I can’t help but think that people that demand clarity in everything about life must be profoundly unhappy people, because clarity is just about the last thing to expect in any part of life touched by humans, and that includes the Church.
What’s with the personality generalizations on this thread? Seriously, do people have that little imagination?
I remember when I was introduced to the Myers-Briggs system of personality classification. I was in a big group of people and we took the test. We were put into small groups of people similar to us, according to the scores, and asked something like what makes good communication.
Each person in my group and I agreed (we were also in very similar fields). We assumed that the other groups would have responses similar to ours, but we were so wrong! Answers ranged from accurate use of words to good relationships to open body language.
It is natural that we have people who are wildly different, and it’s ok: God made people to differ. All those different ways of being allow a greater diversity of (name removed by moderator)ut into the many issues which exist in the world. How could we have artists and engineers, judges and psychologists, historians and inventors, if we didn’t have a wildly broad range of characters?
So in this area at hand: some things actually are black and white, others not so much. Wise people know with one is at hand.
Certain actions fall into certain categories, not because of the feelings of the person(s) involved, but because of something about the action itself. Feeling bad about something doesn’t make it right or wrong, some celebrate having successfully made a touchdown and some that they succeeded in committing a bank robbery-- but the nature of each act remains the same; one is good, the other is bad.
I remember arguing with someone on another forum who was proposing that the solution to “messy” Catholicism was a smaller and purer Church as once mused by the Holy Father Emeritus.
I fear that if we attempted to have a smaller, purer Church, the end result would be a small messy Church instead of a large one, and I don’t think that would serve anyone’s salvation and moreover it would just end up being a private club. Human nature is such that we usually manage to make a mess in large groups, or small; “là où il y a l’homme, il y a l’hommerie”.
Fortunately the Holy Father seems to not mind “large and messy”, to try to get as many people as possible, onto the Gospel message, no matter where they are in life.
I have the feeling that the two popes were saying different things and that you are contrasting them as if they were opposed to each other. I don’t think Pope Benedict wanted to Church to contract due to a departure of sinners, and I don’t think Pope Francis sees a Chirch-full of people sitting beside the path to holiness as the ideal.
Pope Benedict foresaw that the Church would become small as more people deserted Christ for the world, which was happening at the time he wrote that 1969.
Pope Francis wants to share the Good News so as to help those who have been-there, done-that in the world will have a place of hope to go to.