How far can a liberal Catholic go and still be orthodox?

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Depends on what you mean by liberal. If your liberalism makes you, say, support things condemned by the Church such as SSM, abortion, ABC, or deny doctrines such as the Real Presence and the Trinity, you are probably not orthodox. If your liberalism does not lead to that, I say go for it, you’re probably orthodox.
 
There is no wiggle room on doctrine. As a Catholic in good standing with the Church you can not have views on contraception, abortion, marriage etc that deviate from the Church’s teaching
But wait a minute doesn’t that doctrine change? I mean already Pope Benedict had recently created some wiggle room for people in Africa on the issue of contraception. Who is to say that more wiggle room will be created to accomodate another group being affected by not being able to use contraception?
 
But wait a minute doesn’t that doctrine change? ** I mean already Pope Benedict had recently created some wiggle room for people in Africa on the issue of contraception.** Who is to say that more wiggle room will be created to accomodate another group being affected by not being able to use contraception?
I think you may have misunderstood what he said/wrote. Please reference your source.
 
As far as the teachings on contraception go they are not mere disciplines, but consistent magisterial teaching, dating back to the Didache of the 1st century i believe, and accordingly, whether you believe it or not, there is no wiggle room on them. Since that is the only concrete example you gave, it is the only one we can speak to.
So far nobody has answered my question, but only skirted around the issue. Maybe it is because there is no such wiggle room. I do not believe this. There are many things that the Church has no stance on. Some things are a matter of discipline. Maybe a liberal catholic would prefer priests to be able to marry. They respect the authority of the Church, but hope that this discipline might be changed in the future. If they hope that women can be priests then it is not liberal, but heterodox or heretical, etc. These were the kind of examples I was looking for.
Another example: In the past there were no female altar servers. Liberal catholics may have wanted female altar servers. Conservative catholics did not. Neither view was wrong.

Another example: Catholics may have different opinions on liturgical customs.

In the original post I explicitly stated that I was not talking about people who disagree with dogma or doctrine. I am not a liberal catholic but am trying to see things from their perspective. We are obviously not all robots who think 100% the same. The basics we must agree on to be orthodox–I am trying to find out where the points of disagreement may be.
 
Another example: In the past there were no female altar servers. Liberal catholics may have wanted female altar servers. Conservative catholics did not. Neither view was wrong.

Another example: Catholics may have different opinions on liturgical customs.

In the original post I explicitly stated that I was not talking about people who disagree with dogma or doctrine. I am not a liberal catholic but am trying to see things from their perspective. We are obviously not all robots who think 100% the same. The basics we must agree on to be orthodox–I am trying to find out where the points of disagreement may be.
There may be disagreements on matters of discipline and practice, never on matters of faith, morals, doctrine, or dogma.
 
I think our new Pope Francis is a good indication of what we ideally should be: personally conservative – living a chaste, simple, and spiritual life – but socially quite liberal in terms of doing good for others (and supporting gov programs that do good for others).

It’s very pitiful that in such a very rich country we cannot find it in our hearts to help others.
Socially, we are quite conservative in terms of doing good for others…

Not sure how that is a liberal thing, especially when statistics on charitibility don’t bear out liberals being more generous.

It is pitiful that we have people who don’t do more, but not just for the poor in money, but the poor in spirit too.

As a country, we flip God the middle finger and tolerate a redefinition of marriage (the oldest human relationship known to exist), we fight for the right to Eve’s descendants to kill their offspring, and we defend killing our elderly (who cared for us) when they become burdensome. And you are surprised we aren’t selfless with ourt prosperity?

The things I described are the height of a “me first” culture.
 
Another example: In the past there were no female altar servers. Liberal catholics may have wanted female altar servers. Conservative catholics did not. Neither view was wrong.

Another example: Catholics may have different opinions on liturgical customs.

In the original post I explicitly stated that I was not talking about people who disagree with dogma or doctrine. I am not a liberal catholic but am trying to see things from their perspective. We are obviously not all robots who think 100% the same. The basics we must agree on to be orthodox–I am trying to find out where the points of disagreement may be.
The reason why “liberals” want female altar servers is that that position is the entry path to a female priesthood. And by creating an artificial shortage of priests, the “liberals” hoped to increase the strength of the argument for ordination of women.

Catholic priests CAN be married … just not in the Roman/Latin rite. The other 22 rites or churches of the Catholic Church permit married priests.

So, maybe the thing to do, in order to answer the OP, is to refine the question.

Usually, when somebody asks “how liberal can you go”, they really mean contraception, abortion, divorce, same sex marriage, fornication, artificial insemination, infidelity, and full acceptance of homosexual sexual relations [see “After The Ball”, which is the battle plan of the homosexual community].

In addition, “liberals” want to include codification of political correctness as part of the Christian / Catholic moral teaching. Of course, political correctness varies from day to day. So, if I love the sinner but hate the sin, I could be accused of “hate speech”. Or, if I disagree with someone, they could accuse me of “hating”.
 
The term “Liberal Catholic” is many times associated with the phrase “Cafeteria Catholic”.
These people tend to want to pick and choose which dogmas and rules of the church they wish to observe. This goes anywhere from not attending Mass on a regular basis to espousing Civil Divorce, Abortion, Contraception, Gay Marriage, and Women Priests. In their error, they actually believe they are Catholics in good standing.
Other Liberal Catholics are those who were born to non practicing Catholic parents, yet were Baptized in the Church, but were never Catachized to any great extent. Most of these people consider themselves as Catholics, even though they attend Mass only on the Holidays,
I would say the term “Liberal Catholic” precludes those who are practicing Catholics in full recognition of the Faith.
If one is truely a Practicing Catholic, one is educated in their faith and is orthodox in their beliefs and practices. This, in itself would preclude their being political liberal, unless you are using the term liberal in place of tolerant.
I concur with this analysis. This pretty much sums of the description of liberal Catholics, at least in the U.S.
 
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