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KSchuster
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Are we bound to obey a priest in the matter of faith and morals even if we suspect he is wrong? If no then how do we keep from “priest shopping”
IMHO it comes done to knowing he is wrong when he speaks on faith and morals. Just suspecting it is not enough. If you suspect he is wrong then you must search and find out the Truth. If he is correct then you submit, if he is not then you do not.Are we bound to obey a priest in the matter of faith and morals even if we suspect he is wrong? If no then how do we keep from “priest shopping”
If a priest suggests you to act sinfully then you must **not **obey. Church and God is always above any priest. So if you are not sure and suspect that he is wrong I would check it out perhaps by reading an appropriate document or asking an orthodox and knowledgeable priest. If the priest in question is wrong then it might be a good idea to get back to him and explain him that he made a mistake (of course gently with respect). He might not be aware that he is spreading a wrong message.Are we bound to obey a priest in the matter of faith and morals even if we suspect he is wrong? If no then how do we keep from “priest shopping”
If you have spoken to him in the confessionel he will feel uncomfortable speaking to you outside of the confessionel about the situation, been there tried that.Are we bound to obey a priest in the matter of faith and morals even if we suspect he is wrong? If no then how do we keep from “priest shopping”
Why don’t you make a thread here at CAF and people might help you to decide!An example of what I am talking about is a wedding that one priest says to attend and another says to not attend. BOTH claim they are not putting forth their own oppinions but the Church’s teaching. One has to be right and the other has to be wrong. How are we to find out which one is right since now we know any priest (except the Pope of course) is subject to being right or wrong in this matter?
Some things are not black and white and may allow for pastoral application of a basic principle to a concrete situation.An example of what I am talking about is a wedding that one priest says to attend and another says to not attend. BOTH claim they are not putting forth their own oppinions but the Church’s teaching. One has to be right and the other has to be wrong. How are we to find out which one is right since now we know any priest (except the Pope of course) is subject to being right or wrong in this matter?
This is not Church teaching regarding formation of conscience or following one’s well-formed conscience.My thoughts are that what works for me has to work for all of us.
Yes, he turned away from the Church and rejected defined doctrines. That is not the same as applying Church teaching to a concrete situation.And in the end you can always go back to Martin Luther who knew more than most lay people about the Church, its history, the Bible and its teachings and he still trusting in his own conscience turned away from the Church.
That is what we are called to do. Read the Catechism on this topic.I don’t see how a person can discern this for themselves.
The Church does not take the role of dictator in our lives. She guides and directs us, and if we form our conscience well we will have moral certainty regarding our actions.To me it is like a kindergärtner questioning a professor. What can a student that small do for himself when trying to understand something that has the potential to be so complicated.
No, this is not correct. Yes, you are to obey them but you are also to inform your conscience which you can do through prayer and study.I have come to the conclusion that we are bound to obey (only in the matters of faith and morals) our home parish priest and he leads us astray the sin is not our but his and we are ok all the time.
Since God has always desired us to come to him we all have the things we need to do that. That thing has always been the Church in some form or other. What is the difference between the true prophets of the old testament and any of the heretics running around at the time. They had the backing of God and the Church who are one in the same. My point being that whatever they had to work with back then should be good enough for us now to work with.This is not Church teaching regarding formation of conscience or following one’s well-formed conscience.
In other words if we listen well The Church will form our conscience right as when we are born we are working with practically nothing in the ways of discernment. If that is so then how can we question those who have taught us. The average lay person doesn’t even have the training to discern for themselves what they need to do that is why we go to PSR and Catholic School. But what happens when the problems get harder and there is more grey area. In all the other fields of learning in the world you get more schooling when the problems get harder. When the moral problems get harder I just don’t see where we have the training or the knowledge to work this stuff out for ourselves. Just as people in the medieval times had to rely on the Church for everything when they could not read or when they could not have a copy of the scriptures.The Church does not take the role of dictator in our lives. She guides and directs us, and if we form our conscience well we will have moral certainty regarding our actions.
I wouldhttp://bestsmileys.com/thinking/4.gif question how well Luther knew these things. He seems to have had someAnd in the end you can always go back to Martin Luther who knew more than most lay people about the Church, its history, the Bible and its teachings and he still trusting in his own conscience turned away from the Church.
That’s not the way it works. God will judge us by what we know, not what we don’t, as long as we have made a sincere effort to learn, as our resources permit, and to apply our learning. He holds a child to different standards from an adult, a priest to different standards from a layperson, a pagan who’s never heard of Christ to different standards from we who are Catholic.In other words if we listen well The Church will form our conscience right as when we are born we are working with practically nothing in the ways of discernment. If that is so then how can we question those who have taught us. The average lay person doesn’t even have the training to discern for themselves what they need to do that is why we go to PSR and Catholic School. But what happens when the problems get harder and there is more grey area. In all the other fields of learning in the world you get more schooling when the problems get harder. When the moral problems get harder I just don’t see where we have the training or the knowledge to work this stuff out for ourselves. Just as people in the medieval times had to rely on the Church for everything when they could not read or when they could not have a copy of the scriptures.
You keep from priest shopping by educating yourself on moral matters. and to do that, you look first to the teachings of the Church; one of the first places to stop is with the Catechism or one of its legitimate derivatives.Are we bound to obey a priest in the matter of faith and morals even if we suspect he is wrong? If no then how do we keep from “priest shopping”
I don’t know if I’d agree with that. Aren’t there are a whole ton of folks who wish to remain “ignorant” just so they won’t be committing wrong knowingly, maybe? For example, you tell someone something is wrong. Do you think he’s going to believe you if he’s been conditioned otherwise? Maybe we’re all pagan in this sense. And who’s to say no “Catholics” are pagans?That’s not the way it works. God will judge us by what we know, not what we don’t, as long as we have made a sincere effort to learn, as our resources permit, and to apply our learning. He holds a child to different standards from an adult, a priest to different standards from a layperson, a pagan who’s never heard of Christ to different standards from we who are Catholic.
That would be where ‘sincere efforts to learn and apply that learning’ come in. Wilful ignorance, unwillingness to learn, or being unwilling to admit one is wrong if one is, doesn’t fit into the equation there.I don’t know if I’d agree with that. Aren’t there are a whole ton of folks who wish to remain “ignorant” just so they won’t be committing wrong knowingly, maybe? For example, you tell someone something is wrong. Do you think he’s going to believe you if he’s been conditioned otherwise? Maybe we’re all pagan in this sense. And who’s to say no “Catholics” are pagans?
Maybe it’s better to say God will judge us on what we SHOULD have known? But then we can’t judge God either, can we? Nor do we know how He will judge us.
Wilful ignorance? Now who would admit to being of such state?That would be where ‘sincere efforts to learn and apply that learning’ come in. Wilful ignorance, unwillingness to learn, or being unwilling to admit one is wrong if one is, doesn’t fit into the equation there.
I recommend you read the entire section of the Catechism on Conscience:Are we bound to obey a priest in the matter of faith and morals even if we suspect he is wrong? If no then how do we keep from “priest shopping”