Finally a catholic response. My intent is not to flip anyone over. But if you could help me in my quest, please answer my question post #484.
I am not a Christian. But I enjoy talking about religion. Here is an excerpt I found interesting:
nytimes.com/2005/05/22/books/review/22STEINFE.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
If religions are alive, as Catholicism surely is, they change.
[Denial of change], still widespread, means that examining change in official teaching – or what became known in the 19th century as ‘‘development of doctrine’’ – poses two challenges: first, to establish that alterations – some more than minor – have unquestionably occurred; and second, to show how they can be reconciled with the church’s claim to preach the same essential message Jesus and his disciples did 2,000 years ago, presumably deriving criteria that can help distinguish legitimate evolution in the future from deviations or betrayals.
Among American Catholics, John T. Noonan Jr. is specially situated for this pursuit. He is a distinguished law professor; a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit; and the author of many books on jurisprudence, legal history and ethics, and church law.
In ‘‘A Church That Can and Cannot Change,’’ Noonan drives home the point that some Catholic moral doctrines have changed radically. History, he concludes, does not support the comforting notion that the church simply elaborates on or expands previous teachings without contradicting them.
His exhibit A is slavery. John Paul II included slavery among matters that are ‘‘intrinsically evil’’ – prohibited ‘‘always and forever’’ and ‘‘without any exception’’ – a violation of a universal, immutable norm. Yet slavery in some form was accepted as a fact of life in both Hebrew and Christian Scriptures, in much Christian theology and in Catholic teaching well into the 19th century. Noonan says that Christianity achieved a radical transvaluation of slavery. Jesus presented himself as a slave; slaves became saints; slavery became a metaphor and model for Christian life. Yet neither Jesus nor his followers directly challenged the institution of slavery. The fathers of the church accepted the buying, selling and owning of human beings. So did the popes: Muslim slaves were manning papal galleys until 1800. So did religious orders: Jesuits in colonial Maryland owned slaves, as did nuns in Europe and Latin America. Even St. Peter Claver, who in Colombia befriended, instructed and baptized African slaves, bought slaves to serve as interpreters. Theologians challenged abuses of slaveholding but rarely the practice itself. It was at the urging of Protestant Britain that the papacy condemned the slave trade in 1839. In 1888, after every Christian nation had abolished slavery, the Vatican finally condemned it – with a kind of historical rewriting and self-congratulation that palpably offends Noonan’s sense of honesty.
Noonan’s other exhibits deal with usury, religious freedom and marriage. Lending money for interest, long condemned as usury, became accepted as lawful. In certain cases, modern popes have claimed the power to dissolve marriages once considered indissoluble. And instead of insisting on government’s imposing legal penalties, including death, to uphold religious truth, today the church positively forbids it.