D
dzheremi
Guest
With all due respect to SanctusPeccator, is it really? I am willing to concede that as an ex-Roman Catholic there are probably many things about that faith that I never fully understood (or properly understood, or however it is best phrased), but I definitely question this assumption that because misunderstanding abounds, then we should/would accept those things that we do not currently accept if we only had the “proper” understanding of them, whether we’re talking about the distinctive doctrines of Rome, or those of the Nestorians, or those of the Protestants, or whoever else is out there. As I’ve been involved in plenty of dumb arguments on this board (too many, really) wherein my interlocutor held to some semblance of this idea, I’ve pretty much lost any and all faith in the idea that greater understanding of Roman doctrine can or should lead to agreement on any particular point. And if the point is not to lead to agreement, but just to understanding for its own sake, then why are any of us talking to each other?The most interesting question I’ve seen in this thread by far. Unfortunately, it cuts in all directions.
I have a brain, eyes, and a computer. If I want to, I can access every Vatican proclamation that is available on the Vatican’s official website, and understand it to a reasonable degree. So when someone says or even implies anything along the lines of “Rome’s understanding of X is Y; your understanding of X is Z, so therefore your criticism is invalid/you’re dumb/you actually would agree with Rome if you understood it”, I can’t help but think to myself that neither Y or Z are actually X, so how does my misunderstanding help, bolster, or exonerate Rome? It seems that this is a sly way of avoiding having to discuss the correctness of the Roman position in itself, by forcing us all to play by Rome’s rules when of course to Rome nothing she herself does is in the least bit unorthodox, so those who would label her as unorthodox would have to mistaken.
A concrete example of what I mean:
- Some Protestants believe that Papal Infallibility means that the Roman Pope is Infallible whenever he says anything about anything.
- Those Protestants are mistaken, in that this is not what the Papal Infallibility teaches, according to the declaration of the doctrine at Vatican I in 1870 (i.e., that is not Rome’s own understanding of what she herself is saying).
- The declaration of Papal Infallibility as put forth at Vatican I in 1870 is unacceptable to many Christians, and furthermore cannot be made to be acceptable to a great many Christians. In other words, it is not a matter of clarifying the position itself so that its opponents will understand it as Rome does – it’s simply the fact that the idea itself is wrong, no matter if any individual understands it as Rome does or not.