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Unitas
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I wrote this a while back, about this same topic. Too large to repost here.
Pius IX and modern democratic freedoms
Pius IX and modern democratic freedoms
Was not the Great Flood divine intervention? Is it not divine intervention when God smites a person down? Were rainbows not explained as divine intervention after the Great Flood? Was it not divine intervention when God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah? Was it not divine intervention when Jesus fed the poor, healed the sick, raised the dead? Did God not plague the Egyptians with 10 different curses? Did he not split the sea and destroy the Egyptians following the Jews? A miracle is anything that occurs with supposed divine intervention. Anything that happens in the Bible as described to have divine intervention is a miracle. And miracles in the Bible as said Error #7 are all true, actual happenings.
I don’t understand your point
-adrift
It is saying that the Church as a religious figure has the power of governments.
Why do you think it doesn’t. The Vatician is a country.
-adrift
Ah, so you agree that Catholics should not make abortion against the law correct? Abortion is not the law of the land, people now have the choice whether to have one or not.
No that was not my point my point was when the government makes a law contrary to what is moral we do not follow the government law but the law of God. The ability to have an abortion is the law. Catholic hospitals must not allow abortions.
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In every instant where there is a miracle or divine intervention in the Bible, error #7 says it is completely true. All of those that I listed above are miracles, as miracles are divine intervention.I don’t understand your point
The point is that the Catholic Church is totalitarian. It’s goal is to set up and control all the governments of the world and make Catholicism the sole form of worship to the exclusion of all others by any means deemed necessary by the pope. All public policy would be based on religion. This goes directly against all democratic concepts of our day.Why do you think it doesn’t. The Vatician is a country.
And that would incite rebellion.No that was not my point my point was when the government makes a law contrary to what is moral we do not follow the government law but the law of God. The ability to have an abortion is the law. Catholic hospitals must not allow abortions.
Obviously you haven’t read it. The article shows how the two papal statements do NOT contradict each other.-It only really talks about freedom of religion. Freedom of religion was very clearly prohibited by errors 15, 77, and 78. But that article talks about Vatican II approving of freedom of religion. Seems that papal infallibility is being contradicted here.
-Petergee
Yes. Though not in the extremely rare fundamentalist-literalist sense which you apparently ascribe to all Christians.Do you believe in the Great Flood?
No.Do you believe God actually smote people over trivial matters?
Yes.Do you really believe in revelation?
I’ll ignore that juvenile insult.If you read the Bible,
No there aren’t.there are many instances of divine intervention that you will find to be non-rational, having no evidence or reason, and down right objectionable.
That’s why I said “proto-Marxist”. Marx and Marxism did not arise in a vacuum. The ignorant ideas which gave birth to it had been a powerful influence since at least 1789.The Communist Manifesto was published in 1848. The error of separation of church and state was not likely made in reaction to communism.
As I explained, Pius was most certainly NOT condemning, and in fact was positively endorsing, the “separation of Church and state” as 21st century Christians understand the phrase, and which was a concept which the Catholic Church INVENTED in the first century and has fought to defend ever since against those who sought to incorporate religion into the State as all other religions before Christianity were incorporated.the section where the separation of church and state is condemned in is titled: “Errors about civil society, condemned both in itself and its relation to the Church.” This very clearly includes the separation of church and state which made up one of the core liberties of American society. Pius IX declared this belief to be an “error about civil society in itself.”
I am foremost a child of God. My choice to be Catholic comes from God giving me a free will. Others have made this choice to die as martyrs… I would too if that was the only choice Democracy is great but it is not everything. We are after all a Republic.In every instant where there is a miracle or divine intervention in the Bible, error #7 says it is completely true. All of those that I listed above are miracles, as miracles are divine intervention.
I agree they are completely true
The point is that the Catholic Church is totalitarian. It’s goal is to set up and control all the governments of the world and make Catholicism the sole form of worship to the exclusion of all others by any means deemed necessary by the pope. All public policy would be based on religion. This goes directly against all democratic concepts of our day.
