Good timing, in light of today's feature article on Day, from the good Dr. Peters:
The causa of Servant of God Dorothy Day (1897-1980)
occasions many questions for ecclesiastical leadership, some of them
canonical. I can suggest three: Day’s abortion, her alleged status as a
Communist, and her apparent conflicts with New York’s Cardinal Spellman
over the title of her newspaper, The Catholic Worker.
Abortion. Day’s abortion is not a
canonical objection to her elevation, as the killing occurred nearly a
decade before her 1927 conversion to Catholicism (from Episcopalianism),
that is, before Day was bound by 1917 CIC 2350 with its penalty of
excommunication. Thus, Days’ repentance for the deed (which she clearly
expressed many times) and Confession of the sin (likely offered in her
first Confession, celebrated the day after her reception into the
Church) would have adequately addressed this tragedy as far as canon law
is concerned.
Communism. Day’s status as a Communist is unclear, but by late 1949 she was clearly describing herself as an “ex-Communist”.
Continue reading the post on the "In the Light of the Law" blog.