L
Lycorth
Guest
Thank you; it is frustrating work. Might as well bash my head against a brick wall.Lycorth, you are a charitable person, to take so much time to tease apart the errors of "portorica.’ Can’t even spell Puerto.
But, I know other people read, even if they do not comment. It is important to do one’s best to counter errors, to speak the truth and be a light unto it.
Yes, it explains that I have chosen to defy my social brainwashing and dare to question the secularists.If you feel that medieval times were near perfect examples of Jesus teachings, then that explains quite a bit.
It says a lot that you choose not to.
That is a lie. Carroll, Belloc, and Pernoud write extensively about what all of Europe and all Europeans experienced, not just about political relationships. If you had actually read the works I’ve cited, you’d know that.The rich resources you mention are generally examples of the political relationships and do little to explain the actual situations experienced by most of the inhabitants of Europe.
If you refuse to read them, then please do not comment on them.
Obfuscation. The writings I’ve mentioned are by serious Catholic scholars who understand their subject material inside and out. Why must you make up bald-faced lies? What is your real purpose here?To put it into a modern analogy, the writings you mention are akin to writings saying that the US economy is in recovery . When in med times it is pointed out the relationships between the 'civilized and titled, it ignores the plight of the common man. Similarly today the profitability of Wall Street is in stark contrast to the real unemployment rate that is in the high teens.
Since I have never stated anything of the sort, I must conclude that you are attempting to deliberately misconstrue the issue. If you are truly a Catholic, I implore you to cease; if you are not, consider yourself outed.To give examples of only what is happening to the “best and the brightest” ignores what happened in the past and is happening to the most.
More obfuscation. The very Faith you take for granted (assuming you are even a legitimate Catholic) was established by a Church that enjoyed its rightful place as the shepherd and guide of temporal authorities. Western civilization as a whole, also taken for granted, is the pure product of the Church’s hard work to preserve and restore civilization after the fall of the Roman Empire.To equate the actions of the church in the middle ages or up to the most recent past with what Jesus taught ignores both the actions of the church and what Jesus taught. Why do you think the term “lack of impeccability” came into usage?
It is a lamentable thing that Catholics today take so much for granted.
The Church does not reserve anything; God bestows the gift of infallibility and defines its limits, not the Church. You seem to misunderstand that the Church obeys God, not dictates anything of her own accord.What you appear to have an inability to do is to separate the human actions of the members of the clergy with the word of God. That is why the church expressly reserves infallibility to matters of morals and doctrine.
The popes were the judges of kings, the only effective check and balance against temporal authority that has ever existed. But I suppose you prefer popes and the Church to be subject to temporal, secular authorities. Little wonder the Church is so hamstrung as it is today.That is why some popes could live like kings and still be shepherds.
Separation of Church and state is a horrible thing. The government today influences the Church to a degree never before heard of in Western civilization. If the Church was free to influence the government, we’d have governments which obey Church teachings and submit to Church guidance. We have nothing of the sort today, proving utterly false the assumption that a secular society protects the Church or is more amenable to Church guidance than a society where the Church has legal protection and support.Separation of Church and State is a good thing. It keeps the government from influencing the Church. However, the Church is free to influence the government. That is not a violation of the separation of Church and State idea that is present in our law and governmental systems.
I’ve been doing it all along. That you refuse to take correction is not our fault.Actually show me one post that has a factual error.
The Church never had temporal authority - what it had was temporal influence; popes from the earliest times knew they could not handle the burdens of temporal government. That is why they chose merely to invest temporal rulers with their crowns rather than assume all their duties. The Church’s moral authority, however, cannot be enforced without temporal sanction and obedience, without cooperation from the government as well as the citizenry. This right and natural relationship has been broken and as such, society and Church both suffer.You have it right. The church can do more when it has moral authority then with temporal authority.
Unless this natural bond is restored, society will continue to suffer and the Church will be further marginalized until her voice is no longer heard. It is barely audible today.
