The fact that Catholic faith leads nice people to reason like this is one of my huge problems with Catholicism, …]
Correct me if I’m wrong, but your problem here is that the Catholic Church says that some “bad actions” might be “good actions”.
To put it in perspective, lets use a smaller example. Killing animals is often a bad action. Anyone that went around saying that the “mass genocide of a species
CAN be moral”, just like the Church saying that “heretic BBQ
CAN be moral”, would sound terribly suspicious, am I right? Is this your problem? (I might have understood wrong, so sorry for anything).
Then comes the Bird Flu, and suddenly everyone backs up China’s decision to kill all those birds. “It is mass genocide of a species, but it is for a greater good”, we reason. The crazy genocidal guy suddenly is “right”, because everyone now agrees with him.
This is, basically, what the Church is doing in regards to all these “you can be a monster” situations. Generally speaking, burning heretics is incredibly unnecessary. Even humanly killing them is hardly acceptable. But the Church’s position is to simply leave a space open for discussion, IN CASE the Heretics Flu hit China and we have to make such a harsh decision.
(can you imagine, in a few years, what the world will say about war against ISIS? Either “the Church didn’t do anything to help!” or “the Church endorsed violence!”…)
It just isn’t true that the Church only went after heretics who disrupted society. That’s an apologetics claim first made, to my knowledge, by St. Thomas More. But it just ain’t so.
Dude, they burned St. Joan of Arc. Of COURSE there were cases done in bad faith, with little to no proof, for political reasons (such was Joan’s case, by a Bishop no less), etc etc.
That doesn’t make the teaching wrong - it was just badly used.
I agree that morality requires God–it does not, however, require divine revelation.
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No, if there is only one truth, you had darn well better use every faculty you have to figure it out.
Then how you suggest we find out what is right, if people reach different conclusions through reason? If even the Bible can be interpreted in different ways?
I mean, even murder is open to debate. Take some Brazilian indigenous groups, for example. They kill “defective” newborns by placing them in holes underground. It’s moral to them. If they were to reason this, they would probably reach the conclusion that “defective people bring burden to whole tribe, making everyone weak” and that is a great reason to commit infanticide. They do not believe in the Sanctity of Life (Divinely revealed), and they do not believe in the Commandments (thou shall not kill - also DR).
I’ll admit that I am putting a heavy burden on you. Not even Philosophers are able to define morality outside of religious grounds (DR), so there might still be a way.
However, I am inclined to believe that the Bible contains all we need to define morality and that, if science ever gets around to defining morality on objective terms, they will only prove the Bible right.
By accepting it blindly, you are subordinating your moral reasoning capacities to your extremely fallible judgment that a particular source of religious authority is the correct one.
That is a really, really bad thing to do.
Because your belief that the Church is infallible rests on your own fallible judgment.
To the highlighted: then, what protects my moral reasoning from my own fallible judgement? Without an infallible Church left by Christ to guide me, how can I ever be sure that I have reached the right reasoning? (because, if I don’t, then I’ll be sinning without knowing)
Trust the Church or don’t trust the Church; either way I am going to be subjected to my ever present fallibility.
And again: I do
question the Church. However, I first give preference to her
judgement, and try to understand it, instead of relying on MY judgement and leaving Her. In other words,
my first reaction is to trust her and doubt me, instead of doubting her and trusting me.
It is like with a
Wife: her behavior gets weird, as if she were hiding something (a lover?) from me. If I rely on my judgement alone, this will end in divorce before she can even utter a word. If, instead, I trust her (faith), perhaps she will explain what is going on.
If her explanation shows that she is, indeed, lying to me? Divorce. But at least I gave her a chance to explain herself. If I mistrusted her first and she was just hiding my birthday present, then I would be divorcing a great woman. (and losing the chance of receiving a great gift

uch
So far, the Wife has been able to explain all her moral oddities to me, which is why I am still married to Her (a Catholic). I am still working out some problems on faith (I have some trouble with use of images here and there), but nothing too great as to make me move out and back to my mother’s house.
Also, in regards to dissenters, St. T.Aquinas said that “[he] who disbelieves [even] one article of faith does not have faith, either formed or unformed”. So, you either have faith in ALL doctrines, or you don’t have faith on the Church. Dissenters, by this, simply have no faith in the Faith they profess; they are welcomed, however,
to stay and raise their faith in Catholic Faith.
Or, as the analogy goes, to stay put, trust your Wife and question her first (and, perhaps, check under the bed and behind the curtains, if you know what I mean

). I am sure such a docile Wife won’t be annoyed by your questions. With so many neighbors calling her a courtesan, she’ll understand if you have doubts…