The Lord has redeemed all of us....Pope Francis

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You keep talking about “defending the Pope”. No, this is not about defending the Pope. This is about clarification so as to send the correct message about Church teaching. It appears that the whole world is having some sort of discussion about this particular homily. Our Pope’s homilies are spread throughout the world daily. Whether you think it shouldn’t matter to the rest of the world because it’s technically a “homily” is irrelevant. It apparently does matter. What is relevant is that the world is getting the WRONG message. If our Church is so concerned about evangelization, then here is the perfect opportunity to evangelize those who misunderstand. WHY DOESN’T IT??
You are right. There was an attempt to explain which brought more confusion. His message was incomplete,non-Catholics are redeemed, and the missing part ofthe message, if restricted to past teachings, still go to hell. He couldn’t say that because the Chruch no longer believes that to the be case. The pope can not say that the Church has changed it’s teaching or that would deny papal infallibility.

JMJ
 
I think ConstantineTG’s link to the Orthodox priests at the beginning of this thread and the one where I cited continuity with Pope Benedict and historic Church teachings really does answer the question. The comment Pope Francis made was completely in line with Church Tradition and teachings and some of the discussions are wandering way off the path into speculative questions of theology on an unrelated issue.

Pope Francis’ comments were in relation to the Gospel reading of Mark concerning some preaching the gospel of Jesus who were not of Jesus’ group. He spoke on the fact that all are redeemed (even if only many are saved). There is nothing new or novel about it. He was picking up right where Pope B left off.

SCC
Again, how can you deny the difference between “No salvation outside the Church” NO EXCEPTIONS even for a martyr in the name of Christ, with the new?
 
When I first reverted back to Catholicism, my faith was very experience oriented. I had a profound experience of God and began to come back out of a sense of joy. All was very joyful and reassuring, which is fine- for a time.

I have found that whenever my comfort zone in the faith is challenged, pain results, and growth from that. And usually I find that I have not been truly following the Christian life, have not been listening to the Church, not accepting what is being proposed but rather imposing my own views first, cause they are comfortable and reassuring for me.

Contraception is one such issue.
Alms-giving is another big one where I put my own feelings about societal problems ahead of Church teaching.
Paying to Caesar what is due to him is another.
General obedience…I am comfortable obeying just so much.
In my experience, if I’m comfortable in the faith and feeling like I have answers to all the problems, I am needing God’s corrective action. And he always comes through in some way.
I attempt to always give the Church…my pastor, catechists, up to the Pope… the benefit of the doubt if I don’t understand something, cause my salvation depends on my being in communion with the Church. It is so simple but so hard to do.
Thanks for this.

I understand what you’re saying. I understand the kind of discomfort that can be good, like if Pope Francis says “we must go out to the poor and serve them”, I might be forced to realize that I don’t really do this much. That could make me uncomfortable, and maybe motivate me to change my behavior and actually get off my backside and serve the poor. Certainly Jesus Himself made people uncomfortable in this good way.

But what if one feels uncomfortable about Church leadership, or (potential) changes to Church doctrine, or doubts about the validity of the Church etc. This kind of discomfort doesn’t motivate me to live a more Christian life, it just pulls me away. So how this kind of discomfort be good, or can it?
 
You are right. There was an attempt to explain which brought more confusion. His message was incomplete,non-Catholics are redeemed, and the missing part ofthe message, if restricted to past teachings, still go to hell. He couldn’t say that because the Chruch no longer believes that to the be case. The pope can not say that the Church has changed it’s teaching or that would deny papal infallibility.

JMJ
Or,…maybe the Church really has never changed her teachings. She has just really started to see and understand what she actually it teaching.

Kind of reminds me of what Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI said about having faith with reason now. Maybe now we are coming to understand the reason of all we have believed over the years.
 
Hi JMJCatholic- the Church did not change the doctrine that there is no salvation outside of the Church. That remains true. Anyone who is saved, is saved through Christ’s body here on earth, the Church. There is a great explanation of this by Dr. Fastiggio (it is about 1/3 of the way through the mp3).

stanastasia.libsyn.com/that_all_may_be_one_q_a
 
JMJ, I think you misunderstand the CCC. You cited 1741 to make a point that I don’t think the CCC was making. 1741 is in the section on the Catechism titled “Man’s Freedom / Human Freedom in the Economy of Salvation” making it clear that the freedom in 1741 is separate from the salvation. In fact, 1741 on “Freedom and Grace” make the point that the two ideas are not in conflict properly understood. In fact, the entire discussion on freedom in this section in specifically in line with the language of redemption so that man has the freedom to make freewill choices like, for example, to accept or not accept God’s free gift of faith. This point is made more explicit as that section of the catechism continues but 1744 states it well: “Freedom is the power to act or not to act, and so to perform deliberate acts of one’s own. Freedom attains perfection in its acts when directed toward God, the sovereign Good.”

A fuller reading of that portion of the Catechism would help bring greater context to what is meant by “freedom” from a CCC perspective.
 
Hi JMJCatholic- the Church did not change the doctrine that there is no salvation outside of the Church. That remains true. Anyone who is saved, is saved through Christ’s body here on earth, the Church. There is a great explanation of this by Dr. Fastiggio (it is about 1/3 of the way through the mp3).

stanastasia.libsyn.com/that_all_may_be_one_q_a
So exactly when did the Church realize/decide it wasn’t just physical membership? It seems like it happened overnight. It took over 2,000 years for the Holy Spirit to clarify this, very critical tenet of the Catholic Church?

