J
Jimbo2
Guest
In another thread about a moral question, a poster wrote:
And as Catholics, we believe in love and prayer, not confrontation and recrimination?
I have been fighting with this poster on several threads and now I see why.
I think this topic is over-arching and affects most of the threads about moral questions. Without answering this, Catholics will always fight about how to handle moral issues.
Broadly, I see the two sides like this:
1.The correctors.
I fall in this camp. I believe that I am able to judge public situations and it is my responsibility to give a Catholic response. If a friend is cheating on his wife, I believe I have a responsibility, due to my Baptism, to tell my friend that he is doing wrong and is committing a mortal sin. This is, of course, only one example. In short, I believe I am compelled to confront him and correct him.
I believe this is the most charitable response.
2.The pacifists.
I do not fall in this camp, so I cannot speak to these motivations. I can only recount my observations.
These people do not believe in confronting those who are doing wrong. Broadly, I charcterize these people as believeing that confronting someone about a moral wrong is to be “judgmental”.
I observe that people from these different camps rarely see eye-to-eye. My own observation leads me to believe that the Church of the last 40 years has leaned very much toward pacifism.
In my own life, pacifism has torn my family apart. My in-laws refuse to confront my BIL about his co-habitation with his girlfried, believing that “Only God can judge” his behavior.
The rest of the family refuses to confront the parents about their dereliction of responsibility, because “Only God can judge” their actions.
Instead, they have, collectively, decided that my wife and I are the only “UnChristian” people in the family because we refuse to go to the shack-up house.
So, personally, I find the pacifist option to be one that tends to turn virtue in vice, and vice into virtue.
I also think the pacifist option carries a rather large temptation. It is very tempting to say “I am maintaining normal polite relations with this person for the sake of keeping lines of communication open in hopes of saving his soul”…when in fact the real reason the pacifist will not stand up is fear. The temptation is to choose the easy way out and then try to justify it as some sort of charity.
So, this is what I see as the bigger issue, and I think if you go to any of the contentious threads, you will find these two camps engaged in battle.
It seems that it would be better to fight over this, and try to seek some resolution, rather than re-hashing the same fight again and again against different backdrops.
And as Catholics, we believe in love and prayer, not confrontation and recrimination?
I have been fighting with this poster on several threads and now I see why.
I think this topic is over-arching and affects most of the threads about moral questions. Without answering this, Catholics will always fight about how to handle moral issues.
Broadly, I see the two sides like this:
1.The correctors.
I fall in this camp. I believe that I am able to judge public situations and it is my responsibility to give a Catholic response. If a friend is cheating on his wife, I believe I have a responsibility, due to my Baptism, to tell my friend that he is doing wrong and is committing a mortal sin. This is, of course, only one example. In short, I believe I am compelled to confront him and correct him.
I believe this is the most charitable response.
2.The pacifists.
I do not fall in this camp, so I cannot speak to these motivations. I can only recount my observations.
These people do not believe in confronting those who are doing wrong. Broadly, I charcterize these people as believeing that confronting someone about a moral wrong is to be “judgmental”.
I observe that people from these different camps rarely see eye-to-eye. My own observation leads me to believe that the Church of the last 40 years has leaned very much toward pacifism.
In my own life, pacifism has torn my family apart. My in-laws refuse to confront my BIL about his co-habitation with his girlfried, believing that “Only God can judge” his behavior.
The rest of the family refuses to confront the parents about their dereliction of responsibility, because “Only God can judge” their actions.
Instead, they have, collectively, decided that my wife and I are the only “UnChristian” people in the family because we refuse to go to the shack-up house.
So, personally, I find the pacifist option to be one that tends to turn virtue in vice, and vice into virtue.
I also think the pacifist option carries a rather large temptation. It is very tempting to say “I am maintaining normal polite relations with this person for the sake of keeping lines of communication open in hopes of saving his soul”…when in fact the real reason the pacifist will not stand up is fear. The temptation is to choose the easy way out and then try to justify it as some sort of charity.
So, this is what I see as the bigger issue, and I think if you go to any of the contentious threads, you will find these two camps engaged in battle.
It seems that it would be better to fight over this, and try to seek some resolution, rather than re-hashing the same fight again and again against different backdrops.