Correct. You don’t care that he is a moral theologian. You only first dismiss him as someone who doesn’t agree with you, who therefore must be an errant priest that other people use to rationalize immoral decisions: because apparently you, not the deposit of moral theology in the Roman Catholic Church, are the moral authority for CAF and EWTN. There are many errant theologians, who for some reason, do not understand, nor do they abide by the teachings of the Church. Pope Benedict XVI is busy cleaning house. A theologian in name only, does not a theologian make. Many have been mislead by these addled ones.
Wow. Talk about manipulating one’s own argument to suit your agenda. You’re the one that brought up conscience as a negative, not a positive or a neutral factor in Catholic decision-making. Now it’s a positive, when you want to use it as a weapon against those who suggest listening to what an actual authority says.
P(name removed by moderator)oint for our audience here where I said what is highlighted in blue. What is highlighted in blue is your distortion and manipulation of what I said. I made a broad statement that anyone who has deeply studied the faith is aware of: moral theology is a system involving good, evil, decision-making, competing goods, ‘lesser evils,’ and logic. It has as its base Catholic philosophy as applied to moral truths handed down by the Fathers and Doctors of the Church, popes who followed them, and by our Lord himself. That has nothing to do with relativism. Anyone, again, who has studied Catholic moral theology understands the difference. What Colin Donovan has done on many of his shows is give an answer to a caller, and then explain to the caller what the ***Catholic thinking ***is behind that – not the loosey-goosy thinking, not the secularist thinking, not the humanistic thinking, not the atheistic thinking, not the dissident thinking, not the Protestant, Muslim, Jewish, or Buddhist thinking.
Obama by name was not discussed. This is at least the second time I have said that. You seem to have trouble following a discussion point by point.