Ideology means politics. Faith is belief. Even if a person’s beliefs are mistaken, the Church says that it is wrong to interfere. Evangelization must never take the form of legal action against someone for their religious beliefs. I understand that this was not always the position held by the Church. But it is today’s position. That is the authority by which we must guide ourselves on matters of law. These positions were never de fide. In other words, they were meant to defend the faith, but they themselves were not statements of faith. Therefore, the Church can change how she goes about defending the faith. She does not authorize the state to take action against those who are not of our faith.
First of all, I completely agree with you about the Church’s authority. I would never do anything contrary to the Church’s will. The chief question for me is whether or not I should
believe that legally punishing heretics or apostates through civil law is always wrong, has always been wrong and will always be wrong. The decisions of past councils and popes make the answer to that question sound like a very strong “no.” But Vatican II (though I know I could easily be misunderstanding its Declaration) sounded to me as though it was saying, “yes, using civil law to punish heretics or apostates, even when they’re spreading error to the faithful, is always wrong, and this is a matter of faith” (it seemed that way to me because of all the theological arguments they used to buttress their statement).
It sounds from what you just said as though you’re saying that the Church’s Declaration on Religious Freedom is not a statement of faith but a statement of how the faith is to be practiced in the present time. Which means the Declaration is not saying it always has been and will be wrong to punish heretics with law when they try to evangelize Catholics; rather, it is saying that it would be wrong right now in the present environment. That isn’t how I understood the Declaration as I read it, though I know some people who have read it understand it that way. You’re the theologian though, not me . . . is that how it was intended to be read?
JReducation:
But the documents were written to reflect the mind of the Church.
Weren’t the documents of the Fourth Lateran Council, the Council of Toulouse and the Council of Florence also written to reflect the mind of the Church? They also defended the laws they supported on the grounds of Biblical evidence and the beliefs of some of the Early Fathers.
JReducation:
c. It must be an infallible truth that has been revealed. This is not an infallible truth that was revealed. The infallible truth here is the truth about the Church. The how and when to deal with heresy is not a revealed truth. The Church must keep the truths about the Catholic Church, but it can change the means and systems on dealing with heresy.
Perhaps one of the things that has been causing me difficulty is an inability to fully make this distinction where it pertains to the Declaration on Religious Freedom. It appeared to me that the Declaration was making a timeless statement of faith which condemned the actions of all the past councils and popes who used law to penalize heretics and apostates, and which set the course for the future in a way that differed from them. But what you’re saying about it is that the belief that using law against heretics violates human rights is a belief of the current popes and bishops that is subject to change, because it doesn’t come from infallible revelation. It is a theologically supported belief, similar to the belief in Limbo, I guess one might say, which is subject to change depending on what Pope we have. It is a method of dealing with a problem, not a doctrine, though this particular method was rejected partly on reasons of faith which differ from some historical popes and can be changed again.
If this is the case, one can still believe that the Fourth Lateran Council was right to punish heretics and can believe that our recent popes are making a mistake in rejecting this right of Catholic States, though one is still obliged to submit to the Church’s authority regardless of whether an error of methods (or in the reasoning supporting that shift of methods) is taking place or not. Because all of this controversy is a discussion of methods and use of theological reasoning to support different methods, it is “open territory” for difference of opinion, though any command from the Church must obviously always be obeyed by all parties discussing the issue.
I guess I was looking at the Declaration as delivering a binding, timeless statement rather than as giving a pastoral opinion that is subject to change.
Something I find interesting about your post 47 is that all the reasons you gave for the Church changing her position were reasons of practicality, not reasons of principle. This makes sense to me instinctively, as it shows consistency between the present Church and the past Church, but when I read the Declaration, I saw it lightly touch on the reasons of practicality, but focus much more on theologically arguing that it’s wrong to ever impinge on anyone’s religious freedom. Which seemed to me to condemn the actions of the Fourth Lateran Council and other past councils and popes who have taken a different position in their own time periods and circumstances. Was I wrong in that impression?
Thanks again for all the time you’ve taken in responding to these questions

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