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Ender
Guest
It appears to me that here you are saying that God’s covenants are no longer in force, that they have been abrogated. This is not what the catechism says:58 The covenant with Noah remains in force during the times of the Gentiles, until the universal proclamation of the Gospel.I could write a book on laws in the Noah Covent Mosaic Covenant etc. that are no long practiced by Christians and even Catholics. Christ fulfills the laws in that his death is the perfect covenant and we no longer have to worry about holding up our end of the covenant because Christ as Man did it for us.
The church never interpreted Gn 9:6 as being limited to pre-Christian societies. It is in fact the basis for her doctrine on capital punishment (along with Rm 13:1-4) and has been for 2000 years.God gave laws and ordered the people to do things because of the circumstances of that time. Genesis 9:6 is the same exact thing
- Why should we condemn a practice that all hold to be permitted by God? * (Innocent I)
What are we obligated to follow if not the doctrine expressed by virtually all the Doctors and Fathers of the church, popes, and catechisms prior to 1995?doctrine can develop our understanding of truth develops. Just because St. Bellarmine says something doens’t mean we today as catholics are obligated to follow it.
Of course not, but surely you understand the structure of that sentence (Gn 9:6). That man is made in God’s image is given as an explanation in the second part of the passage for the command given in the first part.so now you are saying the life long teaching of the Church about man is created in the image and likeness of God has nothing to do with man’s nature but rather an explanation why murder is so horrible?
If we disagree over the best course of action and make opposite choices one of us will be mistaken but neither of us will have sinned, therefore (generally) prudential choices are not moral acts.So because the circumstances go to determine a moral act the circumstances of the DP is in fact a moral discussion.
Ender