That you are rightly against the sin of liberalism does not mean that the rest of your arguments hold water.
I just don’t see the practical value of your point. If Spain forbids the practice of Islam, are you going to go to the United Nations and argue that Spain may forbid Islam, but Saudi Arabia may not forbid Catholicism? How are you going to find a leg to stand on with this? You are preaching to the choir if you’re telling me that Spain is forbidding a false religion, while Saudi Arabis is forbidding the true one. I think you are mixing fantasy and reality.
OK, I assume you are a female, right? Nothing wrong with being a female, of course, but the mind of a man and a women think differently. Men think more objective, while women thing more emotionally and, in a sense, practically (that may not be the correct word).
Men and women are like the cross. Men are the vertical stem and women are the horizontal. Both are necessary but the vertical stem is firmly rooted in the ground and upholds the horizontal. Without the vertical stem, the horizontal would fall to the ground. That is why the man is to be the head of the women.
In our discussion, the vertical (objective), and horizontal (practical) are showing themselves. I am arguing right from wrong, truth from error, and you are arguing against me, in part, because what I am saying does not seem practical due to the circumstances that we find ourselves in. I am going to use another example (one that we hopefully agree with objectively), and then show you how you are arguing.
Let’s use the example of divorce and re-marriage. Now, let’s say that we are arguing with someone who claims that divorce and remarriage should be permitted. You and I argue in favor of the indissolubility of marriage objectively by quoting magisterial document after magisterial document. We also argue using logic and reason. The other person argues from a practical level by attempting to show that enforcing the indissoluble bond of matrimony would never work. Here’s the “imaginary person’s” argument:
IMAGINARY PERSON:
Are you saying that a women who was married to someone for 1 years when they were 19 years old, and who has now been married to another man for the past 15 years with 8 children should be forced to leave her current husband and go back to the man she doesn’t even know anymore? How would that help her children. Do you really think that would be the best thing? It would never work! Your “indissolubility of marriage” argument holds no water.
Notice how the imaginary person argued. They argued from a practical level. Rather than thinking of the doctrine (indissolubility of marriage) objectively, they approached it from the viewpoint of the “horizontal stem”. They ended by denying a truth because it seemed to them to be impractical.
That is exactly what you are doing with me. I am arguing truth and error, and you are rejecting it because it does not seem practical to you. How to best bring our society in line with the truth is the topic for another thread. First, we must establish what the truth is, then we can discuss how best and most prudently to bring it about.
EasterJoy:
The State can legislate moral behavior and has a duty to do so, but no one can legislate faith. Faith is a gift. How can it be moral to punish someone for having failed to receive a gift? Only God, for God alone can judge the circumstances under which it was not received.
It wouldn’t punish someone for failing to receive a gift. If I responded to that point in more detail, it would take way too long and get us off topic.
EasterJoy:
If you legislate that people who do not believe in the True Presence must attend Mass anyway, you are essentially legislating sacriledge! That is the reasonable outcome of a law like that.
Only Catholics are required to attend Mass; and Catholic States do not force non-Catholics to become Catholic.
EasterJoy:
So no, I can’t see legislating the practice of faith, even in a Catholic country. It causes more sin than it prevents.
Sin is the violation of God’s law. Having human laws reflect Divine laws does not cause more sin. On the contrary, a society like ours, who allows everyone to do what they want (as long it is not politically incorrect, or does not harm the new god of the environment) does result in more sin.
EasterJoy:
Where did you get the idea that the Pope’s role is defense of the faith, and not the conversion of souls? This is a new one on me…and, may I say, Heaven forbid!
I didn’t saying that Pope should not try to convert people. John Paul II had friends who were Jews. When he died that stated that John Paul II never tried to convert them. On the contrary, he encouraged them in the practice if the old Covenant – a covenant which is null and void and will not save anyone. I disagree with that and think the Pope should try to convert people. But the Pope is not a missionary. His duty is to govern the Church and protect the faith. Here’s just one quote:
Pope Pius X, Pascendi: “1.** One of the primary obligations assigned by Christ to the office divinely committed to Us of feeding the Lord’s flock is that of guarding with the greatest vigilance the deposit of the faith delivered to the saints, rejecting the profane novelties of words and the gainsaying of knowledge falsely so called.** There has never been a time when this watchfulness of the supreme pastor was not necessary to the Catholic body, for owing to the efforts of the enemy of the human race, there have never been lacking “men speaking perverse things,”[1] “vain talkers and seducers,”[2] “erring and driving into error.”[3] It must, however, be confessed that these latter days have witnessed a notable increase in the number of the enemies of the Cross of Christ, who, by arts entirely new and full of deceit, are striving to destroy the vital energy of the Church, and, as far as in them lies, utterly to subvert the very Kingdom of Christ. Wherefore We may no longer keep silence, lest We should seem to fail in Our most sacred duty, and lest the kindness that, in the hope of wiser counsels, We have hitherto shown them, should be set down to lack of diligence in the discharge of Our office.”
EasterJoy:
Having addressed that point, let us remember that we do have an “inquisitor”, only now the office is the Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith. As you are aware, that is the office formerly held by our Holy Father. They can declare bishops to be in heresy, and have them excommunicated or declare them to be in schism. Are you suggesting that we should figure out a way to have an Inquisition against our inquistors, then?
Not having an inquisitor against the inquisitor, but having the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith take its job seriously and examine our current Bishops for heresy, and remove them when necesary. There are Bishops today who openly deny dogmas of the faith and do untold harm to the average Catholic who hears it. These men should be removed and punished severely now, in the hope that they will renounce their error and not have to go to hell for all eternity.
EasterJoy:
Are you advocating going back to the days of burning people at the stake for heresy?
No, but I realize that the Catholic State had every right to do it. Burning a heretic at the stake will certainly shock modern sensibilities, but I bet aborting 4000 babies a day, or allowing openly heretical Bishops to publicly teach errors, would have shocked the sensibilities of the Catholics who lived back then. Whose sensibilities are more in line with God’s? Keep in mind that God will burn the sinner, not for 2 or 3 minutes, but for all eternity.
EasterJoy:
To burn heretics at the stake is a grave offense against the hope of conversion.
So yes: burning heretics at the stake was entirely a scandal upon the Church. That was
wrong, and I do not fear to say so explicitly.
You say that because it shocks your modern sensibilities. I don’t know of any Catholics who lived during the “good old days” when the State burned heretics who had any problem it. Again, whose sensibilities are correct? Yours or theirs? And how do you know. We are formed in part by the culture we live it. I would advise you not to condemn 1000 + years of Catholicism because it seems strange to you - who have been formed by a very permissive culture that prides itself in tolerating sin. Since your sensibilities are contrary to those of the Church and Catholics for 1000+ years, it would be best for you to say that you don’t
understand why they did such a thing – or that it seems strange to you - rather than saying they were wrong and it was a scandal.