I quoted a few ECFs who held a non-resistant position a few posts ago in case you didnāt see it.
Those are interesting quotes, Iāll have to look at them in context.
But regardless, popularity of opinion is no indication of truth.
Agreed, but when it comes to Christian theology, the more minority your viewpoint, the more people youāre saying are being deluded despite their sincerity.
About the best I can do (and all you can do either in your own circumstances) is pray that I am properly disposed to have āeyes to seeā or āears to hearā. Not everyone understood Jesusā own words as they fell from his own lips either. Yet some did believe and followed Him. It did not require an infallible magisterium to step in there and explain things either.
Actually, it did: Jesus Himself had to explain His teachings on several occasions.
To the best of my knowledge, I do my best to receive the truth and obey it - even a hard teaching like non-resistance.
Just because a teaching is āhardā doesnāt mean itās from God. Donāt mistake difficulty for truth.
Trusting that you do too to the best of your ability and the grace of God, I rely on the mercy of God in both of our conclusions. Again, Iāve no anxiety about this b/c I know I am willing to do anything at all to conform to the will of God.
The issue is that you made a claim earlier, seemingly in defense of the conclusions youāve come to, that you do not believe that God would mislead a sincere seeker. Iām disproving this claim. I myself am a sincere seeker, and yet Iāve come to the
opposite conclusion you have. So you must adjust your claim, either to say that God misleads sincere seekers (of course He doesnāt!), or to say that sincere seekers can still be misled, in which case your claim cannot apply both to your sincere seeking and to my sincere seeking.
Basically, Iām showing you that sincerity has nothing to do with arrival at the truth. Many quite sincere people arrive at false conclusions: at least one of us has.
You are where you are in your understanding. I am where I am. Am I being given more? I have no idea. God can judge that. But Iāve no doubt about my sincerity. I donāt doubt yours either.
Then the only conclusion is that
sincerity has nothing to do with arrival at the truth. Donāt you agree?
Iāve flip-flopped in my convictions many, many times the past several years.
I understand that you see this as a manifestation of your willingness to obey Godās will wherever it leads, and I wonāt disagree (for the sake of charitability), but for your own sake, you might want to look into whether itās actually more a result of your character: are you fickle? Do you always feel the need to take āthe road less traveledā? Are you pugilistic, and enjoy taking the less popular position in debates simply because itās less popular? I say this because I myself have to constantly ask myself whether I do what I do because I want to rebel against my parents, because I know thatās something Iām prone to do when the opportunity arises. Itās at least worth some consideration.
I appologize for the arrogant way Iāve presented my convictions. I mean that. I just think it is so obviously against the nature of Christ that it seems quite sinful to even entertain the possibility that any killing is permissible for a Christian.
For my part, I think the idea that a man shouldnāt save his wife and children from an aggressor is obviously against the nature of Christ, who came to seek and save the lost, to protect and defend the least of these. I think a father who looked on and refused to defend his children from an aggressor intent on raping and torturing them would very much cause them to stumble, and it would be better for him to have a millstone hung around his neck and be cast into the sea, than sit idly by while his helpless children are raped and tortured.
Make no mistake: as Iāve posted elsewhere in this thread, I do not believe that killing such an aggressor is
good, only that itās
permissible, and possibly in some situations
necessary in order to fulfill a manās
responsibility to protect his family.
I say I reject the CC claims of authority based on this clear contradiction to Christ.
The Catholic Church only contradicts Christās teachings
as best you understand them, you must admit. Unless you are claiming personal infallibility in this regard, and weāve established youāre not, then you must admit the possibility that youāve misinterpreted Christās teachings in this regard, and that the Catholic Church may be correct.
How is the canonization of scripture āevil meansā?
The canonization of Scripture was the āgood endā in my argument, which was arrived at by the āevil meansā of a (supposedly) false faith by which works were measured and determined canonical or non-canonical.
The counterargument to my claim, which defeats it entirely (I realized after posting it) is that God already uses evil means to accomplish His good ends: Pharaohās hardness of heart is one concrete example, but all sin glorifies God in that it gives Him the opportunity to exhibit either His mercy in forgiving it or His justice in punishing it. God is permitted to use evil means to accomplish good ends; humans simply arenāt, because we donāt know the end from the beginning like He does.
I am merely pointing out that it does not take an infallible magisterium to be used to canonize scripture.
Thereās a much deeper argument to be had here, but Iād rather flesh it out separately and save it for another thread.
To Be Continuedā¦