G
Gorgias
Guest
I’ll answer your question with a question: was Luther a heretic; that is, at that point, could a non-Catholic be a heretic?Was Luther a “Catholic” when he started the “Lutheran Church”?
Gee… maybe because it’s the truth? The scandal is located precisely in the fact that they are Catholic! Would Sebellius or Pelosi be any less scandalous if they were excommunicated? Of course not! Would they quit calling themselves ‘Catholic’? Of course not! Would the Church then say, “these people are no longer Catholic”? Of course not! She would be in a position to say that these people should no longer present themselves for communion, but not that they aren’t Catholic!Why would we persist in calling a public rejector of the Faith a “Catholic”?
The only thing that the Church distances from itself, in that case, is their teachings and assertions…!
Exactly! And to say that someone can become not-Catholic obscures the fact of what baptism accomplishes!I think we need to be clear about something: words mean things. When you start obscuring what a “Catholic” means
That’s just it – the identifier “Catholic” doesn’t ID what I believe, but rather who I am, with respect to Christ and His Body, the Church. (In an ideal world, it would therefore also identify what I believe, but since we’re human and imperfect, that’s not the case).it ceases to be a moniker of one’s actual beliefs.
Without a doubt.Heresy should horrify us, and spark in us a desire to pray for souls and eagerly evangelize those who have doubts about the faith.