On April 7, 2018, a historic conference was held in Rome to address the debacle of error and confusion that has plagued the Church since the election of Pope Francis. The hot-button issue of course has been the Vatican’s sanctioning of adultery by sometimes allowing divorced and civilly “remarried” Catholics to receive Holy Communion, something that Francis himself promulgated as “authentic magisterium” on June 5, 2017 through the Vatican's Acta Apostolicae Sedis.
In refutation of this and other related errors that have been advanced in the name of the Church's Magisterium, the conference issued a Final Declaration in the name of its participants, wherein the authors restated, in six points, the Church’s immutable teaching on the indissolubility of marriage, adultery, absolute moral norms, subjective judgment of “conscience,” the need for contrition to receive valid sacramental absolution, and the fact that “remarried” divorcees living in adultery may not receive Holy Communion.