Z
zamboni
Guest
This is going in circles. The pro abort position seeks to redefine the debate. The problem is you cannot reconcile intentionally killing innocents with Church teaching and that teaching includes the fact that the civil law should never contradict the moral law on such a grave matter.
It has been pointed out by posting sections of the CCC and papal encyclicals, yet nothing will satisfy those who refuse to be convinced.
I will try one last time to reach the self-appointed (or home-brew-anointed?) small “b” bishops and lower-case “c” cardinals who keep simply repeating themselves on this thread, and who keep insisting that a pro-choice position is irreconcilable with Catholic Church teaching.For anyone who knows even a smidgen of catholic doctrine they know there is absolutely no way that one can reconcile Church teachings with being pro-choice.
In my opinion, your case would be of more value (than it’s current value of zero) if it were not for the fact that you must be overlooking the neglected responsibilities of men according to 2270 and 2271. I submit that by overlooking these neglected responsibilities of men, while still expecting women to follow Church teaching, constitutes hypocrisy that goes beyond Pharisee level hypocrisy, according to my richter hypocrisy-magnitude scale. The reason I say “worse than Pharisee” is that those of the New Testament Pharisees found by Jesus to be “hypocrites” were following the letter of the law, as opposed to (or at the expense of) the spirit of the law, whereas the modern Pharisee portion of the anti-choice movement nowadays does not seem to follow either the letter or spirit of the law. Just half of the letter of the law is followed (the part applying to women only) and none of the spirit of the law is all that apparently remains intact of Church teaching in the hands of estebob, fix, Caramel, and thread host, small “w” wizard of OP.