I don’t need to read it again. There are lots of Saints in heaven (it’s a doctrine of the Church). Every one of them “ascended” there. This language is, of course, imprecise (heaven is not really “up,” so we cannot really “ascend” there, but we lack the vocabulary to really describe it). But, unlike most Saints, Enoch and Elijah were OT persons who had witnesses, and their ascention was recorded in Scripture, so they are favorite examples of OT figures known to be in Heaven. But JP2 did not even approach a claim that what happened to Enoch and Elijah (whatever that was) was the same as the Assumption of Mary (whatever that was).
We know from scripture that at least in the case of Enoch he did so “bodily” and that he did not “see death”. All you have to do is connect the dots.
That’s your interpretation (and, I agree, as I said, it is the plain sense of the text). My interpretation is not so literal - I believe that something special happened to Enoch, but it was not the same thing that happened to Mary.
They are not the same document, which you should know if you read them.
Of course, you are correct. Quite stupid of me. That’s what I get for typing at 2:30 in the morning. I thought the datestamp in the URL was a document number and did not look more closely.
And the one you ignored says: [what Sardath has been saying]
I concede that you have found a Vatican document that links Elijah and Enoch to the Assumption the same manner as CA. So I will modify my claim that *almost *no recognized authority has ever used this parallel, with the known exception of one report published by a dicastery which I had never heard of until yesterday (had you ever heard of it before you did your search?)
So “objective truth” is simply whatever the Church says it is, and without the Church’s imprimatur “there is no objective truth” to be had.
I’m using the term “objective” to describe Church teachings which must be accepted as fact (ie, infallible decrees). Other teachings are “subjective.” For example, subject to the authority of your Bishop. BTW, I think you meant to say “
nihil obstat” but neither term really works in this context (*nihil obstat *means only “free from (known) error” - it does not guarantee truth).
…and we must accept our local bishop’s opinion on the subject as “the teaching of the Church” at least for us, if not for everyone else. Thank you for clarifying that.
You’re welcome. Why is this so hard for you to accept? It has always been this way.
Canon Law declares that “all are bound to seek the truth in the matters which concern God and his Church” and that “when they have found it, then by divine law they are bound, and they have the right, to embrace and keep it.”
Yes, and I believe I have been careful to qualify my remarks that you are never required to accept anything contrary to morality (which includes your firm belief of the truth - it is immoral for us to reject what we firmly believe to be true) and that you are never required to give assent of the heart (only the assent of faith).
For the bishop to command me to stop seeking the objective truth about such matters and to accept his personal theological opinion instead is tantamount to a demand that I disobey the divine law.
Did your Bishop actually forbid you from your inquiries? This is something you have not mentioned before.
Let me ask you this: Do you feel yourself at liberty to completely ignore and disregard the teaching of your Bishop?
[discussion about 1984 and my t-shirt sig]
I think this branch is getting off-topic. I think there’s enough substance here without delving into science fiction and t-shirt jokes, so I’ll refrain here.
But at least one American bishop invoked his full apostolic authority to declare the same war to be clearly “unjust” and to bind the faithful on pain of mortal sin not to participate in it or support it in any way. So was the Iraq war a just war in one diocese but unjust in another? Was it perfectly appropriate for Catholics from Diocese X to go to Iraq and kill people there, but a mortal sin for Catholics from Diocese Y to do the same? By your lights, that would seem to be the case.
I had not heard of this Bishop, but it does not matter. What you say is basically correct.
Why is this so hard for you to accept? In some countries, it is legal to drink at 18, and in others it is against the law. That’s because a nation (state, city, county) has authority to make the rules. Do you complain if an 19-year old is arrested for underage drinking in Oregon simply because it would be perfectly legal in South Korea? Of course not. Most people accept the idea of legal jurisdictions which may or may not share the same rules of conduct. What is perfectly legal in one jurisdiction might even be a capital crime in another.
It is no different for Bishops. A Bishop is absolutely sovereign in his own Diocese - if you live in his Diocese then you are subject to his authority. Only the full Universal Magersterium (either Ordinary or Extraordinary) can supercede his teaching authority. Not even the Pope can supercede this authority, unless he invokes
ex Cathedra. It has always been this way.
But, unlike legal jurisdictions, you have far more leeway in the Church. You are not compelled to accept any teaching that opposes morality (including your firm conviction of truth), and you are only required to give assent of faith to those teachings which do not oppose morality (meaning you are free to charitably dispute them, as long as you accept the possibility you could be mistaken).