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Debbie_Kono
Guest
First, I must say that I respect and like you Itwin. I’ve read many of your responses on other threads and you are very gracious and kind. I want this for myself…but without compromising my beliefs as taught by The Church.No single group of participants got every single thing they wanted expressed in the document, which underwent multiple drafts and lengthy revisions, but they nevertheless arrived at a mutually agreed upon declaration.”
The two common definitions of compromise are: finding a happy medium and accept standards that are lower than is desirable. I don’t know how you can say the statement above is not compromise. It flat out is. I know a common complaint among my Protestant friends is their desire to not hear watered-down sermons. So they constantly church hop. This, I’m guessing does not apply to you…but it is a problem in Protestantism (and now Catholicism too…but I can’t say much on that in these boards for getting kicked off).
Yes. Yes I do. Because that “general agreement” weakens the Church and Her dogma “There is no salvation outside the Catholic Church.” It’s the watering down of the Gospel. Where does the compromise stop? We already have cults which deny Christ’s divinity. Most all of Protestantism denies that divorce and remarriage is adultery. That contraception is a sin (keeping in mind that all Christians believed it sinful until less than 100 years ago). And then some Protestant churches say homosexuality and abortion is no big deal. Where does it stop? Listing what we agree on leads to a watered down gospel and is dangerous.Do you think its compromise for Catholics to sit down with Eastern Orthodox and Protestants and say what can we agree on and lets write this down on paper, even if in some areas its very general agreement?
And I am very well aware that we have this problem in the Catholic Church today too…but I am not allowed to say so here.
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