You keep changing the subject.
Not changing the subject, just getting to the heart of the matter.
Two Christians disagree. Which is right? Who has the final say?
If the ‘authority’ says it’s up to the individual, then so be it.
If the ‘authority’ says it’s not and give a definitive answer, then so be it.
What is the ‘truth’ of the matter? Who says it is?
My comments were in reference to issues like Abortion and Euthanasia, and now you change over to the “truth of scripture,” in which neither of these issues appear (at least explicitly).
Abortion and Euthenasia are only examples of topics that Christians disagree on.
The issue is who the church is and what authority it has to teach on such topics.
That’s what I was saying “as good as we can” in reference to. I cannot point to a passage of scripture and say, “Jesus condemned abortion right here.” He doesn’t.
Exactly!
So we should listen to the authority Jesus left on Earth to know what the truth is regarding Abortion.
How do your feelings change if, for example, the topic is the Eucharist and the Real Presence or any other topic (birth control).
What I can do is explain to someone, based on principles found in the Bible, why I find abortion to be wrong (it’s the taking of an innocent life, etc.), but the rest is up to that person’s conscience, and is between him/her and God.
I agree that this it is a wholesome and right thing to do to try and correct something that this person wrongly believes. If that doesn’t work then scripture says to bring others that believe as you do to help this wrong-thinking person to understand the error. If he still doesn’t believe, we bring him to the church.
We do
not leave it “up to that person’s conscience” and resign them to deal with God.
I’m not sure how you could object to this when the Catholic church does the same thing (leaves room for the individual’s conscience).
I can absolutely object to it.
In your description you say that you can do your best to teach that person that abortion is wrong, but if they don’t believe you then what they do is not a sin.
This is making ‘truth’ subjective for that person.
You can’t really claim that everyone in your church thinks exactly the same way in all things. I can prove that they don’t:
From
catholic.com/library/creation_and_genesis.asp:
“Catholics are at liberty to believe that creation took a few days or a much longer period, according to how they see the evidence, and subject to any future judgment of the Church (Pius XII’s 1950 encyclical Humani Generis 36–37).”
Ahh … but what the Catholic Church teaches definitively, is believed, definitively, by all Catholics.
Nobody said that the Catholic Church has a definitive teaching for every topic on the face of the planet.
However, what it has defined, it has defined as truth with the authority given the church by Christ himself.
“Catholics are at liberty to believe”? Sounds a lot like what I’ve been saying regarding differences of opinion on certain matters. We are at liberty to believe differently about many things, just not those issues involving salvation. Those, the Apostles make quite clear.
… and to bring this back to one of your first posts …
It is not correct to say that we are at liberty to believe differently on issues involving salvation. Nowhere do the Apostles make quite clear that you and I can have different ideas on salvation. Please cite examples.
michel