J
JimG
Guest
Please understand that my “proposal” is not serious. And if the Catholic Church did a merger which involved the ability for everyone, or even a regional bishop’s conference, to change doctrine at will, then it wouldn’t much matter what particular individuals accepted, since their religion would have become a dead letter.I am not sure that your proposal is feasible at least for now. Does your proposal mean that Catholics will accept SS marriage of bishops and women bishops?
As an example, let me take the case of artificial contraception. For nearly 2,000 years of Catholic history and 400 years of Protestant history, both Catholics and Protestants had the same teaching on artificial contraception–that it was contrary to God’s law. Every Protestant church taught the same as did the Catholic Church on the issue.
That remained the case until 1930, when the Anglican church, under pressure from those favoring birth control, in the Lambeth Conference that year, decided that artificial birth control could be allowable for married couples for serious reasons. That broke the dam, and other denominations followed. A constant teaching was changed, and it enabled the sexual revolution which followed, having broken the connection between sex and procreation.
Actions have consequences. Rejection of divine law has serious consequences. That’s why we won’t see any change in Catholic teaching on contraception, abortion, marriage, or extramarital sex.