T
TOME
Guest
Danno,
First, I have faith that a Dogmatic Constitution of the Church is not a modernist document that deserves condemnation. To hold that a dogmatic constitution of the Church deserves comdemnation I think denies that the Holy Spirit was guiding the Council Fathers at Vatican II and that Lumen Gentium is not the result of the Holy Spirit’s activity in the Church. And in the same light I believe although it may not be declared a dogma, what was presented in Dominus Iesus come fromthe teaching authotiry of the Magisterium of the Church and it to was created under the guiding light of the Holy Spirit.
Dogma does not change but our understanding of the truth contained in dogma grows and has to grow because the Church is a living body and her teachings are alive. So the truth is immutable but our understanding of truth is always developing.
As for your question about the Council of Florence, I adhere to the teachings of Saint Thomas Aquinas on the Sacraments, I made mentioned of it briefly when describing the meaning of "Ex opere operato and Ex opere operandi. Given the fact that Thomas’ teachings on Sacramentality has been accepted and with the rise of neo-Thomism given new life, I think I am on sound gound with this answer.
So I don’t doubt or question the truth in the teachings of the Church from Vatican II to the present, I am just trying to seek a greater understanding of the truth in these doctrines.
First, I have faith that a Dogmatic Constitution of the Church is not a modernist document that deserves condemnation. To hold that a dogmatic constitution of the Church deserves comdemnation I think denies that the Holy Spirit was guiding the Council Fathers at Vatican II and that Lumen Gentium is not the result of the Holy Spirit’s activity in the Church. And in the same light I believe although it may not be declared a dogma, what was presented in Dominus Iesus come fromthe teaching authotiry of the Magisterium of the Church and it to was created under the guiding light of the Holy Spirit.
Dogma does not change but our understanding of the truth contained in dogma grows and has to grow because the Church is a living body and her teachings are alive. So the truth is immutable but our understanding of truth is always developing.
As for your question about the Council of Florence, I adhere to the teachings of Saint Thomas Aquinas on the Sacraments, I made mentioned of it briefly when describing the meaning of "Ex opere operato and Ex opere operandi. Given the fact that Thomas’ teachings on Sacramentality has been accepted and with the rise of neo-Thomism given new life, I think I am on sound gound with this answer.
So I don’t doubt or question the truth in the teachings of the Church from Vatican II to the present, I am just trying to seek a greater understanding of the truth in these doctrines.