…unless you also want to say that the Catholic church gave us the inquisition and the priest sex abuse scandals.
The point being that you can not take credit for the positive while at the same time pass the buck on the negative. A little consistency on this please.
Let us review what can and cannot be considered an official Teaching of the Church: It must be either a Doctrinal belief or a Moral belief.
Determining the Canon of the Bible is both Doctrinal and Moral, and its determination is clearly a case where the Church is actively and universally defining the two, as it canonizes in one fell swoop the usefulness (though certainly not stand-alone) of those books in our
search for Morality and Truth. It affirms the teachings of the Bible as true and sound, a statement at once Doctrinal and Moral, and since the Canon was to apply universally, it meets all the criteria for being an Infallible, official teaching.
Priest sex abuse scandals have nothing to with the Church actively promoting such abuse in our Doctrine or official Moral Teaching, as the Church leaders, for all their faults, have never given anything in the way of a statement saying “It is good and just to abuse children or offend those who do”; thus it has nothing in common with canonizing the Bible, which the Church actively and unapologetically did.
Likewise, the inquisition was a collective and isolated action, which in no way established a Doctrinal Reality or an Ethical One. It was an ethical incident, to be sure, but not an ethical
definition. To imply that an isolated incident within history was ever intended to apply to universal and timeless Ethic and Doctrine simply makes no legitimate sense. There isn’t and never could be an infallible statement saying “The Inquisition is okay” because infallible teaching must apply to something more universal and timeless than that. If a Pope commissions people to kill people, that is a
practical command, and isn’t even structured in the correct manner to be an infallible definition of Doctrinal and Ethical realities. Just as if I tell you to kill someone, I am not defining any truth to you–I am simply telling you to do something, which defines nothing of its morality. Thus this likewise is of a totally different nature than the canonization of the Bible.
So it is with all the negative, and many of the good, things throughout Church history. It’s not only the bad things that we deny are parts of official Catholicism. Many good fruits accomplished by Catholics throughout history are still not the stuff of infallible pronouncements. For instance, the Catholic school system is a good fruit of Catholic people just as the inquisition was a bad fruit of Catholic people. Just like the Inquisition, it is impossible for a School System to be part of what
Catholicism (as opposed to Catholic people) has given the world. So, unlike you imply, we are not conveniently choosing to say our religion (Catholicism, which many refer to as “The Church” since the Church is the revealer of that religion) gave us every single good thing Catholics have ever done. That we do not believe our religion itself has given us the bad things is obvious and suggests no devious or sneaky manipulation of the facts. If a person believed their religion itself (as opposed to misunderstandings and misinterpretations) was a source of bad, why would they continue to follow it?
So there is a difference in the things between which you draw a parallel. This has probably been said at some point (this thread grew very quickly) since it is rather obvious, and so if you have brought up other arguments after that one was refuted, I cannot deal with those until I have them.
Blessings in Christ,
KindredSoul
P.S. I see that you have had people insult you because of your name. I assume your name is meant to be tongue-in-cheek and make no attempt to insult you for it, but I would have advised you to have chosen something that didn’t lend itself easily to angry insults. If you are
hoping to be insulted so as to make Catholics look bad, as your signature leads me to believe, I must point out that unlike your signature suggests, such insults have nothing to do with Catholicism being bad nor the Holy Spirit of love lacking in Catholicism any more than in Bible-Only Christianity. I can attest, people of all beliefs can get easily worked up and hostile when those beliefs are attacked. So please do not suggest that this universal (as in, found in every line of belief, not necessarily in every individual) phenomenon proves anything, as that would be fallacious.