Here’s what’s been percolating in my mind for a while, ever since this thread was posted. (It’s just taken me a few days to get it together)
Imagine this:
You’re happily married and thinking oneself a faithful Catholic. Then one day, a friend of yours makes a joking reference to, say, a news article about some aspect of Catholic moral teaching.
You want to speak up in defense of the Church, but you’re just an average Joe/Jane Catholic, who doesn’t have the CCC memorized, was poorly catechized, and is just glad to get to a reverent Mass each Sunday.
So you google some of the terms, find a link to Vatican documents, and–cue harp music–a tiny corner of your brain becomes enlightened by one of the truths of Catholic Moral Teaching.
But the more you search, the more info comes up! Soon you are surfing through the web, reading plenty of myths for every Truth! Who can you trust? Now you are starting to have doubts about some of the very practices that you’ve always done without a moment’s hesitation in your marriage!
Who can you ask about this & be absolutely rock-solid sure that their answer is correct? Your priest? Well, not face to face, surely! Okay, so in the confessional? You try that, but he isn’t as specific as you were hoping, and you’re not going to keep pestering him about it, for goodness’ sake!
So you try an anonymous Catholic internet forum. It’s run by a reputable organization, and you know from lurking there that people will usually cite references with their answers, so at least you can do your own homework.
Sure enough, you get a bunch of replies. Although they vary, the majority agree that what you describe is not a sin. Most of them point you toward a particular church document. A few of them actually take the time to walk you through the reasoning process. So you breath a sigh of relief, you’ve gotten a little catechesis, and you’ve found a new reference source for future wiscracks from your friend.
Is that so bad?