Catholics with strong conservative positions

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Just to get this thread back on track, … conservatives are anti-Communist. Catholicism is anti-Communist.

Rush Limbaugh is anti-Communist.

I’m sure there are more examples … some kind of symbolic logic.

Etc.

Back on track.

Thankyouverymuchandhaveaniceday.

What else???

Hmmmmm.

Something from the other side of the aisle, perhaps.

A representative from California was a Communist. She was defeated by Richard Nixon who when on to prosecute Alger Hiss, who was vehemently defended by Liberals/Democrats.

So, there we are … a discussion with a Liberal/Democrat/Communist pole. And with a Conservative/Republican/anti-Communist pole.

That should help get the discussion back on track.

If not, I could interject the phrase … “soft on Communism”.

And to warm things up further …

amazon.com/Blacklisted-History-Senator-McCarthy-Americas/dp/140008105X

And, this will get things going although the author has several titles in print that will create some interest.

amazon.com/Godless-Church-Liberalism-Ann-Coulter/dp/1400054214/ref=pd_bbs_3?ie=UTF8&s

And, oh heck:

amazon.com/Makers-Takers-conservatives-generously-materialistic/dp/038551350X/ref=pd_sim_b_85
 
ill join in then men like arnold schortsniger ‘ill be back’ are ridiculed all over the internet for not keeping fit in the publics eye i guess society will have to get use to his good movies or mabby except politics or is this an open discussion on a russian person being comunist
 
Just to get this thread back on track, … conservatives are anti-Communist. Catholicism is anti-Communist.

Rush Limbaugh is anti-Communist.

I’m sure there are more examples … some kind of symbolic logic.

Etc.

Back on track.

Thankyouverymuchandhaveaniceday.

What else???

Hmmmmm.

Something from the other side of the aisle, perhaps.

A representative from California was a Communist. She was defeated by Richard Nixon who when on to prosecute Alger Hiss, who was vehemently defended by Liberals/Democrats.

So, there we are … a discussion with a Liberal/Democrat/Communist pole. And with a Conservative/Republican/anti-Communist pole.

That should help get the discussion back on track.

If not, I could interject the phrase … “soft on Communism”.

And to warm things up further …

amazon.com/Blacklisted-History-Senator-McCarthy-Americas/dp/140008105X

And, this will get things going although the author has several titles in print that will create some interest.

amazon.com/Godless-Church-Liberalism-Ann-Coulter/dp/1400054214/ref=pd_bbs_3?ie=UTF8&s

And, oh heck:

amazon.com/Makers-Takers-conservatives-generously-materialistic/dp/038551350X/ref=pd_sim_b_85
Catholic Liberation Theology tended to identify with the Left, especially in Latin America. The Church defies any and all political attempts to co-opt it.
 
We were attacked by Japan. Our Congress declared war on Japan (note, we did it the legal way that time). Germany and Italy, allies of Japan, declared war on us. We returned the favor.

We were attacked. But it’s a different world. You can’t fight Islamic terrorism the same way you fought the Nazis. Besides that I was answering a poster who said “peace is always the best option.” We could have done nothing in WWII. Would have been wrong, but we could have. You can always have peace if you’re ready to do nothing. At least you can have it for the moment. 😦

Was Switzerland attacked?

No, but they sure reaped the benefit of Nazi gold and Jewish treasure while they sat on the fence. Sometimes you just need to pick a side even if the bully didn’t personally hit you.
We are way off topic. Sorry.
 
As I said, I can’t account for the Protestants, nor do I care much about them, unless they organize Catholic-hunting parties and come after us. Then I’ll get excited.
I grew up in a house without running water because my father would not lie about being Catholic. Catholic school only went to 5th grade. When I entered a public school in 6th grade, the teacher took time to explain what a WASP was, and that I wasn’t one. But, it was made clear that Christian charity would be shown to the new pagan boy…
I thought you were indicting news people such as Hannity and O’Reilly, who are Catholic.
Professing to be Catholic and following the faith are two different things.
My point was that their political beliefs can be supported by the official teachings of the Catholic Church, in the context of personal interpretation. I’ve only been reading and re-reading the current CCC since it came out in the mid-'90s. For me, the CCC is the bottomline. It’s the official record of the teachings of the Catholic Church.
Then you should read more closely. It goes through the Nicene Creed a line at a time. If you are at odds with the Pope’s interpretation of the Catachism, you are at odds with the Catholic faith.

