The Bible is not the teaching of the Catholic Church? You will have a hard time convincing me of that. You might also refer to Summis desiderantes affectibus of Innocent VII (1484)
What you quoted was not THE Bible but part of the Bible. Not all of the Bible is to be taken literally.
Actions speak louder than words. Or are you telling me that the Catholic Church is the kind of organisation that practices, “Do as I say, not as I do”? If something is part of the practice of the Church then it is part of the Church.
As I said before, they were hypocrites. And yes, if that person is behaving badly, then indeed “ Do as he says but don’t do as he does”, providing he is not preaching what he is doing.
I was not referring to just the doctrines of the Church, I was referring to the whole Church.
Teaching has to do with doctrine. Even if the Pope behaves badly, his action though lamentable still is not doctrine.
Even if 90% of Catholics were to behave badly, it does not mean that somehow the Church teaches error.
The Church never claimed to be sinless, just infallible. And even that works in a negative way, in the sense that she is prevented from teaching error.
If we drop all of the bad parts then no religion contains any untruth and this whole discussion is useless
Truth has nothing to do with behaviour, but rather with doctrine. What we can determine though is whether action is in line with doctrine.
. In order to get a correct results we have to look at each religion as it is, not as it would like to be and not with awkward parts conveniently removed from the discussion.
The religion as it is, rests on her doctrine. That is where the differences lie.
St. Francis of Assisi is supposed to have said, “Preach always, use words if you have to.” Using that definition then it is inevitable that the Catholic Church has sometimes “preached” untruth.
Nope. Some members of the Catholic Church have been hypocrites, but the Church itself has never preached untruth. The individual members of the Chruch is not the magisterium of the Church.
St Francis words mean that our lives are to supposed to reflect our faith.
If you separate the actions of the members of the Church from the actions of the Church then no religion has ever performed any evil act.
You are muddying the subject. We are not talking about evil acts but truths. Yes, member of the Church have performed terribly heinous acts but the Church has not taught that this is a good thing.
You need to learn to separate the two. It is only because the Church has always taught the truth, that she can be renewed because there is that benchmark, the Truth, that she can gauge her performance against.
Would you say that Buddhists who martyred Christians in Japan were acting individually so their actions do not reflect on Buddhism? No, and I don’t either. All religions have resulted in both truth and untruth. A cut down version of any religion, with all the nasty bits removed, only has truth; but that is not a very useful conclusion.
It depends if in Buddhist teaching there is something that says it is okay to kill others. If not, all it shows is they did not live according to their belief.
But if their behaviour was because of their belief then that definitely reflects on Buddhism.
No, and I don’t either. All religions have resulted in both truth and untruth.
Nope, most have but not Christianity. That we have behaved badly does not mean that the Church has taught what we have done. Some of her members may have taught it but not the Church.