Something along these lines. Thank you very much for your (name removed by moderator)ut.
No problem.
This quote from Vatican I makes me shiver.
Good. That was sort of the point (maybe?).

However, itās a lot less menacing if you consider that what itās essentially saying is, āIf you believe some things that contradict the faith, then you really donāt have the faith.ā People get really scared when they hear the word āAnathemaā and stuff ⦠but all that really means is that āyou arenāt a Catholic if you donāt believe in Catholicism.ā Itās showing what is required to believe if you wish to remain Catholic. Thatās really all itās saying. Still shivering?
Also, one may get a sense that this Vatican I excerpt is implying that you canāt believe in some part of reason if it contradicts faith. Thatās not what itās saying. What it is saying is, āYou canāt believe an opinion contradictory to the faith
claiming that it is a discovery of reason/science.ā The Church, even here, is assuming that faith and reason do not contradict each other. Letās review the quote again:
All faithful Christians are forbidden to defend as the legitimate conclusions of science those opinions which are known to be contrary to the doctrine of faith
So, if you look closely, they are not saying āforbidden to defend legitimate conclusions of scienceā but āforbidden to defend certain opinions as if they were legitimate conclusions of science.ā Big, huge difference.
The Church is also referring to many different issues at this time ⦠such as (my guess) the theory of evolution, which some scientists said was scientific proof against Christianity. The Church was not against evolution, it was against the illogical connection that evolution was somehow a disproof of Christianity.
Itās madness, isnāt it. Effectively, āIf science incontrivertibly proves something that doesnāt tally with what we, the church, say, you are forbidden to believe it. Anything that contradicts what we say - no matter what we say - is just plain wrong, period.ā
Once again, this is not what itās saying (see above). Also, once again, it is forbidding
Christians to believe
allegedly scientific proofs against Christianity ⦠because, of course, that means they donāt believe in Christianity. Itās kind of common sense. You see, some people believed that you could believe that reason contradicted Christianity ⦠but that you could still be Christian. However, the Church rejected this idea, reaffirming that faith and reason do not contradict each other. Is this clear to anyone?
Right you are. I am constantly amazed at the stubborn denial of facts, the distortions and contortions the apologists undertake.
Ouch. Well, some apologists probably do such stuff. I canāt deny that. Incompetent, dishonest, and illogical apologists are one of the worst things ever. However, you canāt deny that there are a lot of unbelieving scientists who do the same thing to try and discredit Christianity. In fact, most rants against Christianity Iāve read contain horrible contradictions that even a child could see. But whatever.
Hopefully, truth will out.
As a matter of fact, I sometimes present the same questions with āleadingā wording in two different ways, and grin, when the same people vigorously argue for and against the same question.
Yeah, Iāve done that a few times ⦠but I eventually figured it out. Weāre not perfect ⦠and sometimes weāre morons too.
(One example might be the concept of hell. The same people will argue that hell is a punishment - sometime even say that it is not a sufficient punishment, we deserve much worse - and that hell is not a punishment, it is the sign of Godās love and mercy. It is an eternal separation from God, yet God is omnipresent in hell. It seems that no amount of contradiction is unacceptable when faith is contradicted by reason.)
Yeah, this is a good question. It troubled me greatly. But hereās what I gathered (and much of this is thanks to St. Catherine of Genoa).
Godās Presence in Hell
God is present in hell insofar as He acts to maintain the existence of the souls in Hell. It is the doctrine of conservation that anything exists must be actively maintained in existence by God (things canāt exist completely apart from God in that way). God, however, is *not *present in Hell insofar as grace is concerned (and maybe for other reasons ⦠but this is probably the most important one). That is, the souls completely have no fulfilling knowledge of God, they have no hope of reaching God, and there is no meaningful love or interaction with God. Besides having existence, they really have no connection to God whatsoever.
Hell as Merciful
If one does not go to hell (eternal separation from God) then one ultimately goes to heaven. In heaven, by definition, you behold God Himself. However, (based on a vision of St. Catherine of Genoa) for a soul with sin on its soul, the soul would rather suffer an eternity of the fiercest kinds of hell than look on God unworthily ⦠it would pain the soul too much. There is some reasonableness to this. Surely, there are instances even in this life where one feels unworthy and undeserving of things (even if they are good things) and would thus rather not have them. God is goodness Himself, so Hell would naturally then be the place for such a soul to be. In that sense, then, Hell is merciful ⦠and would actually hurt less than being in heaven with sin. Some say that, because of this, Hell is not a Punishment ⦠because the alternative (being heaven with sin) is so much worse and more painful. Personally, I would simply say itās merciful punishment, but a punishment nonetheless.
Hell as Sufficient Punishment
If in fact we do reject God, who is an infinite being, goodness and love itself (etc), then we have committed an infinitely heinous act. No punishment is too great. In that sense, Hell is not sufficient. However, since it is God who has been offended, He gets to assign the punishment. He assigns a punishment of some limited degree of suffering ⦠though there is no limit to the amount of punishment instilled on Him since it was an infinitely heinous act. He would have had the right to increase the sufferings in hell, but He doesnāt ⦠out of mercy.
I hope Iām not in error with anything I said.