sailor28 #284
I am Catholic but the older I get the less my conscience is comfortable with the conflicts the Catholic church creates for it. I can not continue to violate my conscience when I believe doctrines and teachings the church embraces are not healthy or whole. It goes beyond female ordination. I believe the church has done spiritual and emotional damage to gay individuals. The black and white embracing on the ban on contraception is not sound theology. I also don’t believe in infallibility. For me, it is not a matter of more catechesis. I have had more catechesis as an adult. Always learning and studying trying to accept it but I can not accept it. In fact, I believe the church has serious problems with its understanding of human sexuality. I have not figured out how to reconcile this and remain Catholic.
But I do see the church is very broad and wide and I believe there is room for more than we may think.
This fantasy of “violation of conscience” is a recurring theme of yours.
There is no “violation of conscience” against truth when the conscience has been badly formed – its formation needs to be put right. There is certain violation when it is properly formed and you freely go against it.
So, since conscience is not a god, but a judgment of the practical reason as Msgr Cormac P Burke (
Law and Dissent, 1985) points out, "for the Catholic, there is never a conflict between the authority of the Church and conscience, because belief that Christ has given His Church authority to teach without error is part of his conscience, freely accepted. According to Canon 205, Catholics are those in full communion with the Church through the bonds of profession of faith, the sacraments and ecclesiastical governance.
"If one holds a personal opinion that a particular course of action seems licit – contrary to the Church’s teaching – he has a conflict within his own conscience. This is doubt or rejection of the divine guarantees of the certainty of the truths already present in his mind, to accommodate a contrary opinion. We now have a house divided against itself.
"He cannot escape the conclusion that his contrary opinion must be mistaken, as he would be acknowledging the accepted fact of the fallibility of conscience – it does not make truth. He then has to see where he has been mistaken, to reflect more deeply on the arguments for the Church’s teaching. If he feels that he is not mistaken, then he must conclude that Christ’s Church is mistaken and naturally his faith in Christ and His Church has started to collapse.
“He has no grounds then to believe in any truths – the sacraments (especially the Eucharist), or in Her worship or any other aspect of Her life. Such a Catholic needs the counsel of a faithful priest.”
Thus no one can in good conscience deny Christ’s authority as taught by His Magisterium in dogma or doctrine. That mandate from Christ means that those that do have tarnished their Catholicity and lost the respect of real Catholics.