L
LongingSoul
Guest
I read every word of the Catechism with grateful awe as I have always done. I observe every word of the Catechism with obedience and endure my sufferings in the spirit of the Cross as best I can.I think the Catechism encapsulates it in a general rule in CCC 1650. What are your thoughts on that paragraph? My understanding is that there is another major difference: it involves people living in a situation that the Catechism says “objectively contravenes God’s law.” (CCC 1650) From your response so far, I’m getting the impression that we must be talking about two different situations. What do you think? I don’t see how that is likely, given that Pope Francis has said he does not want to change the Church’s pastoral practice on this point. (See my previous post.) If Pope Francis doesn’t want the Church’s practice to change, then how would the practice get changed? When Peter was faced with some statements that he didn’t like, he said, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of everlasting life.” I don’t see why anybody would leave the Church unless it changed its teachings, and from what I can see, nobody is discussing any change in Church teaching. Anyway that’s what I think. What do you think?
I also trust in the wisdom of the Magisterium as expressed by the Popes and guided by the Holy Spirit, to look at the wounds in the faith community that call for addressing. Back in 1992 when the new Catechism made the change to the teaching on Limbo of the Infants that didn’t definitively exclude unbaptized babies from heaven but entrusted their fate to Gods mercy…the same predecessors of the temple police we see today were saying the same things. “Denying limbo is tantamount to defacto denying the necessity of baptism”. They did not want to ease the suffering of the mums who had lost unbaptized infants… they only wanted to uphold legalism.