The goal of the Church is to guide people to heaven.
And that would incite rebellion.
WHY
Are you foremost a Catholic, or are you foremost an American? It is not religion’s place to rule. I would think you’d be more grateful to democratic and liberal ideals than to Catholicism. After all it is what has given you the choice to be Catholic.
Here’s what the article says about error 15 on freedom of religion:Obviously you haven’t read it. The article shows how the two papal statements do NOT contradict each other.
This refers to separate questions I asked. You seem to deny that the instances in the Bible where God intervenes and smites people or otherwise causes destruction are not miracles. Miracles are solely instances of divine intervention that make things possible which contradicts nature, they are not always positive or heart warming. All instances of divine intervention are miracles, and it is condemned to deny or lessen any instance of miracles in the Bible, as the descriptions are perfect.Yes. Though not in the extremely rare fundamentalist-literalist sense which you apparently ascribe to all Christians.No.Yes. No there aren’t.
I don’t know what you’re talking about. Give examples if you wish.That’s why I said “proto-Marxist”. Marx and Marxism did not arise in a vacuum. The ignorant ideas which gave birth to it had been a powerful influence since at least 1789.
Where in the world did you get this from? Where was Pius IX endorsing separation of church and state? 21st century Christians most certainly do NOT endorse separation of church and state. Tim Staples, a Catholic apologist I’ve spoken with, absolutely denies that it is in our constitution and believes it is a wrong concept. Obviously Christian fundamentalists don’t like it either. The Catholic church MOST CERTAINLY DID NOT INVENT separation of church and State, Thomas Jefferson and the founding fathers did.As I explained, Pius was most certainly NOT condemning, and in fact was positively endorsing, the “separation of Church and state” as 21st century Christians understand the phrase, and which was a concept which the Catholic Church INVENTED in the first century and has fought to defend ever since against those who sought to incorporate religion into the State as all other religions before Christianity were incorporated.
I’ll ignore this juvenile insult.I’ll ignore that juvenile insult.
IMO you are merely making a dance like you have repeatedly done here, to try to put your own perverse interpretation on the Church’s documents. If you don’t mind I prefer the Cardinal’s interpretation of the S of E, which is not new but basically the same as the interpretations which were made by leading churchmen at the time of the S of E and endorsed by Pius IX himself. You are building a paper tiger.Taking into account proposition 3 of the syllabus in no way changes the meaning of 15. 3 does not deal with the quest through reason to find God, it only deals with the judgments of other truths, good and evil, and law once a person has already found God (and this God 3 is implying is of course the Catholic God). Here the Church is merely making a dance like it always does to justify and/or correct its mistakes.
If by this contorted double negative you mean that I agree they are miracles you are correct.This refers to separate questions I asked. You seem to deny that the instances in the Bible where God intervenes and smites people or otherwise causes destruction are not miracles.
a cute attempt to twist the Church’s definition that a miracle is **beyond or not explicable by **(not contradictory to) **the general laws of **nature (not nature itself).Miracles are solely instances of divine intervention that make things possible which contradicts nature,
If they don’t warm your heart, maybe you’re just too cold-hearted. They warm mine. For God to destroy something evil or to punish a sinner is a positive and heartwarming thing. God never destroys or condemns anyone or anything without giving fair warning that this will be the consequences of sin. If they fail to repent and keep sinning, they bring destruction on themselves. It is sad and evil and negative that they sin, but it is positive that God is just and true to His word.they are not always positive or heart warming.
Again you attempt to spout your own creations as if they were the words of the pope, and have the nerve to demand that catholics believe them.All instances of divine intervention are miracles, and it is condemned to deny or lessen any instance of miracles in the Bible, as the descriptions are perfect.
