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Thursday, March 19, 2026

WILL POPE LEO’S WORLDWIDE MEETING WITH THE PRESIDENTS OF BISHOPS’ CONFERENCES ON THE TOPIC OF AMORIS LAETITIA ADDRESS IN PART ITS CONTROVERSIES AND THE CARDINALS DUBIA TO POPE FRANCIS, NEVER ANSWERED BY POPE FRANCIS? TIME WILL TELL!



Pope Leo is calling the heads of bishops conferences from around the world for a meeting in Ocotber on Amoris laetitia. Overall this Apostolic Exhortation issued by Pope Francis on the Solemnity of Saint Joseph, Husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary, March 19, 2016, is quite a beautiful exhortation except for Chapter 8 and an innocuous footnote that opened the path for those Catholics living in sin to receive Holy Communion on a case by case basis. 

This controversy created moral chaos and disunity in the Church as some cardinals, called the “Dubia Cardinals” asked Pope Francis for a moral clarification to which they received no clarification from the Pope. 

I believe it is a great thing that Pope Leo is calling the heads of bishops’ conferences to a meeting to discuss Amoris Laetitia in order, in the first place, to promote all the good that is in it but secondly to address, I would presume, the major controversy this document created and perhaps clarify it. 

I would think that clarifications would also have to deal with what is called the “internal forum” when couples who are living in an irregular union due to previous marriages, presumed valid, apply for an annulment and for reasons due to a lack of evidence or witnesses that are not available cannot receive an annulment. The annulment procedure is the “External Forum.” When it fails due to the reasons I mention, the internal forum helps couples to make a moral decision about their union using their conscience. In some cases these couples return to Holy Communion, but the decision is theirs and they are responsible for it. However, their receiving Holy Communion should not cause scandal in their fellow parishioners who don’t have the full story. Sometimes they are encouraged to receive in a parish they don’t belong. 

 MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE LEO XIV

ON THE OCCASION OF THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE POST-SYNODAL APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION AMORIS LAETITIA

[Multimedia]

_____________________________________

Dear brothers and sisters,

On 19 March 2016, Pope Francis offered the universal Church a luminous message of hope regarding conjugal love and family life, which was the fruit of three years of synodal discernment enriched by the Jubilee Year of Mercy: the Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia. On this tenth anniversary, we give thanks to the Lord for the stimulus that has encouraged reflection and pastoral conversion in the Church, and ask God for the courage to persevere on this path, always welcoming the Gospel anew in the joy of being able to proclaim it to all.

The Second Vatican Council taught that the family is “the basis of society,”[1] a gift from God and “a school for human enrichment.”[2] Through the sacrament of marriage, Christian spouses form a kind of “domestic church,”[3] whose role is essential for teaching and transmitting the faith. Since the Council, the two Apostolic Exhortations, Familiaris Consortio — issued by Saint John Paul II in 1981 — and Amoris Laetitia (AL), have both strengthened the Church’s doctrinal and pastoral commitment to the service of young people, married couples and families.

Recognizing that “anthropological and cultural changes” (AL 32) have become increasingly pronounced over the past thirty-five years, Pope Francis wanted to further engage the Church in the path of synodal discernment. His address on 17 October 2015, delivered during the XIV Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the family, called for “mutual listening” within the people of God: “all listening to the Holy Spirit, ‘the Spirit of truth’ (Jn 14:17), in order to know what he ‘says to the Churches’ (Rev 2:7).” He explained that it is not possible to “speak about the family without engaging families themselves, listening to their joys and their hopes, their sorrows and their anguish.”[4]

In gathering the fruits of synodal discernment, Amoris Laetitia offers valuable teachings that we must continue to examine today: the biblical hope of God’s loving and merciful presence, which allows us to live “love stories” even when navigating “family crises” (AL 8); the invitation to adopt “the gaze of Jesus” (AL 60) and tirelessly to encourage “the growth, strengthening and deepening of conjugal and family love” (AL 89); the call to appreciate that love in marriage “always gives life” (AL 165) and that it is ‘real’ precisely in its “limited and earthly” way (AL 113), as the mystery of the Incarnation teaches us. Pope Francis affirmed the need “for new pastoral methods” (AL 199) and for a better education of children (cf. AL chap. VII), while inviting the Church to accompany, discern and integrate fragility (cf. AL chap. VIII), overcoming a reductive conception of the norm, and to promote “the spirituality that unfolds in family life” (AL 313).

