P
Pax_et_Caritas
Guest
That makes no sense. The Church defined that pagans (those who have never heard the truth), heretics, (those who who reject the truth), Jews (we know who they are), and schismtatics (those who have the same faith but reject the primacy of the Pope), will go to hell.No, Rome does not agree that all the SSPX claims as error are, in fact errors. It is the interpretation of these doctrines and their application in the world today that is a point of disagreement. For example, a document about salvation outside of the church issued in a land and time when the Catholic Church ruled would vary from one five centuries post-reformation. Why? The Church can not address isssues which not only hadn’t occurred, but were completely unfathomable.
Pagans, infidels, heretics, Schismatics and Jews still exist today, and as such the teaching still applies. In fact, if there was ever an excuse for these people (invincible ignorance), it would have been in those days when most people could not read, and those who could were unable to afford books.
No salvation outside the Church has not changed, nor will it ever change. If you interpret Vatican II to mean something different than what the Church has defined di fide, you are misinterpreting it.
When you read Vatican II and the new Catechism carefully, they actually don’t contradict what the Church teaches… it just appears that they do.