I have a better idea, do your own research on the matter…
Truth and Tolerance by Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
After you have read his book, if you still don’t understand, I can help you.
Scared to put it your own words, aren’t you? I don’t blame you.
After reading through your posts again USMC, your argument sounds no different than the Jansenist web page you cited. They use your method of primacy of personal opinion as to “knowing what the truth is” to reject St. Pius V and St. Pius X as heretics. … Like your contention, they KNOW the truth. Why would they need to conform to those heretical claims by Pius V and Pius X, huh?
I see no difference in your approach to Catholic teaching than their approach. It’s just that what YOU KNOW is the truth differs from what THEY KNOW is the truth, both of which differ from the Catholic magisterium authentically teaches.
So, you are admitting that you do not know the truth? That is the difference between a person who holds to what the Church has alway taught, and you.
When you believe what the Church has always taught you will KNOW the truth. Unfortunately, as you have proven, you don’t know the truth. You don’t even claim to. Instead, you wait on pins and needles for the lastest document so you will know what to believe today, even though it is the opposite of what you believed yesterday. Your faith is built on sand and it is shifting with the winds of modernism.
Let’s take just one example to show your shifting foundation.
Remember a year or so ago when we were discussing the eternal destiny of aborted babies? Remember when I quoted magisterial text after magisterial text to show that they will not go to heaven? Remember how you rejected those magisterial documents? And do you remember why you rejected them?
Because in Evangelium Vitae, John Paul II made the statement that aborted babies “are living with the Lord”. For you, this comment completely reversed all that the Church had ever taught and raise, to a dogma, the teaching that aborted babies go to heaven.
I bet you felt pretty foolish, didn’t you, when you later learned that the novel statement of John Paul II, which was contrary to what the Church has always taught, was removed from the final and offical version of the encyclical.
That is the problem with people, such as yourself, who refuse to submit to what the Church has always taught and prefer to follow novel teachings.
One day you will learn that the Catholic faith does not change; and that the dogmas of the Church are irreformable. Unfortunately, you have chosen to follow any novel teaching, as long as it comes from someone in the magisterium. That is a dangerous thing to do during a crisis such as we have today.
Or maybe we are not in a crisis. Maybe we are in the new springtime? According to John Paul II we were experiencing a “new springtime” while he lived. Since John Paul II said we were in a new springtime, by golly, we were in a new spring time, right?.
But then, a few days after he died, I’m sure you completely reversed yourself with Cardinal Ratzinger said the contrary when he compared the Church to a , *“boat on the point of sinking, a boat taking in water on all sides. *And also in Your field we see more darnel than wheat. To see the vesture and visage of Your Church so filthy throws us into confusion. Yet it is we ourselves who have soiled them!
It is we who betray you time and time again, after all our lofty words and grand gestures.”
If you submitted to what the Church has always taught you would not be on the foundation of shifting sand during todays crisis. You need to heed the wrods of St. Paul who said:
“though we, or an angel from heaven, should preach a gospel to you other than that which we have preached to you, let him be anathema”.
I can imagine people such as you who lived during the Arian crisis arguing with those who were holding fast to the true faith. I can hear them now:
"You must follow the magisterium, who now teaches that Jesus is not God. Stop putting your personal interpretation of the documents from the council of Nicea above the “living magisterium”. You must submit to the new teachings!"
Fortunately, during that crisis a few held fast to what the Church had always taught. Maybe you should consider following their example.