Something just doesn’t make sense to me.
 
From Baltimore Catechism No. 4:

If you are in a state of mortal sin you lose the merit of any good works you perform. God promises to reward us for good works, and if we are in the state of grace when we do the good works, God will keep His promise and give us the reward; but if we are in mortal sin, we have no right or claim to any reward for good works, because we are enemies of God.

Isn’t this quite different from what we understand today? I do not bring this up because I disagree with Pope Francis, only more support for the fact that Church teaching has changed.

JMJ
 
From Baltimore Catechism No. 4:

If you are in a state of mortal sin you lose the merit of any good works you perform. God promises to reward us for good works, and if we are in the state of grace when we do the good works, God will keep His promise and give us the reward; but if we are in mortal sin, we have no right or claim to any reward for good works, because we are enemies of God.

Isn’t this quite different from what we understand today? I do not bring this up because I disagree with Pope Francis, only more support for the fact that Church teaching has changed.

JMJ
Did Church teaching change or are Pope Francis’ words giving the impression that it did?

Let me see if I can see the similar part in the New Catechism.

I can’t find something that specifically speaks about “good works” but I did find this which I think basically says the same thing:

1861 Mortal sin is a radical possibility of human freedom, as is love itself. It results in the loss of charity and the privation of sanctifying grace, that is, of the state of grace.* If it is not redeemed by repentance and God’s forgiveness, it causes exclusion from Christ’s kingdom and the eternal death of hell**, for our freedom has the power to make choices for ever, with no turning back. However, although we can judge that an act is in itself a grave offense, we must entrust judgment of persons to the justice and mercy of God.*
 
But what if one feels uncomfortable about Church leadership, or (potential) changes to Church doctrine, or doubts about the validity of the Church etc. This kind of discomfort doesn’t motivate me to live a more Christian life, it just pulls me away. So how this kind of discomfort be good, or can it?
We have the consolation of the Holy Spirit that it will all work out to God’s good pleasure, that truth is truth and doesn’t change. The question that is hard to swallow is
“Will I accept this consolation, or will I insist that things happen the way I want them to, or in a way that I fully understand?”

That means detachment for me. If the institution I place my trust in says something I don’t understand, the onus is on me to let go of my insistence, and come to the living water. Then I might understand. (Or I might not)
For ex…Why is contraception bad when people are starving? The teaching doesn’t make any sense to a lot of people. For me, it began to make sense when I gave up my own understanding and plunged forward in trust of the Church. It happend without me “knowing” something, but rather trusting,then knowing. To understand a lot of this teaching, I have to be willing to first be taken apart and remade. If I’m not willing to be remade, I live a life at odds with the gospel and the Church. Both ask for my conversion, and that can be very uncomfortable. That’s why I think Francis is doing a great job. He is challenging people to move.
 
JMJ, I think you misunderstand the CCC. You cited 1741 to make a point that I don’t think the CCC was making. 1741 is in the section on the Catechism titled “Man’s Freedom / Human Freedom in the Economy of Salvation” making it clear that the freedom in 1741 is separate from the salvation. In fact, 1741 on “Freedom and Grace” make the point that the two ideas are not in conflict properly understood. In fact, the entire discussion on freedom in this section in specifically in line with the language of redemption so that man has the freedom to make freewill choices like, for example, to accept or not accept God’s free gift of faith. This point is made more explicit as that section of the catechism continues but 1744 states it well: “Freedom is the power to act or not to act, and so to perform deliberate acts of one’s own. Freedom attains perfection in its acts when directed toward God, the sovereign Good.”

A fuller reading of that portion of the Catechism would help bring greater context to what is meant by “freedom” from a CCC perspective.
I don’t think the above explanation would be comprehensible to the average Catholic, and not due to poor catechesis, as was stated; hence the need for clarity and consistency.

JMJ
 
That’s right. Why do I bother being Catholic? Pffft.
Because you love God, for who he is, not for what he can do for you. You love God because he is God, and you are in a loving realtionship with him. And the Catholic Church offers the fullest experience and expression of this relationship.
 
“If we annoy people, blessed be the Lord,” said Pope Francis. Looks like my words annoyed one of the moderators. I received a message of infraction. So, if I disappear from the forum, let me say, keep the faith, and God love you!

JMJ
 
MODERATOR NOTICE

Please read number two. The pope does not have to speak according to our preference.

Unless someone can prove to me that arguing about what the pope should have said and how he should have said it is going to get to the pope and “help him out”, the discussion is not helpful to the forum.
 
Because you love God, for who he is, not for what he can do for you. You love God because he is God, and you are in a loving realtionship with him. And the Catholic Church offers the fullest experience and expression of this relationship.
I didn’t mean it clem. Of course I’ll remain Catholic for all of what you said … and MORE.
 
Could someone show me where the Catechism states that the un-baptized are “children of God”?
842 The Church’s bond with non-Christian religions is in the first place the common origin… All nations form but one community. This is so because all stem from the one stock which God created to people the entire earth…

844 In their religious behavior, however, men also display the limits and errors that disfigure the image of God in them…

845 To reunite all his children, scattered and led astray by sin, the Father willed to call the whole of humanity together into his Son’s Church…

So since God created them to people the earth and CCC says through the Church there’s a desire to reunite all his children who are scattered and astray, why wouldn’t this mean they are still his children even though scattered and astray?
 
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