What the English bishop is saying about Humanae Vitae is the same thing as the Prefect for the Congregation on the Faith. It is not infallible dogma. He does not encourage dissent. I don’t see that coming through in the interview, unless there is something missing from the interview.
JR
I don’t know how you can say that. Here is the interview of what he actually said
Emphasis mine]
Time to move on to something else. It is 40 years since Humanae Vitae. It became acceptable, I suggested, for many otherwise loyal Catholics to routinely disobey a key teaching of the Church.
"Well, first of all, I would disagree that it’s a key teaching.
[It is a key teaching if its something that can wind a soul(s) into Hell.] The key teachings of the Church are in the Creed. It’s not a life issue**[What?!! Ever heard of an abortificent!!]
." To do with the transmission of life, then? “It’s to do with what family and married life means, being open to procreation. So it’s not a life issue because then you tie it in with abortion. The two are completely different issues.”[See above]**
Does it matter if people disobey that teaching?
"In the great scheme of things I don’t think it’s high up the list. It became a very public issue which affected a significant number of people, not the majority of Catholics. The majority of Catholics are not in that position, where birth control is an issue. Look around on Sunday morning and see ‘is birth control an issue for most people here?’ No, it’s not.
First off notice how he doesn’t answer the question which is so typical of dissenters, except in this case for a Bishop is scandalous and disgusting. But to an extent his answer is right in the sense that its not high up on the list and that is because of the utter abject failure of our clergy to teach about the evils of artificial birth control.
But it became the place where the tug of war took place: it was to do with dissent and obedience. Can you be a Catholic and dissent?"
He thinks there should be greater emphasis on the virtues. “Why do people never go back to the Beatitudes, ‘blessed are the poor in spirit’? You know, are you poor in spirit? No. Does that bother you? No. Do you practise birth control? Does that bother you? Yes. We’ve got a very distorted view of what we think Christian morality is.”
[Again an evasive answer and not directly answering the question.]
The Church has attempted to codify every detail of our behaviour hasn’t it? “Yes, but it rarely in tradition has attempted to codify charity, for instance. Again the basic commandment of God - love God, love your neighbour. That has been left largely unexplored.”
Codify charity? “You can’t quantify love. The birth control issue becomes easy because it’s measurable. You do it or you don’t. But love: you do it or you don’t do it, how can you measure that? We fight the easy battles but we ignore the bigger ones.”
Was Humanae Vitae a mistake? “I don’t know. I don’t know. **[You don’t know? Wow so sad.]**But at the same time we’ve seen the disastrous effects of the devaluing of sexual relationships, to say they don’t mean anything, which has had catastrophic effects on society, catastrophic effects on the value of women.”
He disagrees with environmentalists who attack the Church’s teaching on birth control.
“You get people like George Monbiot saying: ‘If the Pope changes his position tomorrow, the world would be rid of the scourge of Aids.’ He’s talking nonsense. Because, first of all, what percentage of the developing world is Catholic? The biggest growth in population is among Islam, not among Catholics. The Church isn’t encouraging people to have children, it’s the culture. That’s not why they’re having large families, because the Church is teaching it.”
[Absolutely true]
But is the teaching itself wrong? “It could be. It’s not an infallible teaching.
[So the litmus test of a teaching is if its infallible?] Clearly the basic Creed formula, what the Church teaches about the sacraments is infallible but there’s only been one strictly infallible statement.”
So in a sense it’s a matter of opinion? “Well, it’s… It is.
[So a Papal encyclical is an opinion. Church teaching is an opinion. Time to go back to the Seminary Bishop.] It’s an expression, however, of something quite profoundly important about human sexuality and relationships. If you really love your fellow human being then you’ll have profound respect for them and that has clearly disappeared from large sections of our contemporary society.”
[And you don’t think that the Pill has caused that?]