You have nothing more to say on the subject of Limbo and the way it was taught? Nothing on the existence of an actual realm called Purgatory? Nothing on indulgences? Nothing on priestly pedophilia? These are troubling issues to me, and I find your dismissal of the question of Limbo typical of the average Catholic’s failure to admit to any character defects found within the Church in our lifetime. I am disappointed, not surprised.
I don’t remember being threatened with Limbo when I was in Catholic school. If that was your experience, I believe you. I have nothing more to say than that. You asked what the Pope said recently, and I gave you the link to the article. We weren’t discussing Purgatory, indulgences, or pedophilia, so I’m not sure what I was supposed to say about them.
marietta;4134184:
My gripe with Pro-Life folks is that they are not satisfied concentrating on their own lives and families, that they are compelled to make the pregnancies of strangers theirs to manage, too. I’m grateful that when I entered PreTerm in D.C. before Roe v. Wade passed, there was no one on the sidewalk outside to harass me or wave placards in my face. I was a very young woman then, very fit, and very pugnacious. Somebody would’ve been hurt, and it wouldn’t have been me. I didn’t need assault on my record.
marietta
Pro-lifers are there because they realize abortion is a desperate act, and they care about the pregnant woman and the child she is carrying. If you saw someone attempting to jump off a bridge, would you try to stop them or mind your own business and look the other way?
But, I’ve heard this argument before, so I’m not surprised, And the same thing was said about slavery when it was legal “Those who oppose slavery are free to refrain from it. They have no right to impose their personal religious morality on society through legislation or a constitutional amendment.”