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He’s not saying that. It’s not a dichotomy “better than”. The text needs to be understood in original context, that’s all. That doesn’t mean that specific contextual reading dictates Catholic theology.And yet we regularly disagree with some OT verses as Judaism itself interprets them.
They should know better than us according to your hermeneutic principle above.
Inspiration is not something that is monopolized. The Holy Spirit breathes through the Church for all people.But then you will say we or Peter have some monopoly on the Holy Spirit etc etc.
This issue has nothing to do with infallible statements. The morality of an act can be determined without an infallible statement.Not that any infallible statement has ever been made re whether the OT condemned Polygamy as you assert.
And morality is not about determining condemnation, it’s about determining what is good, and actions are evaluated morally in reference to that. I touched on that above.
I am trying to think of a way that Polygamy is not in violation of natural law.But we may have to conclude that polygamy, while currently prohibited by the Church, is not strictly speaking in contradiction of Natural Law but only of well standing derived principles.
And I’m not sure what “standing derived principles” are in morality.
Again, morality refers to objective good. So if morality is derived from anything, it is derived from evaluating actions as they refer to that good.
The good does not change. The quality of human evaluations and acts may come and go.
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