Substituting personal interpretation of the Catechism over the authority of Rome is just another variant of Protestantism. In fact, the Universal Catechism isn’t even primarily written for the laity. Look at Pope John Paul II’s declaration that is printed with it. The primary audience is the Bishops and it expressly does not supercede approved Local Catechisms that they prepare. So, if you want the most definitive application of Catholic Doctrine with regards to specific moral situations in the US, you should see the “United States Catholic Catechism for Adults”.

But many US Catholics give only superficial deference to Rome and even open disdain to our local princes of the Church. This generally accomanies ‘caffeteria Catholicism’ and ‘moral relativism’, which Pope Benedict has stated is the greatest threat to the faith today.
 
I grew up in a house without running water because my father would not lie about being Catholic. Catholic school only went to 5th grade. When I entered a public school in 6th grade, the teacher took time to explain what a WASP was, and that I wasn’t one. But, it was made clear that Christian charity would be shown to the new pagan boy…

Professing to be Catholic and following the faith are two different things.

Then you should read more closely. It goes through the Nicene Creed a line at a time. If you are at odds with the Pope’s interpretation of the Catachism, you are at odds with the Catholic faith.

Substituting personal interpretation of the Catechism over the authority of Rome is just another variant of Protestantism. In fact, the Universal Catechism isn’t even primarily written for the laity. Look at Pope John Paul II’s declaration that is printed with it. The primary audience is the Bishops and it expressly does not supercede approved Local Catechisms that they prepare. So, if you want the most definitive application of Catholic Doctrine with regards to specific moral situations in the US, you should see the “United States Catholic Catechism for Adults”.

But many US Catholics give only superficial deference to Rome and even open disdain to our local princes of the Church. This generally accomanies ‘caffeteria Catholicism’ and ‘moral relativism’, which Pope Benedict has stated is the greatest threat to the faith today.
This is my final statement on this matter. You are bending over backwards to interpret Catholic authorities to support your politics. Your opponents are doing the same thing, but reaching different political conclusions. Neither of you is right, because the sources you’re interpreting aren’t political in nature.
 
Has the Pope taught “from the Chair”??? NO just his opinion.
Hey. I’m Christina, and I recently joined this site because I felt like I had to talk about this. I’m a Protestant but leaning more towards Catholic all the time.

A lot of people with strong conservative positions call themselves Catholic but ignore what the church teaches. They are probably Catholic because they agree with the Church about things like abortion, gay marriage, and religious freedom. However, they also ignore what the Vatican has said about the Iraq War, illegal immigrants, and affirmative action. Many of these people (Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, etc.) act as if Catholicism lends itself to support of everything America does. If they examined what the church has said about these things, would they accept that by their definition Catholicism is anti-American and globalist, or would they excuse themselves by saying they are not ex cathedra teachings or something like that?
 
This is my final statement on this matter. You are bending over backwards to interpret Catholic authorities to support your politics. Your opponents are doing the same thing, but reaching different political conclusions. Neither of you is right, because the sources you’re interpreting aren’t political in nature.
Projecting perhaps? I’ve stated clearly that neither major political party fits Catholic Doctrine. Political parties are earthly alliences of humans for the pursuit of pwer.

I’ve referenced the Catechism and quoted the Dogmatic Constitution of hte Church, which it repeatedly quotes and cites. I’ve primarily stressed statements we make, weekly, in the profession of faith. The only thing I’m bending over to be is Catholic.

If we are to accept your hypothesis, then the faith has no meaing whatsoever. Disagree with the Church on abortion? Torture? War? The persecution of Christians? No biggie, it is must a matter of which mental masturbation you accept…

If you are at odds with the Vicar of Christ, it is not a matter of different opinions, at least to a Catholic. If it is critical for you to believe otherwise, perhaps you should look to what Jesus taught us about serving two masters. One’s actions always show which is loved best.
 
Has the Pope taught “from the Chair”??? NO just his opinion.
What do you mean, “just” his opinion? Perhaps we need to review Catholic Dogma 101:
“Among the principal duties of bishops the preaching of the Gospel occupies an eminent place. For bishops are preachers of the faith, who lead new disciples to Christ, and they are authentic teachers, that is, teachers endowed with the authority of Christ, who preach to the people committed to them the faith they must believe and put into practice, and by the light of the Holy Spirit illustrate that faith. They bring forth from the treasury of Revelation new things and old, making it bear fruit and vigilantly warding off any errors that threaten their flock. Bishops, teaching in communion with the Roman Pontiff, are to be respected by all as witnesses to divine and Catholic truth. In matters of faith and morals, the bishops speak in the name of Christ and the faithful are to accept their teaching and adhere to it with a religious assent. This religious submission of mind and will must be shown in a special way to the authentic magisterium of the Roman Pontiff, even when he is not speaking ex cathedra; that is, it must be shown in such a way that his supreme magisterium is acknowledged with reverence, the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to, according to his manifest mind and will. His mind and will in the matter may be known either from the character of the documents, from his frequent repetition of the same doctrine, or from his manner of speaking.” - LUMEN GENTIUM (Dogmatic Constitution of the Church)
vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html

The First Vatican Council put it even more forcefully:
“If anyone should say that the Roman Pontiff has merely the function of inspection or direction but not full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church, not only in matters pertaining to faith and morals, but also in matters pertaining to the discipline and government of the Church throughout the entire world, or that he has only the principal share, but not the full plenitutde of this supreme power; or that this power of his is not ordinary and immediate over all Churches and over each individual Church, over all shepherds and all the faithful, and over each individual one of these: let him be anathema” -Vatican Council I, Dogmatic Constitution of the Church of Christ
If you have any doubt that this is central and important stuff, look where the Universal Catechism explains it - in elaborating a line from the Nicene Creed, which we profess in unison each week.
 
vatican.va/roman_curia/secretariat_state/documents/rc_seg-st_doc_20010621_death-penalty_en.html

vatican.va/roman_curia/secretariat_state/documents/rc_seg-st_doc_02111999_death-penalty_en.html

From The Vatican’s own website. I imagine if anything had changed, this would have been updated.

Well what do you know?👍

ops.gov.ph/europevisit06/photos1.htm
Pope Benedict XVI shows a bound copy of Republic Act No. 9346 abolishing the death penalty in the Philippines which President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo presented to him during a private audience with the Pontiff Monday noon (June 26, 6:00 p.m. Manila time) at the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican. (Marcelino Pascua – OPS-NIB Photo)
:cool:
 
Just to get this thread back on track, … conservatives are anti-Communist. Catholicism is anti-Communist.

Rush Limbaugh is anti-Communist.

I’m sure there are more examples … some kind of symbolic logic.

Etc.

Back on track.

Thankyouverymuchandhaveaniceday.

What else???

Hmmmmm.

Something from the other side of the aisle, perhaps.

A representative from California was a Communist. She was defeated by Richard Nixon who when on to prosecute Alger Hiss, who was vehemently defended by Liberals/Democrats.

So, there we are … a discussion with a Liberal/Democrat/Communist pole. And with a Conservative/Republican/anti-Communist pole.

That should help get the discussion back on track.

If not, I could interject the phrase … “soft on Communism”.

And to warm things up further …

amazon.com/Blacklisted-History-Senator-McCarthy-Americas/dp/140008105X

And, this will get things going although the author has several titles in print that will create some interest.

amazon.com/Godless-Church-Liberalism-Ann-Coulter/dp/1400054214/ref=pd_bbs_3?ie=UTF8&s

And, oh heck:

amazon.com/Makers-Takers-conservatives-generously-materialistic/dp/038551350X/ref=pd_sim_b_85
And there you go again. Anything slightly liberal is communist. Wrong.
 
And there you go again. Anything slightly liberal is communist. Wrong.
It does rather seem sweetly old-fashioned of him - what with words like ‘relativist’ so popular nowadays - but I expect that Al’s a sweet old-fashioned guy, deep down . . . . . very deep down.
 
It does rather seem sweetly old-fashioned of him - what with words like ‘relativist’ so popular nowadays - but I expect that Al’s a sweet old-fashioned guy, deep down . . . . . very deep down.
At Mass yesterday, the priest delivered an amazing homily about how the Holy Father at World Youth Day in Australia spoke against relativism.

Might be worth researching to see if the text is available on-line.

But then, I guess the Holy Father is also a “sweet old-fashioned guy, down deep”.
 
At Mass yesterday, the priest delivered an amazing homily about how the Holy Father at World Youth Day in Australia spoke against relativism.

Might be worth researching to see if the text is available on-line.

But then, I guess the Holy Father is also a “sweet old-fashioned guy, down deep”.
Apparently he likes cats so he can’t be too awful, I guess.
 
Projecting perhaps? I’ve stated clearly that neither major political party fits Catholic Doctrine. Political parties are earthly alliences of humans for the pursuit of pwer.

I’ve referenced the Catechism and quoted the Dogmatic Constitution of hte Church, which it repeatedly quotes and cites. I’ve primarily stressed statements we make, weekly, in the profession of faith. The only thing I’m bending over to be is Catholic.

If we are to accept your hypothesis, then the faith has no meaing whatsoever. Disagree with the Church on abortion? Torture? War? The persecution of Christians? No biggie, it is must a matter of which mental masturbation you accept…

If you are at odds with the Vicar of Christ, it is not a matter of different opinions, at least to a Catholic. If it is critical for you to believe otherwise, perhaps you should look to what Jesus taught us about serving two masters. One’s actions always show which is loved best.
Be fair. I think you are missing the point of what KingAlfred is saying. From his quote:

My point was that their political beliefs can be supported by the official teachings of the Catholic Church, in the context of personal interpretation.

You and your opponents both believe what the official teachings are but you don’t agree exactly on what those teachings are saying.

Whether you like it or not the church’s stance on abortion and the death penalty are not exactly the same.
 
Be fair. I think you are missing the point of what KingAlfred is saying. From his quote:

My point was that their political beliefs can be supported by the official teachings of the Catholic Church, in the context of personal interpretation.

You and your opponents both believe what the official teachings are but you don’t agree exactly on what those teachings are saying.
There seems to be some serious confusion on both your parts. Us and them is an important part of conservative ideology, not mine.

Also, we are not discussing a case of ‘my’ understanding vs. ‘your’ understanding. We are talking about Rome’s position vs. someone elses position. As a Catholic, it’s a no brainer. The Pope is not a moral peer, he is the legitimate Vicar of Christ, infallibly appointed.

As the Catechism and the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church both note, I am obligated to show appropriate deference and submission of mind and will even when he “is not speaking ex cathedra” (infallibly).

The idea that Christian teaching or Catholic doctrine are just matters of personal interpretation, and that there is no higher earthly moral authority, are purely Protestant concepts. We live in a Protestant nation, with deep historical Protestant roots, so some errosion in understanding is natural. But even though we are not as openly treated as an unwelcome minority as, say, 40-50 years ago, it is still a fundemental difference. One either accepts the apostolic nature of the Church, or one does not.
Whether you like it or not the church’s stance on abortion and the death penalty are not exactly the same.
This comment is revealing in a couple of ways. One thing I have noticed about modern US conservatism is that there isn’t even the pretense of accepting nuances in points of view. I am not in lockstep with, say, the ‘dittohead dance’, so I am immediately assigned a bunch of views which I have never expressed or commented on.