Choose any of an enormous number of histories of the development of Marxism, including those written by Marxists themselves. They are unanimous that Marx did NOT create Marxism ex nihilo, but it was a natural historical development from previous ideas, culture and insititutions. If you don’t even know this, I don’t intend to go into a lengthy education of you re Marxism. I’m busy enough correcting your absurd ideas about Catholic doctrine.I don’t know what you’re talking about. Give examples if you wish.
I’ve never met a Christian who does not endorse it in the sense I mentioned.Where in the world did you get this from? Where was Pius IX endorsing separation of church and state? 21st century Christians most certainly do NOT endorse separation of church and state.
What a ridiculous little man you are. You think your country is so powerful and important it invented everything, but compared to the history of the Catholic Church, it is just a blip. And the “separation of church and state” in the sense you mean did not become a powerful idea in your country until well over 100 years after Jefferson died.Tim Staples, a Catholic apologist I’ve spoken with, absolutely denies that it is in our constitution and believes it is a wrong concept. Obviously Christian fundamentalists don’t like it either. The Catholic church MOST CERTAINLY DID NOT INVENT separation of church and State, Thomas Jefferson and the founding fathers did.
LOL. You have packed so many implied errors into this little paragraph it’s hard to know where to begin. Making Catholicism the official religion of the Roman Empire was nothing to do with, and indeed antithecal to, the idea that the Church should be controlled by the State. The “Holy Roman Empire”, which was founded centuries AFTER the western Roman Empire collapsed, never ruled Rome and its name has no connection to the so-called “Roman Catholic Church” which was a term invented by anti-Catholic Anglicans in the 17th century.And are you telling me that the Catholics in Rome fought so fervently against making Catholicism the official religion of the empire? Are you saying that there was never such a thing as the Holy Roman Emperor?
-PetergeeLOL. You have packed so many implied errors into this little paragraph it’s hard to know where to begin. Making Catholicism the official religion of the Roman Empire was nothing to do with, and indeed antithecal to, the idea that the Church should be controlled by the State. The “Holy Roman Empire”, which was founded centuries AFTER the western Roman Empire collapsed, never ruled Rome and its name has no connection to the so-called “Roman Catholic Church” which was a term invented by anti-Catholic Anglicans in the 17th century.
You give too much credit to your dogmatic faith. Separation of church and state had been a powerful idea since the beginning. It kept different Christian sects from discriminating against each other in communities sometimes as large as states themselves. Separation was definitely in effect after it was implemented. Puritans for example had wanted to establish total puritan colonies and states and reform a "purified’ Church of England. They discriminated against all non-puritans. Once states were made some state governments tried to pass laws which would have made it so that only people of a certain religion could be voted into elected positions, and in their constitutions tried to implement taxes which would support religious congregations. These were disallowed due to the First Amendment.What a ridiculous little man you are. You think your country is so powerful and important it invented everything, but compared to the history of the Catholic Church, it is just a blip. And the “separation of church and state” in the sense you mean did not become a powerful idea in your country until well over 100 years after Jefferson died.
Hubriss (what a well chosen name) you really need to learn some history, and I don’t mean the pop-TV postmodern secularised revisionist invented “history” but what actually happened. Every sentence in this silly paragraph is pretty much the exact opposite of the historical truth.-Petergee
Ah, you don’t even know what separation of church and state is/does. It’s greatest effect is not to keep a state from controlling a church. The goal of the first amendment for example is to keep religion from playing any role in government, that includes having too much influence on public policy for purely religious reasons. It is to keep any religion from taking control over any part of government. The Holy Roman Emperors were crowned by the Pope to defend the Catholic church. The emperors were considered as part of the Church, but then later emperors attempted to gain more influence and maybe take control of the Church. But it was the Popes who first fused state and church together in order to use the states to uphold its religion.
