T
Thomas_White
Guest
The article argues that moral truth is found in the natural law and can be known by reason, and that this “simple truth” leads to profound conclusions about conscience–that is, conscience does not create its own truth. Primacy of conscience, therefore, makes no sense unless “conscience’s authority” is derived from a person’s responsibility to know and live in the truth of both divine and natural law. This is not the teaching of the catechism, where “conscience’s authority” is God’s law inscribed on the conscience.Yet one more article about conscience:
crisismagazine.com/2015/an-archbishop-and-the-catholic-conscience
The article next notes that the Catechism provides that “a good and true conscience is enlightened by true faith” (CCC 1794). It is explained that this is not a subjective faith in God’s law (what is inscribed on the conscience) but a faith in Church teaching (which is objective knowledge learned by reason). As objective knowledge becomes (inexplicably) a matter of faith, the argument concludes that conscience must obey Church teaching (objective knowledge that is knowable by reason). It is argued that a “true conscience” is enlightened by Church teaching and, again, not God’s law inscribed on it. This is said to concern the primacy of the objective knowledge of Church teaching and the articulate defense of the Apostolic teaching on faith and morals and its implications on man’s conscience. To fail to recognize this is to risk an “exultation of subjectivity over truth”, that is, truth is what is knowable objectively and not faith in God’s law inscribed on the conscience.
While faith in Church teaching is essential, it is not the same thing as the certain judgment of conscience. In this construct, the certain judgement of conscience that hears’s God’s law inscribed on it vanishes. While this theme has become common, it Is not the teaching of the catechism on conscience.