Hi Portrait,
It sounds to me like you have not avoided the moral and doctrinal relativism of which you accuse others though I am not completely sure that I understand what you mean by the phenomenon. Perhaps you can clarify. According to the above you chose to jump ship and join a religion that is consistent with your personal beliefs rather than alter your beliefs to submit to the authority of the church you previously identified with. Is that not an example of the exact same phenomenon you condemn?
Best,
Leela
Dear Leela,
Cordial greetings and please forgive my lengthy delay in replying to your post, but I have only recently returned from being on holiday.
First, by moral and doctrinal relativism I mean the repudiation of moral absolutes and non-negotiable truths. Thus an heir to the monotheisitic Judeo-Christian tradition would declare, for example, that homosexual aberrant acts are abhorrent and sinful because the prohibitions against them were issued by the omnipotent, one true God. Whereas a moral relativist would be prepared to tolerate them as alternative and perfectly allowable variants of human sexuality. Again, a moral relativist might declare that whilst he personally believes that sexual desire directed towards children is wrong, someone from a different culture might reasonably believe otherwise.
However, most moral relativists are not consistent and practices like sex slavery, female circumcision and ethnic cleansing have been known to test the forbearance of even the most committed of relativists, who are neither as numerous nor as influential as they would like us to believe.
In April 2005, Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) delivered a homily before the College of Cardinals in which he contrasted a steadfast faith in Christ and the Church with the pernicious pluralism of the day:
“The small boat of thought of many Christians has often been tossed about by these waves - thrown from one extreme to the other: from Marxism to liberalism, even to libertinism; from collectivism to radical individualism; from atheism to a vague religious mysticism; from agnosticism to sycretism, and so forth…Having a clear faith, based on the Creed of the Church, is often labeled today as a fundamentalism. Whereas, relativism, which is letting oneself be tossed and “swept along by every wind of teaching”, looks like the only attitude (acceptable) to today’s standards. We are moving towards a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as for certain and which has as its highest goal one’s own ego and one’s own desires”
I do not think that I can improve upon that. The truth of Pope Benedict’s words have been exemplified and verified continually throughout the present thread.
Second, my decision to say farewell to Anglicanism was determined chiefly on the basis of a conviction that the Church of Rome was the one true “Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church”. Once that realisation had dawned upon me I had no alternative but to convert to Catholicism and depart from the Church of England. Thus it was not so much a question of joining a religion that was consistent with my personal beliefs, but rather of joining the only Church that taught authoritatively on all matters pertaining to faith and morals. The Catholic Church was orthodox in its beliefs on account, and only on account, that it was the one true Church established by Christ upon St. Peter (see St. Matt. 16: 18) and thus has been preserved from teaching docrtrinal and moral error.
Unfortunately, because the Anglican communion lacks the Magisterium (unlike the Catholic Church) it simply cannot teach with any authority and is therefore continually being “swept along by every wind of teaching”; doctrinal and moral bedlam is sadly the order of the day. Thus there is no “authority” as such to which a man can submit, since there are no uniform and universal beliefs; beliefs will vary according to which bishop, clergyman or layman one happens to be conversing with and the particular ‘shade’ of his theological opinions, is he an Evangelical, Anglo-Catholic or a progressive radical? Alas, not everyone within Anglicanism is singing from the same hymn book, sometimes literally I hasten to add!, for certain hymnbooks reflect the standpoint of certain church ‘parties’.
A
laissez-faire church with no doctrinal and moral boundaries will not command the respect of any earnest Christian. Someone has to take ultimate responsibility for the leadership of the Christian Church and that someone is St. Peter’s successor, the Pope.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait