Eventually someones going to say it. ‘Hitler must be right because he followed his conscience’. It’s getting closer. I can feel it.
I wish everyone would just stop talking and read this article from Cardinal Ratzinger. It is really not this complicated. It is hard because we are trying to bend the principles to fit an assumed conclusion, so in effect we are discarding the principles, the teaching, the doctrine to fit our purposes. You simply can’t do that and end up with anything but chaos.
Could you explain what that means?
This is not accurate in that it overstates what has been imprinted on man. It is certainly not the law, if by that is meant the ability to know right from wrong in all cases. What we are imprinted with is a sense of right and wrong, that moral choices exist. *(St. Basil) **“We have received interiorly beforehand the capacity and disposition for observing all divine commandments … These are not something imposed from without.” Referring everything back to its simple core, Augustine adds: "We could never judge that one thing is better than another if a basic understanding of the good had not already been instilled in us.The Church teaches that God’s natural moral law is inscribed on the conscience. It is thus part of man’s nature to know right from wrong. In a particular instance, this is known by “listening” to the certain voice of the conscience.
Amen.You cannot claim that because the doctrines are being changed for only a small group it doesn’t constitute a doctrinal change. The same problems exist even if the change affected only one person. Either the doctrines mean what they say or they don’t. Finding a way around them is the equivalent of nullifying them.
Ender
Thanks for the laugh . As childish as it may sound I needed it ,my dad passed away in August and I have my ups and downs.Thanks for the link to the article. It looks good, so I think I’ll go and read it right now. :takeoff:
Bishop with a backbone? Just a guess.Could you explain what that means?
How weird. It looks and feels like a satanic symbol to me.Bishop with a backbone? Just a guess.
I’m just going to keep posting sections from the Ratzinger document since it seems so pertinent to everything being discussed.*What I was only dimly aware of in this conversation became glaringly clear a little later in a dispute among colleagues about the justifying power of the erroneous conscience. Objecting to this thesis, someone countered that if this were so then the Nazi SS would be justified and we should seek them in heaven since they carried out all their atrocities with fanatic conviction and complete certainty of conscience. Another responded with utmost assurance that of course this was indeed the case. There is no doubting the fact that Hitler and his accomplices who were deeply convinced of their cause, could not have acted otherwise. Therefore, the objective terribleness of their deeds notwithstanding, they acted morally, subjectively speaking. Since they followed their albeit mistaken consciences, one would have to recognize their conduct as moral and, as a result, should not doubt their eternal salvation. **Since that conversation, I knew with complete certainty that something was wrong with the theory of justifying power of the subjective conscience, that, in other words, a concept of conscience which leads to such conclusions must be false.Eventually someones going to say it. ‘Hitler must be right because he followed his conscience’. It’s getting closer. I can feel it.
Geez. A baby falling down is not a question of objective good/evil. It does not remotely compare with a moral question and how to handle it.Eventually someones going to say it. ‘Hitler must be right because he followed his conscience’. It’s getting closer. I can feel it.
From my point of view, it looks like you are trying to suppress the sentence…
"It is never wrong to follow the convictions one has arrived at—in fact, one must do so."
… because it gives licence to abuse it with subjectivity. By not affirming that sentence strongly, even though there is the fact that conscience can be in error… makes people vulnerable to evil. Cults are renowned for suppressing the primacy of conscience so they can have control over people for example. I think it was Peter Kreeft who made the analogy that conscience is like the capacity to walk. A baby is not punished every time it attempts to walk and falls over. Those attempts are recognised as important steps in the formation of confident mobility. If you tell a baby you can’t make any attempts until you are fully proficient at walking… well it’s obvious.
I agree with everything here except the part where you say “some people” (in this case, an Archbishop) are trying to blur the lines or saying the rules governing marriage/divorce are merely discipline. This of course, is just begging the question.Originally Posted by sarah j
The indissoluability of marriage is a doctrine of the Church.
Some people are trying to blur the lines and say that the rules governing marriage/divorce are
merely discipline and as such are open to change, but that is incorrect.
Marriage is a sacrament; marriage tribunals judge only whether a marriage actually took place…they
cannot dissolve a marriage.
