OK, I guess the core of my question is, a person who isn’t a committed trad attends your chapel for whatever reason (say it’s an sspx chapel and thus Rome says they can, or something) and the penitent cites a post Vatican ii source to you to justify their actions, would that be good enough assuming it was cited correctly for you to commune them or not
In the Novus Ordo, the entire system has broken down. Very few self-styled theologians these days would even come close to qualifying as such prior to Vatican II, and yet every other one feels entitled to publish his own ramblings and reflections far and wide. So there would have to be appeal to some formal Church teaching rather that to some Novus Ordo pamphlet or the ramblings of some Modernist priest. Appeal to Novus Ordo sources is probably the equivalent to appealing to, say, my posts here on CathInfo. Now, if there were appeal to some specific putative papal teaching, then that might be more difficult. If the person is convinced that Paul VI was a Pope and appealed to something in
Humanae Vitae and considered it to be Church teaching, I could see a person having a sincerely informed conscience ... although that too could be just rationalization. Thankfully, Wojtyla did keep most Catholic MORAL teaching intact ... although Bergoglio has begun to undermine it, especially with
Amoris Laetitia. I would not accept an appeal to
Amoris Laetitia as legitimate justification for cohabitation. Even
Amoris Laetitia gives most of the discretion to the priest, and as a priest I would deny such appeals. In fact, Bergoglio directly contradicts Wojtyla on this matter in
Amoris Laetitia, so an appeal to the latter entails a rejection of the former.
This crisis is so very sticky in many ways, since, even though the Conciliar establishment really entails the establishment of a religion (doctrine and worship) that is alien to the Traditional Catholic religion, most still consider themselves to be Catholic, profess the true faith, and are only in material error.