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carefullytread
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John the Baptist did just that with Herod.
John the Baptist is a rather special case.Verily I say unto you, Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist
John the Baptist did just that with Herod.
John the Baptist is a rather special case.Verily I say unto you, Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist
They proudly shame themselves day after day. Their utter abandonment of Catholic teachings is public knowledge.How is he shaming them by stating things that are public knowledge? By all accounts these politicians hold their disobedience as a virtue and feel no shame in proclaiming it.Even if Chaput thinks a smaller Church is better, how can a Christian bishop stand up and shame people by name?
That is not an argument. In fact, if John the Baptist set that example - to call out the powerful when they are in great error, even when it might mean persecution or death - then one would think that we should be emulating that behavior.John the Baptist is a rather special case.
I don’t think Benedict’s point was that the Church would be better off. He (as then Cardinal Ratzinger) was making a prediction of the coming crises in the Church and in the world. He noted that good could come from it as the many trials the Church would face would cause her to reevaluate, grow in holiness, and that hope of the believers would then be attractive.He did. He said that the Church might be better off if it were smaller.
+*A gentle correction . . .the above reference leaves out the crucial word . . . *“teach” . . .Baptize all people in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
These are public officials, not ordinary private citizens And if anyone has authority to lecture on right doctrine, faith, and morals, it’s a Bishop. It’s not as if Kain or Biden’s positions aren’t clearly against Church teaching.Even if Chaput thinks a smaller Church is better, how can a Christian bishop stand up and shame people by name?
I don’t think either Benedict XVI or Archbishop Chaput wants a church of people who think they are holy. At least for then-Cardinal Ratzinger, it was more like a prediction. The Church will grow smaller, because at many levels, the Church Militant is ostensibly self-destructing. Of course the gates of hell will not prevail. It may be that conservatives have a narrow conception of Catholic identity; it is no less true that the Modernists do as well. They would turn the Church into an exclusive club for secular humanists.All are welcome into the Church to grow into holiness, it shouldn’t be an exclusive club for those who already think they are holy.
So Chaput calls out those who don’t merely sin (like everybody does), he calls out public Catholics who publicly state heretical views on abortion and so-called same sex marriage. As far as I know, he didn’t excommunicate them.Thus colour me, if you will, of the Pope Francis school. All are welcome into the Church to grow into holiness, it shouldn’t be an exclusive club for those who already think they are holy.
Here is the linked speech from the original article: Remembering who we are and the story we belong toDoes anyone have a link to the actual speech the Archbishop gave?
It is difficult to have any meaningful discussion without knowing exactly what was said and in what context.
Media, even Catholic media, sadly, seems to be operating out of its own agenda lately, and it does not alway mean we are getting completely accurate information.
He is calling them, and others, out who have abandoned loyalty to the Church in exchange for loyalty to our ambitions.To put it another way, quite a few of us American Catholics have worked our way into a leadership class that the rest of the country both envies and resents. And the price of our entry has been the transfer of our real loyalties and convictions from the old Church of our baptism to the new “Church” of our ambitions and appetites. People like Nancy Pelosi, Anthony Kennedy, Joe Biden and Tim Kaine are not anomalies. They’re part of a very large crowd that cuts across all professions and both major political parties.
True…They have publicly shamed themselves.
Homilies around where I live have gotten soft and humorous…like lukewarm water in the mouth.This is a hard saying. Who can listen to it? John 6:60
Here is the linked speech from the original article: Remembering who we are and the story we belong to
In particular this is what he said “shaming” politicians
He is calling them, and others, out who have abandoned loyalty to the Church in exchange for loyalty to our ambitions.
Because the people mentioned are public figures, who publicly discuss their Catholicism, and publicly take positions contradictory to Catholic teaching. If left unchallenged, these people lead others astray…they teach a false gospel. They must be called out.
So given the full context of Chaput’s statements (at least those reported), is he wrong?To become a smaller church with fewer Catholics, the Catholic Church would need to change its teaching by no longer claiming all baptized Catholics to be Catholic.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=13411600&postcount=2
What would be better is obedience and for them (and us) to not be apostate by our actions. A smaller Church is not the goal, but rather conversion of sinners. In an ideal world the who of humanity would be obediently converted to the Church.So given the full context of Chaput’s statements (at least those reported), is he wrong?
Is the Church better off having Catholics in the public arena spouting heretical positions? Or, more in line with his point, we would all be better off if Catholics in the public arena would just stay quiet about their non-Catholic beliefs.
Well, it shows what a man needs to do to be considered great among those born of womenJohn the Baptist is a rather special case.