D
ddiemer.catholic
Guest
My friend Greg, a baptized Roman Catholic, told me that many canonized Saints in the Catholic Church actually taught heresy. When I asked for Saints’ names, he provided St. Maximillian Kolbe and St. Alphonsus Ligouri.
I explained to him that the process of canonization precludes the possibility that the candidate believed, said, wrote, or taught anything contrary to the Bible, Tradition, or the Magisterium of the Catholic Church. His answer was basically, “That’s the process, but it’s not what actually happens.” In effect, even though the Church had such strict measures in place to ensure the heroic virtue of the candidate, in practice, they want this person to be a Saint, and so canonize him regardless of the individual’s beliefs, practices, teachings, writings, or other witnesses.
He insisted that St. Alphonsus taught non-biblical truths, especially found in The Glories of Mary, that he teaches things directly contrary to Jesus and the Bible. When I asked him for proof, he told me to read The Glories of Mary and pick any page, chapter, or paragraph and that would be sufficient proof. I told him that’s not how argumentation work: if he makes a claim, he must support his claim, not demand that I go hunting for his proof.
He became enraged that I wouldn’t read The Glories of Mary and hung up.
Aside from praying for him, what do you think I should do?
I explained to him that the process of canonization precludes the possibility that the candidate believed, said, wrote, or taught anything contrary to the Bible, Tradition, or the Magisterium of the Catholic Church. His answer was basically, “That’s the process, but it’s not what actually happens.” In effect, even though the Church had such strict measures in place to ensure the heroic virtue of the candidate, in practice, they want this person to be a Saint, and so canonize him regardless of the individual’s beliefs, practices, teachings, writings, or other witnesses.
He insisted that St. Alphonsus taught non-biblical truths, especially found in The Glories of Mary, that he teaches things directly contrary to Jesus and the Bible. When I asked him for proof, he told me to read The Glories of Mary and pick any page, chapter, or paragraph and that would be sufficient proof. I told him that’s not how argumentation work: if he makes a claim, he must support his claim, not demand that I go hunting for his proof.
He became enraged that I wouldn’t read The Glories of Mary and hung up.
Aside from praying for him, what do you think I should do?
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