How is what your doing any different? You have a different opinion, so it is the problem of the other posters or is it you that, as you say, refuses to " get it"?
Well, the difference is that it isn’t a ‘different opinion’.
Relativists apparently have the idea that a person can have a different ‘opinion’ because there is no absolute truth; therefore, in situation A it might be moral for a person to do X, but in situation B it would NOT be moral. Or for person C to do X might be moral, but for person D it would not be moral.
But if there is an absolute truth (and obviously we Catholics know there is), then it is no longer a ‘different opinion’ to be given no more ‘weight’ than a score of ‘opinions’.
Suppose that you have persons A, B, C and D.
Person A does not believe that Christ ever existed. That is an opinion.
Person B believes that Christ may have existed, but that he was only a ‘man’, not God. That is an opinion.
Person C believes that Christ did exist but that while He did some pretty amazing things that may (to the ‘uneducated’ of AD 100) LOOKED supernatural, they weren’t, and were in any case ‘exaggerated for effect’. That is an opinion.
Person D believes that Christ existed, and was both God and man, and that He died and rose, for all humanity.
Now, persons A, B and C all can argue their ‘opinions’ until the cows come home. Because their ‘opinions’ are not full truth, all that ‘separates’ them is the degree in which they lack truth. Person A fully lacks truth by fully rejecting Christ’s existance–but person A, should he become convinced Christ existed, can go ‘on’ to position B, C, or D.
Person B has some inkling of the truth because he agrees Christ existed --but he has no grasp of the reality of ‘how’ Christ existed. Between A and B the only difference is that one does not believe that any ‘Christ’ existed, the other acknowledges an ‘existence’ but that existence is not a ‘true’ one. It is like saying, “yeah, a man named John Wayne existed once in 20th century U.S. as an actor and was famous for playing transvestites.” Since John Wayne was most famous for his roles in westerns, to say that he ‘existed’ yet give him a job that is not at ALL what he TRULY did is nearly as wrong as not noting that he existed at all.
Person C has even more ‘grasp of the truth’ in that he knows Christ existed and even acknowledges some of Christ’s miraculous work; however, person C refuses to accept the truth and insists on assigning a ‘conspiracy’ to ‘exaggerate’ the effect. He assents to the truth of Christ’s existence but throws doubt on the manner of how and what He did.
If person B were to move up and acknowledge that Christ did some ‘wonderful things’ he could become person C; if person C were to start doubting even the ‘minor’ miracles he could slip ‘back’ to being person B.
But person D has the fullness of truth.
To say that person D’s position is ‘comparable’ to A, B, or C is either to make the latter positions of EQUAL worth to the truth (though they are not), or to make the TRUTH (person D’s position) ‘lesser’ than truth by insisting that it is of no MORE WORTH than the incomplete A, B, or C.
So it is not a ‘difference of opinion’ when one argues the truth against falsehood. It is only a difference of opinion when people are arguing two or more ‘incompletes’ against each other; when the ‘completeness’ enters the picture, it becomes then a case of truth standing there and people either accepting it or rejecting it.