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FrDavid96
Guest
Well, it’s certainly the position found in Vatican II in Unitatis Redintegratio and Bl John Paul II’s Ut Unum Sint.Not sure the Dialogues would take your position, Fr David
I think that it is the position of the Catholic participants in the dialogue as well.
The dialogue paragraphs just aren’t saying what you think they are saying. As a Catholic (trained in this sort of thing) I can read through them as see the subtleties of the wording and recognize the differences.
Let me give you a situation as an illustration:
Someone might say “Catholics accept that Muslims believe that Mohamed was a prophet.”
Someone else reads that and thinks “Catholics accept that Mohamed was a prophet!”
Not so. Catholics only accept that Muslims believe it–we don’t believe it ourselves.
Catholics can make all kinds of statements wherein we accept that fact that a different community believes something—but that certainly does not mean that we Catholics share the belief.