M
markomalley
Guest
Every time I log into Catholic Answers and look at the “Social Justice” forum, I log off with my head shaking vigorously.
The Church clearly teaches that socialism is evil. Yet you clearly advocate it. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church clearly teaches that homosexuality is gravely disordered. Yet you say that it is OK. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church clearly teaches that it cannot ordain women. Yet you say that it must do so.And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church condemns liberation theology. Yet you continue to push it. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church condemns abortion. Yet you continue to push for it. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
All of this leaves me confused. Not about what the Church teaches. Not about what I am supposed to believe. It leaves me confused about why these discussions are happening among people who supposedly call themselves “Catholic” on a message board sponsored by a “Catholic Apologetics” organization.
Now I could see if the discussions were between Catholics and Protestants or Catholics and agnostics or Catholics and Muslims or some other permutation. But I don’t comprehend the discussions going on among so-called Catholics.
This is not something that is unique to Catholic Answers Forums, either. I remember having to attend the Ash Wednesday Mass at another parish and hearing one of the parishioners offering up “May the Church see the Light and begin to ordain women” during the Prayer of the Faithful. And then hearing a solemn “Lord, hear our prayer” following it…along with no gasps from the crowd and no rebuke from the celebrant. Never mind the fact that +JPII stated that it’s not up to him, but that the Church cannot ordain women. Even this is not unique: there are an alphabet of dissenting groups out there. Dissent is commonplace in the Church…and I simply don’t understand it.
If I was in a group where the expressed values and norms of the group diverged from mine, I would find a group that more clearly reflected my values. I wouldn’t stick around. I’m not that masochistic. On the other hand, if I was convinced that this group knew more than I did, I might stick around, but I would work on understanding why the group held the beliefs it did, in an effort to get my understanding to line up with that group.
But neither approach seems to be the motivation of the dissenting Catholic. I simply don’t understand what the motivation is.
So the question for the group is: if you dissent from so many of the Church’s teachings, why do you stick around? Why don’t you find a group that actually agrees with you?
(And, as a sidebar, I would love to hear from one of the moderators why endless discussions are permitted on subjects where the Church has basically said the discussion is over. I don’t see how this advances Catholicism in any way)
One caveat: this is not to say that NO discussion should be allowed. There are plenty of issues where the Church has NOT said the discussion is closed: the Iraq war (different undestandings of just war are out there), Global Warming (is it or isn’t it and what is/isn’t our response), the Death Penalty (when, if ever) and so on. I’m not talking about those issues. I just wanted to clarify that point.
The Church clearly teaches that socialism is evil. Yet you clearly advocate it. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church clearly teaches that homosexuality is gravely disordered. Yet you say that it is OK. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church clearly teaches that it cannot ordain women. Yet you say that it must do so.And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church condemns liberation theology. Yet you continue to push it. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
The Church condemns abortion. Yet you continue to push for it. And then there are discussions on the subject. Endless discussions.
All of this leaves me confused. Not about what the Church teaches. Not about what I am supposed to believe. It leaves me confused about why these discussions are happening among people who supposedly call themselves “Catholic” on a message board sponsored by a “Catholic Apologetics” organization.
Now I could see if the discussions were between Catholics and Protestants or Catholics and agnostics or Catholics and Muslims or some other permutation. But I don’t comprehend the discussions going on among so-called Catholics.
This is not something that is unique to Catholic Answers Forums, either. I remember having to attend the Ash Wednesday Mass at another parish and hearing one of the parishioners offering up “May the Church see the Light and begin to ordain women” during the Prayer of the Faithful. And then hearing a solemn “Lord, hear our prayer” following it…along with no gasps from the crowd and no rebuke from the celebrant. Never mind the fact that +JPII stated that it’s not up to him, but that the Church cannot ordain women. Even this is not unique: there are an alphabet of dissenting groups out there. Dissent is commonplace in the Church…and I simply don’t understand it.
If I was in a group where the expressed values and norms of the group diverged from mine, I would find a group that more clearly reflected my values. I wouldn’t stick around. I’m not that masochistic. On the other hand, if I was convinced that this group knew more than I did, I might stick around, but I would work on understanding why the group held the beliefs it did, in an effort to get my understanding to line up with that group.
But neither approach seems to be the motivation of the dissenting Catholic. I simply don’t understand what the motivation is.
So the question for the group is: if you dissent from so many of the Church’s teachings, why do you stick around? Why don’t you find a group that actually agrees with you?
(And, as a sidebar, I would love to hear from one of the moderators why endless discussions are permitted on subjects where the Church has basically said the discussion is over. I don’t see how this advances Catholicism in any way)
One caveat: this is not to say that NO discussion should be allowed. There are plenty of issues where the Church has NOT said the discussion is closed: the Iraq war (different undestandings of just war are out there), Global Warming (is it or isn’t it and what is/isn’t our response), the Death Penalty (when, if ever) and so on. I’m not talking about those issues. I just wanted to clarify that point.