T
tuopaolo
Guest
This is a tough question.The latter. The announcement itself has been infallibly declaired to be true, and it occures just when it has been infallibly predicted to occur, by the person who has been infallibly designated to make it (the Pope, though it could be anyone of course). Furthermore, it had been infallibly declaired that the meaning of the anouncement won’t be symbolic. It will have a common-sense meaning that should be taken at face value, a message directly from Christ to the people of the Catholic Church (Perhaps the Pope will deliver it sucessivly in all the languages and dialects on Earth, and in each language it will have the same common-sense meaning.)
Michael
The answer for me would be that I would remain Christian, take my ecclesiology to prayer, and go from there.
I’d like to make a philosophical point that relates to all this.
It is logically possible for Catholicism to not be true in the sense that it not being true does not result in a logical contradiction.
It is also metaphysically possible for Catholicism to not be true in the sense that God could have created a world in which Catholicism were not true (He was free to create a world in which there was no Incarnation or even to not create a world at all).
However that does NOT mean that it is epistemologically possible for Catholicism to not be true. Since I happen to know that Catholicism is true, it is epistemologically impossible for Catholicism to not be true.
In other words, given what I know to be true, it is impossible for Catholicism to not be true. Thus, given what I know to be true, it is impossible for a situation like your example – or any other example including dying and going to heaven and seeing God face to face and having Him tell you that Catholicism is not true – to ever arise.
I hope that makes some sense