B
Brendan_64
Guest
Yet it forms part of the current Catechism of our Church. It **is **to be taken at face value. What is written in Nostra Aetate is Truth, and is part of the authoritative and bind teachings of our Church. It **has **to be accepted as it is written. It is not just authoritative as a means to counter balance poor historical relations with Muslims, it is authoritative in itself, completely and exactly as it is written.Nostra Aetate is written in the context of re-approaching relations with muslims after a 1,300 year history of bloody conflict between our two peoples. It was written with an intent to counter balance a history of falling into error #1 above. For that purpose, it is entirely correct and authoritative (“no buts” as you noted). It was never intended to be used for syncretistic arguments that erroneously grant too much legitimacy to Islam as a religious belief in comparison to Christianity.
I have never said on this thread (or elsewhere) that Islam is a religious belief that is without error or with the same status as Christianity, but Muslims do worship the same God as Christians do. Some Catholics need to stop skirting around the issue and accept that fact (uncomfortable as it might feel to them) because that is the teaching of our Church and we are bound by it.