S
St_Aloysius
Guest
The simple reason is that we humans aren’t naturally predisposed to belief in any one Church’s dogma.
A Catholic may be wholeheartedly devoted to his/her faith but still find the Church’s prohibitation of contraceptives a bit troubling at times in terms of practicality–even if he/she understands why the Church takes this position.
Likewise, a Catholic who is close to individuals experiencing SSA (like myself) may fully comprehend the rationale behind the Church’s position on homosexuality, but at the end of the day still feel a legitimate dissent.
A Catholic may be 100% pro-life but still feel some sympathy toward those in difficult positions (maternal endangerment, rape or incest, etc.) and even agree with certain aspects of the pro-choice movement–or may simply believe economic and societal change are the first steps toward eradicating abortion.
The fact is, if you find yourself wholly and totally in agreement with all Church teachings, I am forced to suspect either super-human faith (praise God!) or complacent self-deception. That’s not to say the Church is necessarily wrong–only that we by our various subjective dispositions are dissenters. It’s ingrained. We should never cease to question things and promote positive change.
Not all Catholics are super-orthodox, or even orthodox at all. Many are simple sinners that legitimately disagree in some areas and are striving to better align their consciences, as well as their actions, with God’s will.
Orthodoxy isn’t easy. Give people the benefit of the doubt, that they’re trying, really trying, for something worth trying for. Sympathize with what may be a weak faith or simply a strong and opinionated personality.
A Catholic may be wholeheartedly devoted to his/her faith but still find the Church’s prohibitation of contraceptives a bit troubling at times in terms of practicality–even if he/she understands why the Church takes this position.
Likewise, a Catholic who is close to individuals experiencing SSA (like myself) may fully comprehend the rationale behind the Church’s position on homosexuality, but at the end of the day still feel a legitimate dissent.
A Catholic may be 100% pro-life but still feel some sympathy toward those in difficult positions (maternal endangerment, rape or incest, etc.) and even agree with certain aspects of the pro-choice movement–or may simply believe economic and societal change are the first steps toward eradicating abortion.
The fact is, if you find yourself wholly and totally in agreement with all Church teachings, I am forced to suspect either super-human faith (praise God!) or complacent self-deception. That’s not to say the Church is necessarily wrong–only that we by our various subjective dispositions are dissenters. It’s ingrained. We should never cease to question things and promote positive change.
Not all Catholics are super-orthodox, or even orthodox at all. Many are simple sinners that legitimately disagree in some areas and are striving to better align their consciences, as well as their actions, with God’s will.
Orthodoxy isn’t easy. Give people the benefit of the doubt, that they’re trying, really trying, for something worth trying for. Sympathize with what may be a weak faith or simply a strong and opinionated personality.