" 1665 The remarriage of persons divorced from a living, lawful spouse contravenes the plan and law of God as taught by Christ. They are not separated from the Church, but they cannot receive Eucharistic communion. "
vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/p2s2c3a7.htm
I guess that is what passes as bumper sticker theology. Since the article only contains two quotes, there is insufficient substance to know the point.Could you explain what that means?
This reminds me of why I have you blocked. Ascribing false meaning to my argument is pretty dirty. I would never claim that subjective conscience has ‘justifying power’. That’s really very shameful of you.I’m just going to keep posting sections from the Ratzinger document since it seems so pertinent to everything being discussed.*What I was only dimly aware of in this conversation became glaringly clear a little later in a dispute among colleagues about the justifying power of the erroneous conscience. Objecting to this thesis, someone countered that if this were so then the Nazi SS would be justified and we should seek them in heaven since they carried out all their atrocities with fanatic conviction and complete certainty of conscience. Another responded with utmost assurance that of course this was indeed the case. There is no doubting the fact that Hitler and his accomplices who were deeply convinced of their cause, could not have acted otherwise. Therefore, the objective terribleness of their deeds notwithstanding, they acted morally, subjectively speaking. Since they followed their albeit mistaken consciences, one would have to recognize their conduct as moral and, as a result, should not doubt their eternal salvation. **Since that conversation, I knew with complete certainty that something was wrong with the theory of justifying power of the subjective conscience, that, in other words, a concept of conscience which leads to such conclusions must be false.
***Ender
+:compcoff:
The Holy Rule of Saint Benedict - Chapter 7
Of Humility
January 28 - May 29 - September 28
We are thus forbidden to do our own will, since the :bible1: **Scripture ** saith to us: **“And turn away from thy evil will” **(Sir 18:30). And thus, too, we ask God in prayer that **His **will may be done in us (cf Mt 6:10). We are, therefore, rightly taught not to do our own will, when we guard against what Scripture saith: “There are ways that to men seem right, the end whereof plungeth into the depths of hell” (Prov 16:25). And also when we are filled with dread at what is said of the negligent: **“They are corrupted and become abominable in their pleasure” **(Ps 13[14]:1).
But as regards desires of the flesh, let us believe that God is thus ever present to us, since the Prophet saith to the Lord: **“Before Thee is all my desire” **(Ps 37[38]:10).
Ora et Labora (Pray and Work)
*"Glory be to the Father . . .
and to the Son . . . and to the Holy Spirit . . .
as it was in the beginning . . . **is ***. . . now . . .
and ever shall be . . . world without end . . . Amen . . . "
:harp:
+
I hope you first explained to your spirituality group the difference between the ‘will’ and the ‘conscience’. You seem to be confusing the two by applying the rule to this discussion?Some time back I took a great group . . . day by day . . . through the wonderful St. Benedict’s Holy Rule in the Benedictine Spirituality Forum here on CAF . . . below is the Blessed St. Benedict’s take re sinful mankind’s depending upon “self” . . .
. . . all for Jesus+
. . . thank you Blessed St. Benedict+
. . . thank you Blessed Holy Mother Church+
My belief? The Church has always taught the primacy of reason. It is not God’s law inscribed on the conscience that could ever err. The judgment of conscience when made in accordance with (faulty) reason can err, but God’s law inscribed on the conscience cannot possibly, and what is necessary is the certain judgment of conscience. The Church does not say that the "conscience itself makes an ‘erroneous judgment’ " in accordance with divine law. Neither does Joseph Ratzinger. This is not possible.You believe our consciences are capable of discerning all moral truths, but the church has never taught this. If this was so she could not teach that the conscience can err, but she has unambiguously asserted the conscience is not inerrant. 1786 Faced with a moral choice, conscience can make either a right judgment in accordance with reason and the divine law or, on the contrary, an erroneous judgment that departs from them.
The church is not saying here that we may find ways to rationalize around our conscience, she is saying the conscience itself makes an “erroneous judgment.”
Ender
“And God created man to his own image: to the image of God he created him…” (Genesis 1:27)The fact that God gives us an innate human ability to do good and avoid evil simply means that he made us in conformity to human nature and in conformity to the real world.