E
Efrain
Guest
Quite honestly Keating is not the authority of the Church, so it is not wise to take a lay person’s information as concrete.And it seems possible that this Forum (viz Keating’s letter on liberal recommendations) is trying very hard to keep anything new from happening. Does this mean that we must all remain in a fundamentalist, conservative paradigm forever, all our lives? Or can we follow the Church’s teaching (*The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church, *1993) and find some wiggle room which would bring us more into line with social and political contexts, 2000 years after Christ made his sacrifice for us. If we did this, would you designate us heretics?
Who, within the Catholic Church, are defined as heretics, in your opinion?
All I can say about politics is that the state should listen to people and the people to the Church. Conservative, fundametalist, liberal etc. are too vague for us to be grouped as. If you ask me personally I feel we should be more progresive in the sense of repairing the damage done in our society by secularism and materialism. The Truth remains unchanged and unmovable for all eternity and the Church who safe guards theTruth, should not bend over backwards to appease “society”. Finding wiggle room in the teachings of the Church is exactly what happened with the Reformation. Wiggle room to me is “own interpretation to justify my own beliefs” these beliefs one may have do not always coincide with the teachings of Christ but instead gives us self justification and leads us to believe that our truth is real Truth. This is quite dangerous if you ask me.
Who I feel is defined as a heretic in the Church is anyone with authority, a deacon or higher, who does not follow the Magesterium to the fullest. It is not up to me to decide who is since I do not have that authority. All I can do is discern the spirit and see the fruit produced if any from an individual.