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But for all practical purposes, it’s the position of many Catholics and is tolerated: I mean no one gets excommunicated from the Catholic Church because they support gay marriage, right? How can you say it’s “not acceptable” when it’s accepted?
- Excommunication is usually a private action. Certain actions cause you to be in a state of excommunication. Even if a bishop does excommunicate you directly, that is normally confidential. I have no idea how many people are excommunicated, or go through lifting that step, through confession. It is a rare step for medicinal purposes, not penal; it is designed for that particular soul, to change.
- One could argue that “for all practical purposes” 100% of Catholics and Protestants have not begun to “take up their cross” and live totally for God. Would you therefore conclude all churches should disband and all bibles tossed in recycling? Of course not. The reality is that people who read the Bible are also subject to enormous secular pressures, especially from the media. That does not eliminate the value of the Bible. Or the Magisterium.
- People with wrong views, and wrong actions, have been “accepted” by the Catholic Church for 2000 years. If you are not a sinner, the Church is not for you. But people with some false ideas - other words, all of us - get clarity of ****truth ****through the Magisterium. The Magisterium is like a fixed lighthouse, on land. The reliability of its light is not affected by popularity. I, personally, want to be a saint, so I watch the lighthouse (along with Scripture and Tradition). Many Protestant individuals and denominations also are guided somewhat by that Magisterium landmark. They may not want to be exactly Catholic, but they set their course in relation to that landmark. The Magisterium sets the standard for “Christian orthodoxy”.