As I had the opportunity to say to the young people gathered at Tor Vergata during the Jubilee of Hope, fragility is “part of the marvel of creation… We are not made for a life where everything is taken for granted and static, but for an existence that is constantly renewed through gift of self in love.”[5]To serve the mission of proclaiming the Gospel of the family to younger generations, we must learn to evoke the beauty of the vocation to marriage precisely in the recognition of fragility, so as to reawaken “trust in God’s grace” (AL 36) and the Christian desire for holiness. We must also support families, especially those suffering from the many forms of poverty and violence present in contemporary society.

We thank the Lord for families who, despite difficulties and challenges, live “the spirituality of family love […] made up of thousands of small but real gestures” (AL 315). I also express my gratitude to the pastors, pastoral workers, Associations of the faithful and ecclesial Movements that are engaged in family ministry.

Our era is marked by rapid changes which make it necessary, even more than ten years ago, to give particular pastoral attention to families, to whom the Lord entrusts the task of participating in the Church’s mission of proclaiming and witnessing to the Gospel.[6] There are, in fact, places and circumstances in which the Church “can become the salt of the earth”[7] only through the lay faithful and, in particular, through families. For this reason, the Church’s commitment in this area must be renewed and deepened, so that those whom the Lord calls to marriage and family life can, in Christ, fully live out their conjugal love, and that young people may feel attracted, within the Church, to the beauty of the vocation to marriage.

In light of the changes that continue to impact families, I have decided to convene the presidents of the Episcopal Conferences from around the world in October 2026, in an effort to proceed, in mutual listening, to a synodal discernment on the steps to be taken in order to proclaim the Gospel to families today, in light of Amoris Laetitia and taking into account what is currently being done in the local Churches.

I entrust this journey to the intercession of Saint Joseph, guardian of the Holy Family of Nazareth.

From the Vatican, 19 March 2026, Solemnity of Saint Joseph

LEO PP. XIV

The following is an AI summary of the ensuing controversy over Amoris laetitia:

The controversy over 
*Amoris Laetitia* (2016) centers on Chapter 8, which addresses pastoral care for divorced and civilly remarried Catholics. Critics argue that allowing those in "irregular" unions potential access to Holy Communion contradicts traditional church teaching on marriage, adultery, and the sacraments, while supporters praise it as a merciful approach.
Key aspects of the controversy include:
  • Access to Communion: Footnote 351 in Chapter 8 suggests that for some, "the help of the sacraments" could include Eucharist, which opponents view as a break from established practice.
  • Role of Conscience/Discernment: The document emphasizes case-by-case discernment for couples, leading to debate over whether individual conscience can override objective moral laws against divorce and remarriage.
  • "Dubia" and Accusations: Four cardinals famously issued dubia (doubts) asking for clarification, while some theologians accused Pope Francis of promoting heresy, notes catholicvote.org.
  • Reaction to "Weakness": Chapter 8 argues the church must accompany those who cannot immediately meet the "objective" ideal of marriage, which critics say weakens moral absolutes.
  • Impact on Unity: The debate created a significant rift within the church, with some viewing it as a necessary shift towards mercy and others seeing it as causing confusion, notes catholicvote.org.
The controversy highlights a deep divide within the Catholic Church over how to balance traditional doctrine with pastoral practice and compassion for complex life situations.

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