Straw men are a convenient mechanism when one is both attempting to propogate fearfulness and ignorance at the same time instilling a sense of moral superiority, but they are a Christian disgrace in the real world. All mankind are fellow Children of God, all are imperfect in their emulation of Christ, and few are as stereotypically shallow as the dehumanizing characture used in modern propaganda.

But aside from insisting in debating points of view I don’t have, it shows a remarkable lack of understanding about the Catholic faith as a whole.

Our teachings on abortion and the death penalty do have some differences. Abortion is held to be a moral absolute, without exception, the death penalty is not. Further, our current understanding of abortion has been asserted to be infallible via the infallibility of the Church (universal agreement of the ordinary Magesterium). Our current understanding on the death penalty is an important teaching (it appears in the same Encyclical and is declared to be a related teaching, also appears in the Catechism, and has received intense attention from the Pontiff and the Bishops), but not asserted to be infallible.

If one wanted to say, rationalize non-Catholic positions, a common tactice is to argue that one teaching trumps others (because it is infallible) and also erroding the authority of the Magesterium on the so called ‘lesser’ beliefs. But, while this may have the appeal of letting someone hold onto beliefs that they wish while giving lip service to the Faith, it is illogical.

While the teachings are not exactly the same, they have a lot more in common than they do differences. For example:
  • The Church’s position on both abortion and the death penalty have evolved with the passage of time. In both cases, the underlying principles have not changed, but understanding and proper applications have.
If one relies on primarily evangelical protestant sources for ‘knowledge’, this first one can be shocking, but it is indisputably part of written Church history. Arguing otherwise, in the face of Papal statements and written catechisms, just makes one look stupid. We can cover it in detail, but one obvious difference is abortion for the sake of maternal health. This was morally obligated in the Halacha (Jewish law) at the time of Jesus.

Tertullian, whose writings on abortion most resemble our modern position, argued that such abortions were a “necessary cruelty”, inaraguable just. Dispensations for such abortions can be found through Church history, and the Church officially declined to take a position on the matter as recently as 1869. Our current ban dates only from the 1880s. A century later, it is held to be infallibly true. If one were to use your reasoning, then it is just a matter of interpretation… Which leads to the next important point:
  • Both teachings rely almost exclussively on the authority of the Magesterium.
In EVANGELIUM VITAE, Pope John Paul clearly noted that we do not have guidance on abortion in Holy Scripture. And, demonstrably, our exact understanding of all applications of the practice has changed over Church history. But, being blessed with a living Magesterium, we can be confident that we have arrived at the just and proper application of both teachings with the fullness of time.

In this particular case, the teachings are even more closely related, since the Church ties them to the Second Vatican Council’s declarations of the inalienable rights of the human person - that is, both are manifestations of the same core teaching. But even if they did not, the authority that gives them weight is the same, the Magesterium. So, if you dismiss the authority of the Mother Church on one, you erode the authority of the other. This is a problem with such moral relativism and cafeteria Catholicism, picking and choosing presumes both that the indivdial moral conscience is equivelent to the infallible moral authority of the Church, and that teachings are discreet and seperate things.

The Catechism specifically notes that we must always be aware of the possible error of our own, individual, moral conscience, and Rome has noted that teachings in isolation is “incoherent”:
“The Christian faith is an integral unity, and thus it is incoherent to isolate some particular element to the detriment of the whole of Catholic doctrine. A political commitment to a single isolated aspect of the Church’s social doctrine does not exhaust one’s responsibility towards the common good. Nor can a Catholic think of delegating his Christian responsibility to others; rather, the Gospel of Jesus Christ gives him this task, so that the truth about man and the world might be proclaimed and put into action.”
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html

