I think there is much “salad-bar” Catholicism in the Church. I have been shocked to find beliefs even in my own family that feel birth control is fine. (Same with sterilization). I suddenly found myself in heated debates with family members, arguing on why NFP and not “birth control.” (They didn’t know WHY the church is against it, they just didn’t agree with the church’s teacings on it.)
What I ended up with, dazed and confused, was that they didn’t really believe in the Catechism of the Church. (The “rules” and such - “It doesn’t say anything in the bible about birth control…”) Same thing for confession. I found myself defending the faith with renewed vigor, but also driving a wedge between myself and family members. A priest gave me advice:
" the struggle in the Church has been and always will be part of the life of the Church. The basic reason for that is that we are all sinful to some degree, reacting with pride, selfishness, anger and all the other capital sins. It is also often the history of individuals that they wander from total commitment to Church teachings to being selective or “salad barring” so to speak. It has been said that “Catholics don’t leave the Church; they just stray and wander. In fact it’s hard to get them OUT of the church. They don’t want to leave.” People know fornication is wrong and condemned, but it still goes on even among believing Catholics. Couples more and more live together prior to marriage. People divorce out of terrible marriage and remarry and try to raise their families in a good atmosphere. Priests are not always perfectly obedient or loyal to their vows as we witnessed in the sex abuse scandal. All of this is not new. Take any sin and you will find it “alive and well” all through the history of the Church."
“But the important thing is that God is ultimately in charge, God is compassionate and merciful and he alone knows what people are capable of in sin. For that reason, Jesus said that we should not judge. It doesn’t mean that we approve of evil or sin. Yet, at the same time, we know that if we are honest, we too can sin and we may not yet have face our “crisis” in our lives. If we are in a position to be faithful, we have to remember our fidelity is just a response to God’s grace; we never are faithful just on our own”
Turned out, it was great advice.