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FirstFiveEighth
Guest
Perhaps you are right. I simply see a trend of putting down those who hold to historical church teaching and elevating those who want to see it changed. If you think someone is doing a good job at their post, you usually don’t let them go when their contract expires. I don’t believe the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is typically one that rotates every 5yrs simply because the obligation time is every 5yrs. We should of course be charitable in our judgments, but that doesn’t mean you simply ignore the stream of evidence, and I don’t necessarily think it is uncharitable to point that out. This is simply one more step down the path that the Pope has been charting his whole pontificate. We shall see where it leads us.No, I can’t do that. I am a Catholic and such lack of charity is something I am taught to avoid.
I am not going to re-hash (at least yet) that there is some disagreement on what is doctrine and what is practice in this area. Suffice it to say that the minority opinion is that change cannot happen without changing doctrine, even though this “doctrine” has not been defined, but assumed based on a synthesis of other doctrines, a synthesis that might be faulty.