Oh, but I think I have.
I just don’t know what the arguments are that you’ve heard and reject. In fact, I believe I’ve
asked to hear what these arguments are that you reject.
Oh, and I asked you again
here, to provide an example of an argument which you reject.
Again, I have no idea what arguments you’ve heard and rejected. Could you please present at least one, including the rationale for why Christians support it and why you reject it, and we can then discuss? (Better yet, start a thread and I will join you there).
Indeed,
this post of yours presents a very fundamentalist understanding of Christianity, which, of course, Catholicism rejects.
I’ll go start with an example of a Catholic argument I reject, per your request above, which is perfectly reasonable and practical, and spin a new thread up with that.
But I don’t accept that Catholicism rejects a fundamentalist understanding of Christianity, but rather proclaims one, albeit a
different fundamentalist understanding. It’s just as fundamentalist, I’ve come to understand, and in some ways more, that the streams of Protestantism I’ve swam in and near for a long time.
Thus I don’t believe that I am without reason in proferring that what you are rejecting (Catholicism) you have not considered. This statement of yours, “Well, per Christianity, all one needs is credulous, subjective faith!” is the fundamentalist’s mantra, not the Catholic’s.
A credulous faith
is sufficient. That doesn’t mean you can’t reason on
top of some fideistic foundation (and here it’s good to point out that the Church itself at key points declares particular canon “de fide”, “unquestionaby true”, “infallible”, etc.), but as I said, such an edifice on a credulous foundation doesn’t make the foundation any less credulous.
As the late, great Bishop Fulton Sheen said (paraphrasing): there are millions of folks who reject what they think is Catholicism, but not a handful who reject what is actually Catholicism.
Yes, I’ve been offered that before. That’s a trope, a kind of meta-apologetic that atheists often invoke (“no one who really reasons it out and understands things critically fails to come to strong agnostic/atheist conclusions”), and my Mormon friends, debate partners 10 years running now, are
still convinced that in all that time, there are the “truest shades” of Mormon henotheism and spiritual fecundity that I fail to grasp, and thus have only managed to reject a persistently “false Mormonism”.
Could be. But that actually tends to turn the tables: OK, you tell
me what you consider the definitive understanding of Jesus as Truth. That way I don’t have to play darts – “do I have it now/?” “No, TS, unfortunately not, try again”. “Now, how about this throw of the dart?” “Closer, but try again, you still don’t have it”, “How about now”, 'Warmer keep trying, hey, you keep at it, I’ll be back in a few days to see how you’re doing…".
The “you didn’t reject the real thing” rings hollow if it doesn’t come with the “real thing” made explicit to take on offered in the other hand.
-TS