You are welcome to come and have a teaching explained.
I tried it, several times. Most recently I pointed out that the cathecism states that God’s existence can be known through
rational means only, that there is no need for faith in some revelation in that respect. (It said that specifics need revelation, but the existence of God does not). Except that it ends there. There is no continuation, it does not say “
how” can God’s existence be known through reason only. There are many so-called arguments for God’s existence out there. One can reasonably expect that the cathecism will state: “
this is the correct proof for God’s existence - and spells it out”. But the page is “empty”.
Here is another reason. The catholic church “claims” that it is the only authority which is qualified to interpret the Bible. Ok, let’s accept this provisionally - even though it is a self-proclaimed authority. But in that case it is inexcusable not to give us a specific interpretation of each and every verse. Which verses are to be understood in a literal fashion, and which ones are to taken allegorically, and if they are allegorical, how should those verses be understood? (Is the creation story literally true? Was there a talking serpent and an actual tree of knowledge of good and evil? Is the story of the flood a literal description of what happened? Is Luke 19:27 literal or allegorical?) If the church claims authority and does not deliver the goods, what kind of authority is that?
But if you wish to deny the authority of the teaching, then that would be your problem.
I deny it. I have many reasons, and two of them I just spelled out above. A “real” authority does not just say something, it tells the specifics, and then tells why those specifics are correct.
The teachings of the Catholic church are firmly backed by tradition.
Tradition means nothing to me.
There actually is a larger problem at work here.
We approached it earlier, but I believe it was dismissed as a ‘red herring’ when it really strikes at the heart of the issue.
What do you believe?
If you believe anything beyond your own practical experience, who do you trust?
Why?
You see, very little of our knowledge is through practical experience.
I drop a rock on my foot, I know of gravity and mass.
But how much is there that I simply do not experience practically or do not bother to test? How do you know the speed of light? The distance to the moon?
That there are problems in the Middle East? That Obama is currently the president?
Much of what you know is told to you by someone or something you believe to be an authority.
So who is your authority and why?
One of mine is God’s church. And it has not steered me wrong.
This is an important question. Indeed we only acquired a miniscule portion of our knowledge through personal experience and verification. An overwhelming majority of what we know comes through “second-hand” means, by accepting some authority’s word for it.
So who is an authority? Someone who can
demonstrate what it says, without referring to its “authoritative” status. Someone who can demonstrate the truth without demanding an
a-priori acceptance of what it claims. Authority is never self-proclaimed, the authority is earned, because some people can demonstrate that they know what they are talking about.
The catholic church fails woefully in that respect. It cannot show the veracity of its claims without referring to its own
self-proclaimed authority, and/or demanding an a-priori acceptance of its claims. There was a catholic theologian who said (not a verbatim quote): “the last thing one should ask for is evidence
for God’s existence. First you must accept that God exists, and then you will be in the position to search
of God’s existence”.
Do you see the difference? The theologian says that one should
not collect all the evidence, and then let the chips fall where they may; he said that one should collect the evidence which support the hypothesis, and discard the rest. That is not the way to establish an “authority”. This is how snake-oil peddlers operate, who only say: “trust me”.