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Walt_Oliver
Guest
Final warning: If you folks can’t disagree without taking potshots at each other, I will be forced to close the thread and suspend a few posters. In other words, be nice…or else!!
Walt
Walt
I can’t say I was impressed with them placing Detroit in IllinoisBecause it’s Lifesite News that’s reporting…
%between%DETROIT, Illinois, January 26, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, who is known as an activist for homosexuality in the Church, has handed in his resignation to the Vatican. Pope Benedict XVI is expected to announce the resignation today.
And I would disagree…anyone who hasn’t had a chance to be proud of a bishop like gumbleton, has not had a chance to see what the Catholic faith could be in its fullness.Consider yourself spared!
“Fullness” is taking it a bit too far. I will agree that he has his good traits…but vehemently disagree that he embodies the Catholic ideal.And I would disagree…anyone who hasn’t had a chance to be proud of a bishop like gumbleton, has not had a chance to see what the Catholic faith could be in its fullness.
msproule said:“Fullness” is taking it a bit too far. I will agree that he has his good traits…but vehemently disagree that he embodies the Catholic ideal.
:ehh:
That would certainly bring us closer :yup: …but not all the way. :nope:If more bishops eschewed the trappings of power that seem to pervade their judgment…then yeah, I think we’d have an ideal church.
Perhaps not…one gets the feeling that the church on Earth will never quite be a finished product.That would certainly bring us closer :yup: …but not all the way. :nope:
Shown wrong where? The pope did not mention contraception either in the encyclical or at World Youth Day. The most you could come up with is that he rejects the use of condoms as a method of preventing the spread of Aids. The media also noted it was the first time he even mentioned contraception since becoming pope.Having been shown to be incorrect on this claim and guess, I am left wondering what other “facts” or “guesses” that you present will turn out to be baseless conjecture? …![]()
You are equating my happiness at seeing Gumbleton retire to a fundamentalist cheering Pope JPII’s death? Now that’s a reach.I think it is in particular bad taste and displays an unchristian spirit when people go around celebrating the retirement of a bishop for negative reasons and to further an agenda. It reminds me of some of the fundamentalists who sang for joy over the death of the pope (to them the antichrist).
Rather sweeping portrayal, and hugely inaccurate.If people cannot see any good in that man than I think it is hard to even call them Christian. True Christians see good and praise what is good in all creation. I recall the past pope even kissing a Qu’ran in praise of the partial truth it contains yet people here would rather burn Bishop Gumbleton in effige.
I second that. You can not even compare the two issues.You are equating my happiness at seeing Gumbleton retire to a fundamentalist cheering Pope JPII’s death? Now that’s a reach.![]()
Two good things you are right Sue.Rather sweeping portrayal, and hugely inaccurate.
Gumbleton Consecrated the Eucharist. That is always a good thing. There. I said something good about him. That, and the fact that he is retired.![]()
I think what good he can do is the question.You are equating my happiness at seeing Gumbleton retire to a fundamentalist cheering Pope JPII’s death? Now that’s a reach.
… come on Sue… ya gotta have a degree to make those comments.
Rather sweeping portrayal, and hugely inaccurate.
Gumbleton Consecrated the Eucharist. That is always a good thing. There. I said something good about him. That, and the fact that he is retired.![]()
Ooooh…impressive!I guess all that post-grad work in philosophy and theology was useless.
Thanks, msproule, well said!Ooooh…impressive!
:bowdown:
I know of some dissenting priests and theologians with such credentials. Modernist philosophy and theology are useless to faithful Catholics! In contrast, submission to the Magisterium and the Deposit of Faith are of great use.
Even a poorly-educated fool like myself can see that Pope Benedict XVI is giving us not-so-subtle hints about exercising our true freedom: “Know the Bible”, paraphrasing, of course, “Learn to pray in Latin”, “God is Love”, and here is his (indirect) condemnation of contraception: “There are only absolute, not relative, truths”.
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Modernist philosophy is not USELESS to Catholics, and once again your use of “faithful” concerns me, at no point did I see anyone in this thread say they weren’t “faithful”.Ooooh…impressive!
:bowdown:
I know of some dissenting priests and theologians with such credentials. Modernist philosophy and theology are useless to faithful Catholics! In contrast, submission to the Magisterium and the Deposit of Faith are of great use.
Even a poorly-educated fool like myself can see that Pope Benedict XVI is giving us not-so-subtle hints about exercising our true freedom: “Know the Bible”, paraphrasing, of course, “Learn to pray in Latin”, “God is Love”, and here is his (indirect) condemnation of contraception: “There are only absolute, not relative, truths”.
![]()
Probably the most beautiful thing I have seen written on this website (other than the occasional Chesterton quote).And to paraphrase from someone I respect…
A lot of humility and a lot of caution are necessary for us who believe in absolute truth. To say that we know that something is absolutely true is not to say that we have a complete and exhaustive understanding of that truth. It is crucial to hearing and spreading the gospel that we do not fall into absolutism: thinking that we’ve exhausted and “tamed” truth and stashed it safely in our back pocket. Such an attitude easily leads to a kind of intellectual fascism where we equate our particular perspective on a truth with the truth itself and try to force others to believe in our supposedly correct under-standing. Those who are absolutists run a great risk of denying themselves the deepening understanding of truth necessary for faithfulness in life’s ever-changing situations