LOL. How come numerous of your states still had anti-Catholic laws more than a century after your First amendment was passed? And I do love the charming way you continue to assert “my country = the world”You give too much credit to your dogmatic faith. Separation of church and state had been a powerful idea since the beginning. It kept different Christian sects from discriminating against each other in communities sometimes as large as states themselves. Separation was definitely in effect after it was implemented. Puritans for example had wanted to establish total puritan colonies and states and reform a "purified’ Church of England. They discriminated against all non-puritans. Once states were made some state governments tried to pass laws which would have made it so that only people of a certain religion could be voted into elected positions, and in their constitutions tried to implement taxes which would support religious congregations. These were disallowed due to the First Amendment.
You’re doing a superb job correcting me. /endsarcasmHubriss (what a well chosen name) you really need to learn some history, and I don’t mean the pop-TV postmodern secularised revisionist invented “history” but what actually happened. Every sentence in this silly paragraph is pretty much the exact opposite of the historical truth.
They might have, but dare you give any examples?LOL. How come numerous of your states still had anti-Catholic laws more than a century after your First amendment was passed?
“What a ridiculous little man you are. You think your country is so powerful and important it invented everything, but compared to the history of the Catholic Church, it is just a blip.”-you.And I do love the charming way you continue to assert “my country = the world”even after I’ve politely warned you.
I would say all these “bad things” are a result of a deprivation of God’s grace-- their protection being removed due to their personal sins or else the sins of others before them. No, I don’t necesarilly think it’s fair either.Was not the Great Flood divine intervention? Is it not divine intervention when God smites a person down? Were rainbows not explained as divine intervention after the Great Flood? Was it not divine intervention when God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah? Was it not divine intervention when Jesus fed the poor, healed the sick, raised the dead? Did God not plague the Egyptians with 10 different curses? Did he not split the sea and destroy the Egyptians following the Jews?
The pertinent bit of the First Amendment goes like this:Ah, you don’t even know what separation of church and state is/does. It’s greatest effect is not to keep a state from controlling a church. The goal of the first amendment for example is to keep religion from playing any role in government, that includes having too much influence on public policy for purely religious reasons. It is to keep any religion from taking control over any part of government.
“The goal” of the First Amendment, as with the rest of the Bill of Rights, is to place a restriction on the power of the state over its citizens. Private citizens and private groups (like churches) are not themselves bound by the First Amendment. So the primary effect of the First Amendment is aimed at the state (specifically, Congress, as it says) and not at churches themselves. Of course, that does mean that attempts by any religious group to get the state to grant it special status or to strike at its rivals by legislation, but that happens because Congress is forbidden to do those things, not because the First Amendment takes a position on whether religion is a good or bad thing in general.“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”
Cite examples? Every Catholic on this thread has denied your assertion.I’ve been somewhat surprised that Catholics I’ve talked to, including some on these forums, don’t deny that Catholicism is totalitarian.
Sure there are plenty of nominal “Catholics” who subscribe more or less to the politically-correct contradictory nonsense that “every religion is as good and as true as every other religion”. It seems you think “totalitarian” means “thinking that your own beliefs are true and that therefore naturally any contrary beliefs are false”.As I said I had thought that Catholicism had developed into more of a moderate religion by the impression that I had been getting by every day Catholics. It seems to me that most in America at least lead a dual life
Then it’s a sad reflection on Catholic schools that you still have such inverted ideas about history and about what the Catholic Church teaches.(I have been around Catholics all my life, going to Catholic schools up until the end of high school).
I agree with you that this would mean that stories “that are not obviously stories” are “actually perfect and totally true,” but I do not believe that this requires one to disbelieve in the Theory of Evolution or science’s long Earth beliefs. You know, when someone has a vision, the content of the vision is not always literally true. In fact, in the scripture it usually involves symbolic language. It is clear from the texts that this is frequently not meant to be literal. It also is clear from the scripture that the Lord often speaks to humans through this symbolic method of communicating.The Catholic Church believes that all of scripture is divinely inspired, and 5 says that the revelation is perfect. This would mean that it is an error to not believe literally in Creationism, and believe that all the stories that are not obviously stories (Psalms, Jesus stories, Proverbs I think) are actually perfect and totally true.