B
Balance
Guest
another post - so much I disagree with you about! I’d love to sit down with you over a beer or a coffee and really chew this over! you sound thoughtful and intelligent - I think it’d be a good discussion. a fiery one too.The Doctors of the Church knew what sin was and treated it as such. They used harsh words at times because of the damage it had wrought among the faithful.
Boanerges
What do I disagree with here? that the Doctors’ language is what we should be using now. You have to remember that we live in a different age - 2000 years of human and Christian history has seen a development in thought, sociology, psychology, theology and so on.
(Let me clarify here - am I saying “times have changed, actually, you know, and homosexual relationships and acts are OK these days and we should realise that and get with it”? - NO! the Church’s teaching on this area of sexuallity is, of course, timeless. (And, just in case you were wondering, yes, I agree with that teaching - all of it).)
What I am saying is that in this day and age we need to talk about sin differently. Sin is still sin, our convictions about sin are still as strong as the Church Fathers’, but the world (and the Church at large) is not going to listen in the same way as 2000 years ago.
Perhaps I’m saying that there is simply no place, now, for harsh words - at least for unformed Catholics and people of no faith. I don’t mind harsh words myself because I’ve been walking with God a while and he and different mentors and friends and have had many harsh words with me so I can handle it.
But my friend A will just switch off when I try that with him - but when I talk not about apologetics or scriptural prohibitions or tough talking from Saints or deep theology but simply about love, and simply about God, he listens, and asks me questions, and nods, and laughs, and cries.