses sinful man, so
that he may recognize that he is part of his
plan of love and allow himself to be changed by
him. He in fact “takes us as we are, but never
leaves us as we are”[13].
For the above mentioned reasons, the Church does
not have, and cannot have, the power to bless
unions of persons of the same sex in the sense
intended above.
The Sovereign Pontiff Francis, at the Audience
granted to the undersigned Secretary of this
Congregation, was informed and gave his assent
to the publication of the above-mentioned
Responsum ad dubium, with the annexed
Explanatory Note.
Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, the 22nd of February
2021, Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter,
Apostle.
Luis F. Card. Ladaria, S.I.
Prefect
? Giacomo Morandi
Archbishop tit. of Cerveteri
Secretary
_______________________
[1] FRANCIS, Apostolic Exhortation Amoris
laetitia, 250.
[2] SYNOD OF BISHOPS, Final Document of the XV
Ordinary General Assembly, 150.
[3] SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL,
Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 60.
[4] RITUALE ROMANUM ex Decreto Sacrosancti
Oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II instauratum
auctoritate Ioannis Pauli PP.
Il promulgatum, De bendictionibus, Praenotanda
Generalia, n.9.
[5] Ibidem, n. 10.
[6] Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2357.
[7] In fact, the nuptial blessing refers back to
the creation account, in which God's blessing on
man and woman is related to their fruitful union
(cf. Gen 1:28) and their complementarity (cf.
Gen 2:18-24).
[8] FRANCIS, Apostolic Exhortation Amoris
laetitia, 251.
[9] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE
FAITH, Letter Homosexualitatis problema On the
Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons, 15.
[10] De benedictionibus in fact presents an
extended list of situations for which to invoke
the blessing of the Lord.
[11] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH,
Letter Homosexualitatis problema On the Pastoral
Care of Homosexual Persons, 7.
[12] FRANCIS, General Audience of December 2,
2020, Catechesis on Prayer, the blessing.
[13] Ibidem.
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