I am interested in Catholicism and what the Church teaches.
Or societal norms. You cannot assert a moral motive without evidence.
She is a woman who served in the military. You have failed to justify the stance that she was special. Can you prove what you say? Where are your sources on whether she was elevated by God beyond the normal activity of a woman?
I never said you did. I also did not say that child-bearing is not normative.
First, your
argumentum ad antiquitatem falls flat by virtue of being a logical fallacy. Second, the internal consistency of your argument has been successfully refuted.
Fortunately, you are correct. The Church’s silence on the morality of women in war certainly speaks for itself, as does my well-formed conscience. There is nothing inherently evil about women in war that does not apply to men.
War is no one’s sphere.
You did not read my last post. You string together sentences without establishing the necessary links between them. Permit me to quote myself:
"Because you seem to have problems with constructing your posts, I will help you out. Here is a schema of your argument as it should be presented:
- It makes sense to make blanket statements about women while dealing with particulars regarding men
- The God-given distinction between men and women exists.
- This distinction involves women not fighting in wars.
Therefore, women should not fight in wars.
I agree with 2) already. The problem is that you have not actually justified 1) or 3) on any grounds other than your own belief."
Dear Baelor,
Hello again and thankyou for the above.
Catholicism, dear friend, teaches that we should listen to the moral sense of the faithful throughout the ages and use our sanctified common sense, guided by a well-formed conscience, in our decision making.
That women are not equipped for close-combat on the battlefield is something that we gather from a woman’s physical and psychological make-up. The refusal to acknowledge this, dear friend, owes more to the radical femenist lobby than to the Catholic Faith. Its sentiments are “Be agressive, be assertive, be a contender with men, not fearing to take them on. Dont’s focus on the family and marriage”. That is its deplorable and shameful vision, my dear brother. It is labouring to eliminate all the differences between men and women and that is impious ideology that should be given a wide-berth by all those who profess religion.
For Joan of Arch to have achieved what she did, strongly suggests that she was uniquely raised up by God, like Deborah in the O.T., for a specific purpose (see my post to ‘thewanderer’ above). Evdidently, she was elevated by God “above the normal activity of women”.
The Church, dear brother, is silent respecting the immorality of women serving in war zones because the very notion is so obviously repugnant to those who have not lost their moral sense. If and until the magisterium issues some official declaration upon the matter, which it does need to do about something so self-evident, I and many other Catholics will continue to to oppose efforts to repeal the rules forbidding women to serve on the front-line. There is everything repugnant and distasteful about the “weaker sex” (I Pet. 3: 7) fighting, which includes bayonetting troops, in close-combat and I am sorry, my dear brother, that you are unable to see this. Men have always been involved in battles and are physically equipped to function in such a harsh environment, that I would have thought needs no proof.
We can, dear friend, make a blanket statement about women, in the same way as St. Peter makes a blanket statement respecting women, calling them the ‘weaker sex’. Men must be assessed for active service to discover whether they are able and capable, but they are not being assessed on the basis of their gender. Women are rightly debarred form engaging in combat because they are not suited to this sort of activity on account of their physical and emotional make-up. Even the military top brass here in the UK recognise this, plus the fact that their male comrades would be wont to protect them and save them, thus putting lives at risk.
Sorry, dear chap, but this is not a matter of personal belief, but something that is apparent even to military personnel, who are surely best placed to judge such issues.
God bless and goodbye for now.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait:tiphat:
Pax