R
rlg94086
Guest
I understand your point, but then she should have answered the interviewer with a different adjective.

If you are opposed to a dogmatic teaching of the Church, you should not consider yourself a “conservative Catholic.” She may confess her opposition regularly, but personally I doubt it. Most Catholics I know who are opposed to Church teaching don’t apologize for it. They don’t feel they are “struggling” with a teaching of the Church - they feel the Church is dead wrong and needs to come around to their way of thinking.
She should have said, “well, Joe, really I meant to say ‘cafeteria Catholic.’ They both start with ‘c,’ so I was confused.”Q: You were recently quoted as calling yourself a “conservative Catholic.” Are you?
A: I think so.
If you are opposed to a dogmatic teaching of the Church, you should not consider yourself a “conservative Catholic.” She may confess her opposition regularly, but personally I doubt it. Most Catholics I know who are opposed to Church teaching don’t apologize for it. They don’t feel they are “struggling” with a teaching of the Church - they feel the Church is dead wrong and needs to come around to their way of thinking.
No, not quite. My understanding of Church teaching is that while Free Will allows that we may not all accept every teaching of the magisterium, we should no promote our opinions in such a way as to lead others into scandal. I believe Speaker Pelosi is pro-choice in her heart and cannot represent herself any different. However, being a public figure she must then publicly act in a way that may well lead others.
Is that clearer? Perhaps my understanding is incomplete.
