The submission to authority to which you are unused seems to be a persistent impediment.
On the other hand, submission to earthly authority may not help save the planet; submission to a divine authority is another matter. Do you mean that if I were less obstinate and confrontational I would be hurt less; if I accepted humbly and graciously what I am told I would find a home in RCC? Or what?
Perhaps it is time to work on submission, rather than exploitation?
This sounds easy, perhaps trite. I am exploiting your patience, your knowledge, your time, your faith. I may grow in wisdom and understanding, I may learn what I need to learn. Would it be the same if I were utterly submissive to you, to the Church?
…I think folks consider you are trying to convert them to your religion [when you say] what you think “we” need to do.
Eish! is it not evident I have nothing to convert people to? What is ‘my religion’? A personal intimacy with Christ informed and enriched by engaging with faiths and people. Sounds like I am plotting a coup.
Google and Wikipedia do not meet my standards for theological veracity.
Absolutely, but if you are in a hurry then you pick the closest resource eg Google Catholic Encyc. If you want ‘theological veracity’, then you need to close the Forum. It troubles me that we are all (exceptions?) effectively undereducated on the matter being discussed here, and rely on opinions and best guesses for the most part.
What puzzles me is that you don’t consider Peter and Paul as authoritative with regard to the credibility of the person of Noah!
Poor old Noah. I am sorry Guan, but I have said my say earlier. I put him in the same bag as Isaiah, who, famous as ‘he’ is, was 3 people. (I learned this at Church and in RCIA.)
I think this must be an example of what others consider proselytizing. You are saying “we need” to…
If the majority of others are happy to believe that there is one true church, and that that Church is the Catholic Church, then that should end of this discussion. There may be people out there who see ‘needs’ in terms of unity in Christendom, but they are being pretty silent. So shall we just close down?
It is as though you think our understandings of God’s intentions are stale, and need refreshing within our historical, social, and economic context. In a way, it seems to imply Catholic doctrine is not in step with the times.
I think the understanding of some Catholic Christians is behind the times, but that is true of many others globally. Keating has referred to a meeting of liberal Catholics (e-letter ‘projects’) and proposals to liberalise this Church. I believe they are looking at reality through their own experience and their understanding of God’s will, rather than the rose-tinted spectacles of sentimental Christianity. This is a hard world. (Sorry if I have offended, but I needed to use the word ‘sentimental’ because it applies to many things said on the Forum.) I also see in the Dogmatic Constitution Vatican II things that are opposite of what believers on this site have served up as Absolute Truth. The third source of evidence is the Vatican’s book on *How to Read the Bible *- see my bibliography (#499 ff), and quote. All indicate there is - certainly in the Vatican, as well as among laiety - a distinct movement in the Church towards a more liberal approach to doctrine, dogma and practice particularly in Latin America, Africa and Asia. And Catholics are voting with their feet if 85% of Catholic Americans confessed they use artificial contraception, and if only 5% of Quebec Catholics attend Church on a steady basis although 85% claim to be Catholic (Binney).
Catholic teaching is that when people are left to themselves, we are fallen creatures, and make terrrible messes of His creation and plans.
If the Church is teaching you that you should not esteem yourself, that you - as God’s Beloved - are frail and unreliable, that you are generally incapable of not messing up, then there a lot of traumatised Catholics. You are God’s child. You have in you a spark of the divine. God have given us each prerogatives and responsibilities, and He assumes we will carry out our obligations using the talents He has given us. Yes, if we work
without Him, we may mess up worse than we would have otherwise. And perhaps, if we work with the guidance of the Catholic Church we might do better. But it is God that counts - and your relationship with Him.
You need perhaps to clarify what you mean by ‘when people are left to themselves’: by God? or by the Catholic Church? Please.