S
St_Francis
Guest
Interesting post. I personally don’t like the phrase “Cafeteria Catholics” as it has a very prideful and superior connotation, as if the person using the phrase is somehow holier or more religious than the person they are speaking of. I don’t know any Catholics who are 100% in lock-step with the church on every single issue. Many Catholics have intuitive beliefs on certain topics - as a result of reason, logic, science, personal experience, etc. Belittling them is not going to change their beliefs. And asking them to leave the church is short-sighted and wrong. I take you at your word that there were members of CAF who said the church would be better off without you. That is very disappointing.
I think first of all that we can agree that there is a difference between people with doubts or confusion and those who, as St Thomas Aquinas put is, obstinately adhere to their own opinion.I think you’re courageous for feeling your doubts and doing it anyway, with an eye to growing in understanding along the way.
Don’t you dare think the church would be better off without THINKING people, like yourself.
Obedience is one thing, but blindness is another. And ignorance is a slippery slope. It is so much easier to take authority’s word than to thrash out the issues personally, daily, as we encounter challenges to doctrine in our lives.
I agree with Muligan, the term “cafeteria Catholic” is pejorative. So is the new, chic-er version “buffet Catholic”. Either way it implies condescension.
You are accepting what you can grasp in faith for the time being. That’s not being choosy, those are the gradual steps of discernment.
Be brave. Love the mystery.
So with those with genuine doubts, those who realize they do not understand a teaching but who want to be in line with the Church and who question and seek for the resolution, we should live up to the name of this forum and help them understand
The others are those whom we call cafeteria Catholics, those who obstinately hold onto their own opinion, and I would say that cC is a term which *describes *them. If the pick and choose between teachings they accept and those they do not accept, well, they are picking and choosing. Why would they be insulted when we point this out? Don’t they proclaim themselves to be people who think for themselves and refuse to kowtow to celibate old men in another country and the like? They take pride in what they are doing, so what’s the problem with acknowledging what they are doing?
I personally prefer to use the term dissenting Catholic, because After being involved in a rather long thread about this very topic, dissenting Catholic seemed more acceptable to others.
So do you two prefer the term dissenting Catholic?
