T
TheAdvocate
Guest
The Church document Dignitatis Humanae was and remains to this day a controversial document of Vatican II. My question is, Does this reflect a change in Catholic teaching? I mean before, people who believed freely were often punished, even killed. There were inquisitions, and certain countries were considered officially Catholic. And previous popes such as Pius IX and Leo XIII had spoken against religious freedom (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dignitatis_humanae sorry, Wiki is the best I can do for now for a source)
And if you believe that it is NOT a change in Catholic teaching, then how is it consistent with previous Catholic teaching?
And if you believe that it is NOT a change in Catholic teaching, then how is it consistent with previous Catholic teaching?