V
Vonsalza
Guest
You’re absolutely right. So first step is that the “fundamental” label has to be first removed for a long enough duration that no one has living memory of that incremental change.@Vonsalza made the point earlier in the thread that such teachings don’t work anymore because we’re 8 billion now, but I don’t believe fundamental objections can be overruled by pragmatic considerations or circumstances.
But maybe Catholicism will refuse to concede its stance on artificial contraception. As such, it’ll dwindle down as it’s currently dwindling in the paved and air-conditioned world.
But that won’t be the end of Christianity. Most Christian groups are fine with it. Some evangelicals are staunch proponents of regular “relations” as a key to a happy marriage - the notion that you won’t also be risking additional children through some form of BC is just assumed.
But to be frank - the monolithic “Catholic View” on artificial contraception is held as fundamental by relatively few people who label themselves “Catholic”, as you wisely pointed out.
I bet if the RCC rolled out the welcome mats for it, the number of returning “prodigals” would vastly out-measure the few hundred thousand you’d lose the the Sedes and similar groups.
But enough of that - this all just relates to the idea that religions incapable of change eventually get read about in history class rather than in “Current World Religions”. Orthodoxy shows more adaptability than the RCC in this regard. Pretty much every other Christian sect does.