T
Thomas_Casey
Guest
Please be sensitive to the fact that there are newcomers to Catholicism, non-Catholics and young Catholics reading this forum. The name of the forum can be misleading. People often assume that it’s for Traditionalists and their concerns. Others assume that if it’s posted on TC Forum is must be part of Catholicism. After all, it’s “tradition”.
In both cases, the assumption is incorrect and leads readers down the wrong path.
To help these folks and avoid confusion, I strongly recommend that we refrain from armchair theology. Unless one is a legitimate theologian (with a degree and authorized by the Church to teach CATHOLIC theology), one should not present his or her arguments as truths, reliable facts or rules that others must follow.
Present your points as your personal opinion, that of someone with whom you agree or something that the Church teaches. There are many good opinions out there, some old and some new. But unless the Church teaches them formally, they remain opinions. There are many good theologians, but unless we state exactly what the theologian said, in what context, to what audience and for what reason, the meaning that we give his or her statement can be incorrect.
“N said . . . . and I agree with it, because.” Is a better way of presenting a piece of theology.
If you can give a reference fine. If you can’t, at least your reader knows that this is N’s opinion that you share, but you’re not a theologian, which can influence your understanding of what N said.
Remember, theologians and lawyers often speak their own language and don’t always mean what we understand them to mean. In a certain sense, this is true of any academic discipline. Many disciplines use language differently.
Thank you
In both cases, the assumption is incorrect and leads readers down the wrong path.
To help these folks and avoid confusion, I strongly recommend that we refrain from armchair theology. Unless one is a legitimate theologian (with a degree and authorized by the Church to teach CATHOLIC theology), one should not present his or her arguments as truths, reliable facts or rules that others must follow.
Present your points as your personal opinion, that of someone with whom you agree or something that the Church teaches. There are many good opinions out there, some old and some new. But unless the Church teaches them formally, they remain opinions. There are many good theologians, but unless we state exactly what the theologian said, in what context, to what audience and for what reason, the meaning that we give his or her statement can be incorrect.
“N said . . . . and I agree with it, because.” Is a better way of presenting a piece of theology.
If you can give a reference fine. If you can’t, at least your reader knows that this is N’s opinion that you share, but you’re not a theologian, which can influence your understanding of what N said.
Remember, theologians and lawyers often speak their own language and don’t always mean what we understand them to mean. In a certain sense, this is true of any academic discipline. Many disciplines use language differently.
Thank you