This is an older thread but it seems as pertinent as ever, and it is particularly relevant to me who is struggling with reconciling some of the teachings and actions of the post-V2 Church with everything else that has been taught before it.
I have been looking to convert to Catholicism for a few years, but the crisis that Bishop Athanasius points out (although people have been discussing the crisis for over 50 years) is one that really stops me, and has at times put serious doubts into mind as to whether or not Catholicism is true. I go back on forth over this problem daily. The Bishop, and others, and the most of the people in this thread all seem to hit on the problem. Since Vatican 2 the Church has altered radically. Not many people in the Church really believe anymore, they aren’t educated in the faith and have no interest in adhering to teachings that they see as being irrelevant, and they are willful and seek to change the Church to conform to their views rather than being conformed by the Church. This is also not a problem just with the laity as it seems to be a regular occurrence for a Cardinal or a Bishop or even the Pope to do or say something that seems completely at odds with the faith (only for someone to come along later and laboriously try to explain it away, or worse, embrace it and be thankful the mean old Church is finally doing a U-turn).
The Church itself doesn’t seem to be interested in fixing the problem. It’s been 50 years since V2, surely everyone is well aware of the problems now. Bishop Athanasius, in his wonderfully charitable and meek manner, outlines the problems in the documents (
youtu.be/z8iBeaGeuxw) in another interview and he also called for a new Syllabus of Errors to make Church teaching crystal clear and to stop any interpretations of a ‘hermeneutic of rupture’. But this shows absolutely no sign of coming to fruition.
There is no clear teaching in the Church anymore, it seems, and to hit on another point made by Cardinal Burke recently, the Church has been radically feminised to the point where discipline and orthodoxy are seen as evils of the past. In a local parish of mine on their website is a wonderful quote from Saint Gregory where he mentions orthodoxy, and under the quote in huge bright red letters is a warning telling people not to be scared by the word orthodoxy, that it doesn’t need to mean sticking to the law and they shouldn’t feel bad about anything, rather they can interpret orthodoxy as meaning having a lot of faith.
As an outsider looking in, it appears that the Church has let slip most of what it once believed in exchange for an easy life, for popularity. I know I’m not the only convert feeling and thinking this way. A convert goes through a long process of discerning the faith and then they show up at their local church, or they stumble upon an article from the tablet, or they hear something from a cardinal, and they wonder what on Earth happened to the Church they had been learning about for so long. A famous example of this would be Magdi Allam who left Islam and was baptised by Pope Benedict XVI. Writing on his Website, he said the “euphoria over Pope Francis” and the rapid way Pope Benedict was set aside was “the straw that broke the camel’s back” and convinced him to abandon his conversion to Christianity…Allam said it was “true folly” that Benedict had prayed in a mosque in Istanbul, and that Pope Francis, in one of his first speeches, said that Muslims “worship the one, living and merciful God.” You see there? Muslims worship the same God as Catholics? That’s straight out of Vatican 2, it’s one of the points Bishop Athanasius brings up that must be changed to become orthodox and it has bred a lot of confusion and led to a lot of errors.
And Magdi Allam had a strong point. If the pope himself can’t be heard teaching sound doctrine or acting in a way consistent with the faith, how is anyone else supposed to believe it? If the Church of today is noticeably different from the Church of 50 years ago, both in teaching and actions, how can they see it as the true, eternal Church of Christ?
Vatican 2 needs to be clarified in the manner that Bishop Athanasius and others have pointed out, catechesis in seminaries and parishes needs to be improved, and the Church needs to bring back the inquisition or something to stop wayward priests from spreading their errors or being bent to the will of their parishioners. There has to be an attitude change, no more burying heads in the sand, no more false charity. It does more harm than good. Unfortunately I have no faith that this is going to happen, so I and others am left in a terrible position. What to do? Follow a Church that seems inconsistent and even dangerous in its teachings at times, or just give it all up?
Apologies for the long post and any offense it may cause. I’ve been struggling with this all for so long now it has really built up in me. I feel like I discovered something wonderful only for it to disappear when I bent closer.