T
TOME
Guest
Ender,
First, thank you for the list you provided me and I am going to take the liberty to say you provided this list for all to read.
I hope you realize that although my hope is to pursuade all, or maybe some or maybe just one, as I wrote earlier this has become a secondary goal. I think it is more important that we, as Catholics, know the what and the why of all current teachings of the Church. This is the reason for my insistence (although, at times, annoying to some if not all) that in this discussion we all take time to actually read such Documents as Evangelium Vitae in their entirity. And I now include in my appeal the documents who kindly provided as well.
I would like to add a couple other points about what I hope all will read. The first is about a catechism, as I wrote earlier all catechisms are references and hopefully having read an answer we will all take the time to look behind the answer and study an answer more fully. This goes not for this particular topic but any topic one of us might be persuing.
My second point is again I preceive a danger in the habit on relying on a specific statement alone, even from a list of documents such as you provided, when formulating an opinion - again I think to proceed this way could cause someone to miss the fullness of what is being taught or in rare occasions missing the teaching altogether having lifted a sentence out of context.
As for Evangelium Vitae, I hope I did an adequate enough job of communicating my desire to address what I though was the basis theme of this encyclical through the questions I have been proposing, namely, given the times we live the exercise of the right of the State is not, as you put it - better than I have been putting it - prudent.
Perhaps going back to the whole question of the DP, maybe I should have stated my question in a different way, that is, I do not deny the States rights to exercise the DP, but is this right without limitations? And if there are limitations, what are the moral principles each of us believe to be the guiding norms of the State to exercise this right. And do our personal norms reflect traditional Catholic moral principles?
Now as I am writing this I hear this little voice saying to me I am changing tactics again. Subjectively I don’t think I am doing this but because of this little voice maybe objectively I am. Either way, as I stated earlier I know that even with a change in tactics I am still using a means that has little or no hope for success if my goal is primarily to change opinion. My primary goal remains to get of us to clarify her or his opinion by clearly identifying the moral principles which have formed the basis of our choice of conscience.
First, thank you for the list you provided me and I am going to take the liberty to say you provided this list for all to read.
I hope you realize that although my hope is to pursuade all, or maybe some or maybe just one, as I wrote earlier this has become a secondary goal. I think it is more important that we, as Catholics, know the what and the why of all current teachings of the Church. This is the reason for my insistence (although, at times, annoying to some if not all) that in this discussion we all take time to actually read such Documents as Evangelium Vitae in their entirity. And I now include in my appeal the documents who kindly provided as well.
I would like to add a couple other points about what I hope all will read. The first is about a catechism, as I wrote earlier all catechisms are references and hopefully having read an answer we will all take the time to look behind the answer and study an answer more fully. This goes not for this particular topic but any topic one of us might be persuing.
My second point is again I preceive a danger in the habit on relying on a specific statement alone, even from a list of documents such as you provided, when formulating an opinion - again I think to proceed this way could cause someone to miss the fullness of what is being taught or in rare occasions missing the teaching altogether having lifted a sentence out of context.
As for Evangelium Vitae, I hope I did an adequate enough job of communicating my desire to address what I though was the basis theme of this encyclical through the questions I have been proposing, namely, given the times we live the exercise of the right of the State is not, as you put it - better than I have been putting it - prudent.
Perhaps going back to the whole question of the DP, maybe I should have stated my question in a different way, that is, I do not deny the States rights to exercise the DP, but is this right without limitations? And if there are limitations, what are the moral principles each of us believe to be the guiding norms of the State to exercise this right. And do our personal norms reflect traditional Catholic moral principles?
Now as I am writing this I hear this little voice saying to me I am changing tactics again. Subjectively I don’t think I am doing this but because of this little voice maybe objectively I am. Either way, as I stated earlier I know that even with a change in tactics I am still using a means that has little or no hope for success if my goal is primarily to change opinion. My primary goal remains to get of us to clarify her or his opinion by clearly identifying the moral principles which have formed the basis of our choice of conscience.