Part 2
By Fix: We should not prejudge, nor should we close our eyes out of scrupulosity.
If you ahve read my various posts, I have a natural disposition to question and probe. That which I don’t understand I especially probe hard and critically. However, I always try to do so with a tender heart open to the Word of God and with an attitude and posture of obedience and submission to my Pope, my Bishop and my Pastor. And in those instances that I can’t reconcile my conscience with the teaching, I go back for more prayer and desire to hear God’s whisper. And only after this process is complete, do I ever contemplate expressing disagreement and then it is always done with respect and reverence for the Office of Priest or Bishop.
By Catholic 2003: Note that “liberal” does not imply “wrong”, any more than “conservative” does. Orthodox Catholics who are conservative must bend to adhere to liberal teaching, just as orthodox Catholics who are liberal must bend to adhere to conservative teaching.
I think there is a lot of wisdom in this. Catholics on both spectrums seem to express a great deal of reluctance to “bend”.
By Fix: Say there is a diocese with a history of being called liberal. One thing that goes on is lay homilists. The bishop claims his reading of Church law allows this. Others claim the Vatican says no way. Also, there is a long history of dissenting speakers, questionable liturgical practices, and other things that the bishop has been informed about, yet nothing changes.
Is it fair, and just, that some faithful label such things as liberal and not in keeping with what the Church actually intends?
It is my understanding that the situation you describe is an abuse (but what purpose is served by calling it “liberal”?) and there is a mechanism for the laity to make this abuse known to CDF. Using the Scriptural story of Christ telling the disciples to cast their nets into the deep water, you should use this mechanism and then trust in God and His Church to correct things in his way. I’ve posted several times on another thread about the Saginaw diocese whereby people of that diocese have made disrespectful comments about their Pastor and then frustration that their new Bishop hasn’t immediately “brought things in line”. This Bishop is very orthodox liturgically. He will do so in his time and his way as he discerns the Holy Spirit. In the meantime, the laity just has to trust in God. But being critical of a mis-informed Priest and a newly installed Bishop does not serve the Church and support its authority.
By Fix: Why is it wrong to question certain things and put forth evidence that certain practices contradict Church directives and teaching?
It isn’t. However, too often the criticism includes labels and comments like “these guys don’t deserve to be respected.” I’m not saying Fix that you’ve said this but some have.
By Fix: One of my concerns about this thread is that I rarely see the term obedience, when it authentically should be used, as in moral theology threads, yet it is frequently thrown out there when speaking about issues regarding USCCB, communion posture, hand holding, etc.
Probably for two reasons. First, if the Bishop tells me to rec’v communion standing on my head, I’m going to do it. If he tells me to hold hands during the Lord’s Prayer, I’ll do it. If he tells me to raise my hands every time I say Amen, I’ll do it. Liturgical norms are to be followed as a means to show unity in worship and to insure that private acts of piety don’t become distractions to others and Bishops have the authority within certain guidelines to have cultural differences.
Second, moral teachings are more susceptible to touching individual “conceptions” and are ultimately harder to accept. For many people, they need a process to express, examine, question, and criticize in combination with contempletitve prayer to understand. And it is thru that process, that the teaching becomes truly reforming as opposed to just following from obedience. As a corrollary to this second reason, it is only when we can’t reconcile during this discernment that we are called to obey. We don’t have to begin with an attitude of blind obedience but one of a desire to assent. It is the Holy Spirit that changes hearts and not some encyclical written using words and concepts beyond the average Catholic without a theology degree.