J
JulianN
Guest
I’m talking about the CPA, not the National Catholic Reporter. The CPA is definitely vetted and approved.
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I think it safe to say that most of the time one is agitating in the Church, one best first be a saint with a very close ear to what God is saying, as most of the time agitating is not holy.If the Pope has called for a commission, how about you just let him and the commission study the issue and get back to us then?
No need to “agitate” about it (The commission could not care less about that stuff. They aren’t elected officials) or jump on any bandwagon being pushed by the National Catholic Distorter.
Sure. No problem with libel at all.It was an example. Nothing to get hung about.
You need to check your definitions. Regardless of how you feel about NCR, the CPA is not a Communist front. They are reputable, verified (without the quotation marks) and approved.Not exactly what I’d call libel but whatever.
I think this often only discernible in retrospect. I’m sure that the last century or so of developments to EENS, to cite one well known example, would have seemed like a fundamental change to Catholics living just a few hundred years ago. But with the benefit of hindsight, it now seems like a development into deeper understanding. And we only get those developments into deeper understanding by discussing things, even things that are not always comfortable to discuss.And that means, then, that what they advocate is an actual development.
Something which changes the fundamental nature of something else, to the point where, for example, the original teaching was, Thou shalt not commit adultery’ to “thou SHALT commit adultery’ is not a development of doctrine.
There is a huge difference between needing every word clarified and the absence of deacons, while specifying priests. I cannot imagine a theologian of St. JP’s stature not making that part deliberate. It is hardly a minor point, and definitely not a loop hole. I never thought resorting the his encyclical on this issue is a strong case compared to the case made by the centuries of teaching on ordination and the diaconate. Nonetheless, I have to give kudos just for finding the word “pettifogger” though I will remind you it is just using a label to describe a position, not the people, lest you just beg the question. And, I might add, it should be considered whether one is simply begging the question in every post, as at least half on this thread do nothing more than that.He did not realize that instead of an encyclical he needed to issue an ENCYCLOPEDIA for every single WORD in that encyclical, that pettifoggers would seize on the so-called absence of ‘diaconate’ along with priesthood
John Paul II was also aware of commissions which had found evidence of women being ordained at the level of the diaconate, like the Pan Orthodox Theological Consultation in 1989 that endorsed the work of E. Theodorou, theology professor in Athens. He probably had many who would help him understand the weight of Epiphanios’ remarks on female baptisms.As if Pope St. John Paul II wasn’t well aware of the many commissions which had found no evidence of women ever being ordained as a deacon with the same rites as male deacons, that they at most assisted with nude female baptisms or helped out poor women (much as our sisters do today!!!), and as if the entire encyclical itself was not in response to the bad decisions made by our Episcopalian brothers and sisters with their ‘female priests’.