IsaacSheen:
So we don’t have to do anything? Christ doesn’t ask us to defend our faith in any way, shape, or form?
Find me a quote in the New Testament where Christ asks us to defend the Faith with violence. I do remember something about turn the other cheek, though. Look, the point is that we are called not to limit violence with equal violence (“eye for an eye”), but to limit it with a disproportionate lack of violence (“turn the other cheek”). That is the whole basis for the Church’s just war doctrine–we have to be as sure as possible that the evils produced by aggressor enemies, after ALL avenues have been exhausted, will still be greater than the evils necessarily produced by wars. People on these threads love to cite Canon Law and the Catechism when it comes to ordaining women and the like, but they sure don’t seem to care much for other doctrines such as the just war doctrine.
IsaacSheen:
And let me ask you this, you say some Christians would have been killed. Is that ok? Sit back, watch them die? I understand the Lord wouldn’t be violent and would die for ultimate love but not everyone is called to follow this example are they? I honestly don’t know. Someone please inform me.
No, it’s not “OK”, but neither is it necessarily OK tio commit acts of violence to prevent this from happening. And yes, we ARE called to follow Christ’s example–just look at all the wonderful examples of martyrs in the early church (and the tradition even continues to the moder day). Now, we as humans are weak, and it is understandable that we often fall short of Christ’s example, but you are treading on dangerous ground if you say that the laws of the New Testament (or of the Church, for that matter) don’t really apply to us and that only Jesus could be expected to follow His teachings.
IsaacSheen:
And what about people who do not want to die but cannot defend themselves. Do we tell them “tough luck, sorry”?
Again, see the just war doctrine in the CCC. This is a horrible situation, but we must weigh very carefull commitingt sin in order to avaoid sin. How about this analogy–should we give condoms to African Catholics so that they don’t get AIDS? I mean, come on, only Jesus could really be expected to live without having sex, we can’t be expected to do the same. And isn’t better to give out condoms rather than tell these poor slobs “tough luck”, you just have to get AIDS and die. No–the Church rejects the entire system as disordered and sinful, and argues that you cannot generally fix sin with sin.
IsaacSheen:
Would you shrug your shoulders at Muslims sacking and destroying the Vatican today? Would you not life a finger if they came in and killed the Pope and every Cardinal and priest that they could find? If Muslims were landing on our shores right now and killing everyone in their paths, would you just let them in?
I would not shrug my shoulders, nor would it be OK if the Muslims came here and “killed everyone”–that is an unfair rhetorical ploy you are using. But the question is, what is the proper response to such behavior? The Church does not PRECLUDE war, but it cautions that this should only be the last resort, and only then should it prosecuted within strict parameters.
As for the Vatican being sacked–it’s happened before and may even happen again; and violence against the Pope has happened before. These were acts of great evil, but you know what? The church survived (just as Christ promised), and it would have been wrong to reposnd to such acts of barbarism with equivelant acts of barbarism.
IsaacSheen:
Please understand, I trust in Christ and everything he said/says. I feel the way you do. If my family, friends and whoever were not threatened and only I would have to die, I would gladly accept it, I’m with you on that one. I just wonder, if a person is going to kill a child and I do nothing but watch when I could have stopped it. Am I in the right?
Another rhetorical ploy. Yes, you should stop someone from killing a child–by grabbing his arm and taking his knife, or by stepping in front of the bullet, or by calling the police, or by reasoning with the potential killer, or by bribing him. But I’m not clear it is right to slit his throat to protect the child. At best this is a morally ambiguous circumstance.
Con’t