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Alex337
Guest
Everyone interprets what he meant.
It seems strange that if such evidence exists years later that it was not apparent to the Priest at the time of the marriage. Is there no screening and questioning done by the Priest to determine the validity of the couple. ?I suppose, with evidence that an abuser believed violence is justified before or at the time of marriage vows, then you may have grounds for a decree of nullity.
That much I can agree with about. That would mean the abuser rejected the Spirit of Christ even at the hour of their vows. That means Christian marriage was never conferred.
That is why it is important to hold to the Apostolic Teaching: Oral and Written Tradition. The Church Founded by Christ is the Deposit of Truth–when people interpret Scriptures on their own they circumvent Christ.Everyone who reads what is written interprets what is meant.
Feelings are not the best criteria to use for Truth.I’ve never felt closer to God.
Wanting to engage in activity that is against what is taught. Most Catholics leave for reasons that originate below the waist.I have great difficulty seeing why anyone would leave their church if he is 100% aware and convinced it is the True Faith.
This is moral relativism. Jesus says He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. I agree that there are different ways of understanding the omnipotent, but that does not mean the Truth/Teachings change!Teachings will differ from church to church, and that’s okay; they are just different ways of understanding the omnipotent.
Perhaps, but Jesus came to show us the One Way that is most effective. There is no other name under heaven by which we may be saved. And His teachings to no “vary”.I think there are infinite ways to understand God.
It sounds like your “faith” is based upon your own experiences and perception.For me that is a faith in the divine, and how that is understood is different for each person.
There are plenty, but they vary from one ecclesial community to the next.I think you have a valid point here. Really, what teachings of Jesus do the P’s have that oppose the C’s? The problem is when we insist that our own understanding of a Teaching is the only viable understanding.
My reference was to the “actual teachings of Christ Himself” as recorded in the Bible.Alex337:![]()
This is moral relativism. Jesus says He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. I agree that there are different ways of understanding the omnipotent, but that does not mean the Truth/Teachings change!Teachings will differ from church to church, and that’s okay; they are just different ways of understanding the omnipotent.
Perhaps, but Jesus came to show us the One Way that is most effective. There is no other name under heaven by which we may be saved. And His teachings to no “vary”.I think there are infinite ways to understand God.
It sounds like your “faith” is based upon your own experiences and perception.For me that is a faith in the divine, and how that is understood is different for each person.
There are plenty, but they vary from one ecclesial community to the next.I think you have a valid point here. Really, what teachings of Jesus do the P’s have that oppose the C’s? The problem is when we insist that our own understanding of a Teaching is the only viable understanding.
I agree with you, we have more in common than we have differences.
It is not “our own understanding” so much as an obligation to retain and preserve what has been passed down to us from the Apostles. We are not at liberty to replace these Teachings with “a different gospel”.
I learn something new here everyday! I did not know that some Quakers were not Christian, and that some Quakers supported same sex unions while others did not.Yeah, I know, but I think I mentioned that not every Quaker is Christian?
No one is immoral for wanting a divorce. I don’t doubt that every married person may think about it at least once.Did you just state that having a violent and abusive spouse means you’re immoral for wanting a divorce? That both are at fault? Really?