Post 261
You are pitting examples of bad behavior and management against Teachings bound by the Church in doctrine.
I believe those who don’t accept Teaching of the Church and use it as an excuse to avoid personal responsibility in overcoming the bad behavior and practice of heterodoxy within the Church (laity and clergy) as part of the problem of overcoming the enemy of Jesus.
But you’re assuming a split between behavior and doctrine, and then berating us for failing to make it.
Make the case for the split.
I understand that this seems off-topic. However, the line of argument taken by Catholics on this thread forces the raising of this question. If the implicit argument is “you can’t know that the words of Jesus are true without accepting the authority of the Catholic Church as we define it” then my response is a relevant and necessary one.
Just to be clear: I believe in the indefectibility of the successors of St. Peter (i.e., the bishops of Rome, historically) and don’t have any insoluble objections to infallibility. My objection–heightened every time I try to become Catholic, as I did again this past year–is to the claim that doctrinal infallibility, narrowly and carefully defined (a broader and less careful definition is clearly unbelievable), is a sufficient basis for “trusting the Church to be led by the Spirit.”
To put it clearly: there are some obvious ways in which my evangelical Wesleyan tradition has listened to the Spirit’s guidance better than the post-Reformation “Roman Catholic Church” has. Maybe these ways have nothing to do with doctrine, though that seems unlikely. I am much more confident that any doctrinal shifts/developments that need to take place in the Roman Communion can take place without the Catholic Church radically abandoning its core commitments and changing its identity (which is basically what many Protestants would like to see). But when you move away from the narrow issue of infallibility in official dogma and make blanket claims about the Spirit’s guidance and our need to trust the Church, then the issues that I raised (and many other similar ones) become highly relevant. And it isn’t reasonable for you then to move back to the narrow definition and chide me for ignoring how narrow it is. I didn’t ignore that at all–I pointed it out. I did not say that the issues I raised contradicted infallibility. I said that infallibility in its tenable, official form is extremely narrow and does not provide grounds for a general confidence in the Spirit’s guidance of the Church in all the ways that are relevant at any given moment in the Church’s history. Long-term, yes. I am confident that Rome will never finally fall away and will always listen to the Spirit eventually. I am not confident that at any given cross-section of the Church’s history, Rome is listening to the Spirit in more effective and relevant ways than any given Christian community not in communion with Rome or any given dissenting Catholic censured by the Church. Historically, that is obviously false if the current stances and commitments of the Roman Communion are true. (I.e., if the Catechism is right in quoting Jerome’s maxim “ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ” and calling for access to Scripture to be opened wide to the Christian faithful, then the Jansenists and Protestants were right and Pope Clement XI was wrong on that particular point. If the Holy Spirit does not and never did want heretics to be burned at the stake, then Luther was right and Leo X was wrong on that particular point. And so on.)
Edwin