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EndTimes
Guest
Can you point us to a specific Scriptural and/or Magisterial Source - so as to back up your contention?I accept the authority of the Catholic Church on this.
Can you point us to a specific Scriptural and/or Magisterial Source - so as to back up your contention?I accept the authority of the Catholic Church on this.
Yes we do practically agree. The only thing I would take issue with is the interpretive lens that allows God’s nature to include commands to slay innocents, which I don’t think is your take, but is common among fundamentalists, and is scandalous to the faith.I’ve already answered this, and I doubt you and I are that far apart on this issue either. Of course I’m going to dispute someone saying God told them to kill an innocent. I don’t reject the idea that God can and will do so if necessary, but I reject almost any explanation they could give for why He would do so now.
Also, you seem to have slipped an extra element into your question. I don’t say that God can contradict His nature, I say that His nature includes His authority to end life (though not existence) and to command others to do the same.
We differ there.To clarify my position, I think He actually gave the command to slay Isaac. It fits too well as a prefigurement of the Crucifixion. I say that it is not inherently against His nature to order the death of an innocent, and even if the tale was written down differently than it actually happened the lessons in it are still applicable.
I think this also speaks to something very important about morality. There are things which are always inherently evil, there are things which are generally permissible, but there are also things which are evil for us and not for Him.
I don’t think you are necessarily. But I think the idolatry of scripture is closely bound up with this issue and is an issue that scandalizes many people out of the Church or away from it. That’s why I get wired up about trying to clarify the Church’s living teaching on this.I’m not taking scripture in isolation.
Could you shed light upon what you’re speaking of?I have always thought that the Jewish people just thought they were being told to kill the various groups they did in the Old Testament and not that God actually told them too. I really can’t accept a perspective that God really did tell them to kill entre groups of people. Can anyone shed light on this topic from a Catholic perspective?
I have also heard that the numbers of people the Jewish peoples killed were greatly exaggerated in some cases. Any light on that subject?
Absolutely not necessary to deny the passage. It is part of inspired scripture and conveys truth for our salvation.As I’ve personally seen someone (a mother) grapple with the Binding of Isaac, I can see the issue. That said, I don’t think it is a good idea to sideline the tale and the understanding that comes from it so that people aren’t scandalized.
We know the bread of life discourses drove people away from Christ. They still do. They are still important to understanding Christ.
People are scandalized because they are weak.But I think the idolatry of scripture is closely bound up with this issue and is an issue that scandalizes many people out of the Church or away from it
…and people misrepresnt the faith to them in some way.goout:![]()
People are scandalized because they are weak.But I think the idolatry of scripture is closely bound up with this issue and is an issue that scandalizes many people out of the Church or away from it
John 6 says otherwise. The people who were scandalized by Jesus’s words were weak in faith, One of them betrayed Him.The Church does not blame weakness for scandal.
Ahh… But of course it Matters…It doesn’t matter at this point.