Not only is the concept of picking and choosing only “infallible” teachings incoherent, it is inevitably inconsistant. Consider Pope John Paul II’s instructions to the Lay Faithful in CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI on the “right to life”. Folks often quote the 2nd paragraph from #38, but the first and 3rd get overlooked:
“The Church has never yielded in the face of all the violations that the right to life of every human being has received, and continues to receive, both from individuals and from those in authority. The human being is entitled to such rights, in every phase of development, from conception until natural death; and in every condition, whether healthy or sick, whole or handicapped, rich or poor. The Second Vatican Council openly proclaimed: <<All offences against life itself, such as every kind of murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia and willful suicide; all violations of the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, physical and mental torture, undue psychological pressures; all offences against human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women and children, degrading working conditions where men are treated as mere tools for profit rather than free and responsible persons; all these and the like are certainly criminal: they poison human society; and they do more harm to those who practice them than those who suffer from the injury. Moreover, they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator>>” - CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/apost_exhortations/documents/hf_jp-ii_exh_30121988_christifideles-laici_en.html

The Pope is directly quoting the Pastoral Constitution of the Church, from the Second Vatican Council. Such a declaration is the Church acting in its most infallible form. So, if you are at odds with Rome on, say, torture of prisoners, you are at odds with infallible Dogma of the Faith. Which leads to the last similarity:

[cont]
 
[cont.]
  • Both teachings are directly attached and eroded by modern US political conservatism.
The death penalty is obvious, it is directly endorsed and embraced - even though the Magesterium, the the Catechism that is applicable to US Catholics, declares that expansion of the death penalty is a causal factor in a culture of death and results in more abortion and euthanasia.

But abortion, too, is attacked. Remember, abortion is an absolute. A reflection of a fundemental expression of inalienable rights which no person or state can abridge. Yet, while thumping their chests about how important abortion is, they routinely compromise on the Church’s position and political support candidates whose positions are, in Catholic terms, intrinsically evil. They justify this as selecting a ‘lesser of two evils’, but you will not find this concept in the Vatican’s documents on voting, and only narrowly expressed in the USCCBs.

The reality is that the supposed “pro life” party not only is dominated with a caucus that embraces some legalized abortion, it is the party most responsible for the existance of Roe and its continuation as US law. Look at the milestones, Roe, Casey, and even the recent Carhart. In all cases, the court was dominated by a GOP appointed majority (in one case, 8 of 9, most recently, 5 of 9 are GOP appointed Catholics).

People say they compromise on abortion to make progress, but what progress? Abortions dropped more sharply under Clinton than under Bush. Abortion ‘friendly’ states like Oregon and California have done better than the national average in reducing abortion rates. Not only is there no tangible progress for such “pragmatism”, the process itself is theologically suspect. Think about it:

‘I can’t follow God’s law, the true natural law, because no good will flow. I have to follow a human construct, oriented towards earthly power, and compromise with evil, because that is the only way to get things done…’

That is idolatry. ‘God helps those who help themselves’ is Ben Franklin, not the Bible. We are supposed to do what is right, not what is expedient. It is called Faith…
 
SoCalRC, I said this:

Whether you like it or not the church’s stance on abortion and the death penalty are not exactly the same.

Then you spent two pages explaining all sorts of stuff to me and telling me I was wrong and in it you said this:

Our teachings on abortion and the death penalty do have some differences. Abortion is held to be a moral absolute, without exception, the death penalty is not. Further, our current understanding of abortion has been asserted to be infallible via the infallibility of the Church (universal agreement of the ordinary Magesterium). Our current understanding on the death penalty is an important teaching (it appears in the same Encyclical and is declared to be a related teaching, also appears in the Catechism, and has received intense attention from the Pontiff and the Bishops), but not asserted to be infallible.

:confused: :confused: Exactly the point I was trying to make. Forgive me, I skimmed the rest of your post. I didn’t know where all that was coming from. 🤷 Surely, my comment didn’t set ALL that off?

If one relies on primarily evangelical protestant sources for ‘knowledge’, this first one can be shocking, but it is indisputably part of written Church history.

You seem to think that I am relying on evangelical protestant sources…😛

That is idolatry. ‘God helps those who help themselves’ is Ben Franklin, not the Bible. We are supposed to do what is right, not what is expedient. It is called Faith.

Where is this coming from???
 
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