Then my understanding is that it is not binding on Latin Catholics to believe that muslims have the same God.
But there is no doctrinal infallible teaching in said council about the God of muslims. What are the ramifications?
In the Catholic understanding, certain teachings of the Church can be binding on all the faithful - i.e. obligate them to offer submission of intellect and will - without being considered infallible.
I’m pretty sure the documents of Vatican II are authoritative in this sense - and if not all of them,
certainly the four dogmatic constitutions.
Lumen Gentium - from which we get this disputed claim about Muslims - even overtly explains earlier on that when the Magisterium teaches authoritatively, Catholics can be bound to submit in good faith even if infallibility is not invoked.
The only
infallible teachings are when (a) the
ordinary and universal Magisterium is invoked, but this is nigh impossible to pin down, since it basically means what the bishops have always all taught as a unit, (b) when an ecumenical council invokes the
extraordinary Magisterium, or when (c) a pope invokes the
extraordinary Magisterium (otherwise known as “papal infallibility”).
I have not dismissed a teaching of an ecumenical council. Please stop trying to paint me as a dissenter, it is uncharitable and I don’t appreciate it.
It is not uncharitable for me to point out what is demonstrably true: the Second Vatican Council’s Dogmatic Constitution on the Church teaches that Muslims and Christians have the same God.
So you are saying that there are non-infallible binding teachings…and infallible binding teachigs? Are there non-infallible non-binding teachings? Where do you find your information about this non-infalible binding teaching?
From
Lumen Gentium, one of Vatican II’s dogmatic constitutions. It says Catholics can be bound to assent in good faith to the Church’s teachings even if infallibility is not explicitly invoked.
Furthermore, there were Popes prior to Vatican II who taught the opposite regarding Islam…
None of the quotes you’ve provided constitute the opposite teaching: that Muslims and Christians have the same God does not in any way exonerate the nasty, repressive, false aspects of the Islamic religion - or its status as non-salvific. As I said, Blessed Pope John Paul II himself called Islam “a religion without redemption.”
So there’s certainly continuity here.
That’s unfortunate. I remember as an Eastern Catholic being treated as a second class Catholic by some of the Latins.
That is deeply unfortunate. We still have a long way to go. I’ve read horror stories from plenty of eastern Catholics even on this forum.
Yes Lumen Gentium reaffirms that those Muslims that acknowledge the Creator, Jesus, and profess the Faith of Abraham, the Christian Faith, are included in the plan of salvation and will adore the just judge, Jesus, along with us.
Read in light of Tradition no problem.
What it doesn’t say is that Catholics and Muslins worship the same God.
Okay, now you’re just lying, and it’s making me mad. Here are the
exact words from Lumen Gentium; my source is the Vatican’s own website:
But the plan of salvation also includes those who acknowledge the Creator. In the first place amongst these there are the Mohammedans, who, professing to hold the faith of Abraham, along with us adore the one and merciful God, who on the last day will judge mankind. -
Vatican II’s Dogmatic Constitution on the Church
Please note:
- Muslims acknowledge the Creator
- They profess to hold the faith of Abraham; it does not claim that they actually do
- They do, however, “along with us adore the one and merciful God”
So please stop spreading falsehoods about Church teaching. The Catholic Church disagrees with you, as the universally binding teaching of a dogmatic constitution of an ecumenical council proves.
In this respect I beg to differ. Allah is not, in the first instance, an Arabic word, its origin being Assyrian. It is a contraction of *el and *ilah i.e. “god”****It was used in pre Islamic times to mean “a higher god” by the Arabic people. Mohammed took this name and loaded it with new meaning from borrowed pre-Islamic ideas, and also from the Old and New Testament thus introducing Allah as a “high god”. The koran itself testifies that the worship of “
al-ilah” was an integral part of the worship system of the pre-Islamic pantheon.
It is an Arabic word
today, and it does indeed mean “God” today. Otherwise why would Arabic-speaking Christians use it?
boleyn2010;8838439:
For my part when I use the term or word “Allah” I am referring to the name used in the koran and not to the name used by Christians to mean “God”.
… They are the same word, though. They have the same meaning - which is “God” according to the philosophical concept that identifies him as the only true and transcendent God.
Muslims believe that the koran is the inerrant word of Allah. So if there is a lie in the koran who is responsible? God cannot lie. So the koran is not inspired by God. To worship the god of the koran and to pray to him is not to worship God or to pray to Him.
Actually, I totally agree. Of course the Qur’an is not inspired by God; that would be ridiculous. It teaches blatant falsehoods.
God is not “the god of the koran,” because the Qur’an teaches falsehoods about him.