The Pope didn’t give bishops discretion in running their dioceses. The dioceses were just there and the bishops were their leaders, and when a crisis broke out that couldn’t be solved locally people looked to Rome to speak for the Church as a whole.
So, you’re saying that this was a situation that existed during the time of the Fathers?
Look at the whole “motu proprio” business. It shouldn’t be any of the Pope’s business what liturgy is celebrated in a local diocese as long as it’s not heretical.
OK, I am not familiar with that, I will look it up. I disagree that it isn’t “any of the Pope’s business” what liturgies are being celebrated, but it seems hardly possible that the Pope, or a legion of Popes, would be capable of paying attention to that much detail. There is a cardinal, an African, I can’t remember his name, who oversees liturgical matters. Liturgical abuse is well-known, and has been reported endlessly in various papers, especially the more rightwing papers, who particularly fear such things. Personally, I favor a relaxed approach, and think that people should be allowed to have the liturgies that appeal to their cultural needs, and I believe the Church is very flexible in this area, within limits.
This makes my point. (You are of course defining “serious Catholics” as those who think like you.) As I see it, the problem is not a liturgical free-for-all, but a boring conformity to a liturgy imposed by a bureaucratic committee.
Not at all, I’m defining “serious Catholics” as Catholics who take their religion seriously. Many don’t, as I’m sure you know. It has nothing to do with right or left. Somewhere between liturgical free-for-all and boring conformity is the right approach. We surely don’t want either. Both are a problem.
By expecting the Vatican to rush in and save you, you keep contributing to the atrophy of the local church.
I guess I’m not seeing any atrophy where I live, though I wouldn’t rule out that it is happening somewhere else. Where I live, the Catholic parishes are alive and growing fabulously. Our bishop runs the diocese, and I have never heard of any interference by Rome on any issue. As a general principle I totally agree that bishops should run their dioceses, but I do think they need to keep an eye on Rome for guidance. That’s why we have a Pope. That isn’t a weakness, it is a great strength.
That’s not the point. I’m not arguing that the doctrine is false or illegitimate, only that the body of beliefs professed by early Christians was not identical to the body of beliefs professed by modern Catholics (or any other kind of Christian, though the Orthodox probably come closest on the whole).
What specifically is different between now and then? I was under the impression that the kernals of the faith are expressed in the Nicene Creed, and this is very ancient. Has something changed in there between then and now? The Bible is more ancient than the creeds, and yet I don’t see anything in Catholic practice that is contrary to what I read in the NT.
Of course it was by 1854. Again, I’m not talking about that. I know that Popes don’t just get up one morning and define things because they feel like it! I’m talking about 100 or 200 or even 300, not 1800!
Well, I’m sure you know more about this subject than I do. About when did people, whether ordinary Catholics, or theologians, begin ruminating about the Immaculate Conception? Just as an example, I mean. This may be yet another instance of my ignorance.
No, I don’t think the monarchical centralization of recent centuries is necessary. Tempting, yes. I understand why Gregory VII started down that road. But the fact that something is helpful doesn’t make it right.
On the other hand, we believe that God is guiding our Church, and so far that has proven to be true. Nothing else compares to it! A reasonably strong central authority must be the main reason, and this must be from God. I wouldn’t argue that the centuries of Papal involvement in temporal affairs of gov’t were a good thing. They may have been necessary as Christianity stood in for disappearing Rome, but eventually corruption set in and caused scandal for the Church. That has all changed. Since the mid-19th century the Church has wielded no power over governments, had no armies.
Pope Benedict is moving in the right direction, while still taking strong stands. It can be done. The Church did it for a thousand years.
I agree! But, I thought you were saying that the Papacy was overgrown… Is Benedict dismantling the monarchical Papacy? What am I missing?