B
bobzills
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There is a problem because many Traditional Catholics have a politically incorrect view of Vatican II.I sure hope Williamson doesn’t jump the SSPX ship and join the SSPV and declare himself pope![]()
There is a problem because many Traditional Catholics have a politically incorrect view of Vatican II.I sure hope Williamson doesn’t jump the SSPX ship and join the SSPV and declare himself pope![]()
Hi Bobzills,Is it for sure that the Vatican has condemned coeducation? I find your assertion on this surprising. If this is true, how do you explain the hundreds of coeducational Catholic schools which operate with the permission of the local bishop? And many of the classes in Catholic schools in sensitive topics are coeducational also. I can’t believe that anyone would advocate that highly conservative Catholic Christendom college be shut down because it is coeducational and therefore condemned by the Vatican?
Ok. It’s a lot clearer now. “Pope Pius XI said he condemned coeducation…” and “I think a person could interpret this to mean that coeducation is not really what was condemned…”Hi Bobzills,
I think the answer to your question lies in better understanding how tradition works.
Papal encyclicals are written by the supreme head of the church under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and while they are infallible in spirit, they are not infallible in terms of the literal words written on the page. The same is true of the Second Vatican Council for that matter, as there was not a single infallible decree or definition that came out of the council, although in its spirit (as it is the Holy Spirit who guides ecumenical councils) the council is infallible.
Pope Pius XI said he condemned coeducation, and he claims that ‘levelling equality’ of the sexes should not exist in education. While Pius might have literally written that the method of coeducation was evil ( a product of denial of original sin), the spirit of what he meant, as Digitonomy referred to, was a rejection of the kind of levelling equality that sees the sexes as interchangeable.
I think a person could interpret this to mean that coeducation is not really what was condemned therefore (even if Pius technically wrote that), but rather what is being condemned is the levelling equality, and he gives one example in terms of gymnastics. I don’t know what specifically we could give for other examples, although I wonder if coed housing would be included.
This isn’t really so different, in one sense, from the theological position that came from Pope John Paul II’s theology of the body that saw the sexes as having different roles ordained by God, although I’m not aware of him ever condemning coeducation
Is it a legitimate question to ask if catholic universities and institutions are following this teaching. We could pray for guidance concerning that too.
I mentioned the document, because I find that the SSPX tends to be very knoweldgable in the tradition of church teaching, although on many occassions I’ve found they will misinterpret the teaching or make it look like it means something other than what it does.
God Bless,
The Church does not condemn co-education. At the time that Pope Pius XI wrote this encyclical the threat to the family was what concerned him the most. It was the beginning of the brith control movement, women’s suffrage in many countries, women in politics in other countries, career women, etc. In other words, families were in danger of losing their stability in the name of education and the equalizing of the genders. He was speaking to this broader issue.Ok. It’s a lot clearer now. “Pope Pius XI said he condemned coeducation…” and “I think a person could interpret this to mean that coeducation is not really what was condemned…”
In any case, it appears that Bishop Williams is not in favor of women attending a university, which is not in accord with mainstream Catholic practice where women are seen as both students and professors in Catholic universities.
The Church does not condemn co-education. …
All of the Pontifical Universities around the world offer co-education, including in theology, philosophy, Canon Law, scripture, ministry, and catechesis. This includes the big three in Rome: Gregorian, Angelicum and North American College.
Pope Pius XI said he condemned coeducation, and he claims that ‘levelling equality’ of the sexes should not exist in education. ,
I wonder if bishop Williamson’s rejection of women at university has anything to do with Pope Pius XI’s condemnation of co-education in his Divini Illius Magistri:
- False also and harmful to Christian education is the so-called method of “coeducation.” ,
I agree with you. Unfortunately Pope Pius XII is never going to get canonized after this. Might as well just give up the cause for his canonization. Thanks, suspended-Archbishop Williamson.I know I am joining late but the holocaust happened. If this one bishop wants to deny that he should leave the Church or recant and request reconciliation. We know the holocaust happened by the very witnesses who thanked Pius XII and the Catholic Church for their help during those troubling times. This just goes to show that we are being attacked by both sides now. Those who admit the holocaust happened but we did nothing and those who deny the holocaust-neither side is correct and both should come to terms with true history.
Fox News quoted Bishop Williamson as saying something like “The Jews invented the Holocaust so they could force all the rest of us to prostrate ourselves before them.” This goes beyond “holocaust denial.” That said, what I didn’t like about this situation was the appearance that the German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, gave orders to the Pope that he obeyed. I doubt this is really true, but the news media made it appear so.I’ve heard it said that the Holocaust has replaced Christ’s passion.
We’re all expected to shed tears of blood over the Holocaust, but public blasphemy and mockery of the Son of God is perfectly fine. People react today to holocaust denial the same way people of the middle ages reacted to blasphemy.
(Don’t get me wrong, the holocaust was terrible, but I think there is a point to this argument.)
I don’t think he said that. Gotta link?Fox News quoted Bishop Williamson as saying something like “The Jews invented the Holocaust so they could force all the rest of us to prostrate ourselves before them.”
Liking chocolate better than vanilla is an opinion. Thinking the Holocaust didn’t happen isn’t an opinion. It is an error at best, a deliberate falsehood at worst. Either way, it is an affront to the truth, and is not excusable by tossing out the word “opinion” along with jingoistic slogans about defending free speech. The right to freedom of speech presupposes the responsibility to be truthful.Holocaust denial is a crime in Germany. Absurd! When you punish people for having an opinion it only makes the opinion, and beyond it, more attractive.
I’m sorry you feel the need to be so unkind and patronizing. I will post no longer on this thread; perhaps on this site. By the way, it might interest you to know that my family background is 100% Jewish.Liking chocolate better than vanilla is an opinion. Thinking the Holocaust didn’t happen isn’t an opinion. It is an error at best, a deliberate falsehood at worst. Either way, it is an affront to the truth, and is not excusable by tossing out the word “opinion” along with jingoistic slogans about defending free speech. The right to freedom of speech presupposes the responsibility to be truthful.
– Mark L. Chance.
There are severa layers of issues here.
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- Germany is a sovereign nation. Whether we agree with their law or not, it is not a law that causes moral harm to its citizens or to the world. There is no justifiable reason for the bishop to violate their law.
Fratk ernally,
JR/QUOTE
The issue here is not the sovereignty of Germany. Bishop Williamson is not a German national, nor were his statements made in Germany. The issue is that the German head of state took advantage of the Pope being German, to lean on him and garner photo-ops and column inches for herself.
To be quite honest, if you were that offended by Mark’s post, there aren’t many other forums you would enjoy.I’m sorry you feel the need to be so unkind and patronizing. I will post no longer on this thread; perhaps on this site. By the way, it might interest you to know that my family background is 100% Jewish.
No, I’m sorry to say I don’t. This came from the line of news reports that runs at the bottom of the screen on Fox News. However, I’ve found their reporting fairly reliable, and don’t think they would have run this without checking it.I don’t think he said that. Gotta link?
Thanks for the advice. I have been enjoying another thread, of a more experiential nature. But being new to cyberspace in general, and not liking the heat, maybe it’s time to get out of the kitchen.To be quite honest, if you were that offended by Mark’s post, there aren’t many other forums you would enjoy.
JR, thank you so much for your detailed description of how the Church views obedience and authority. I had to read it twice to absorb what you were saying.There are severa layers of issues here.
Our holy father Francis always wrote and taught that one may never disobey any superior, even when that superior is wrong, unless one is to sin against God. Other than that, one should rest assured of God’s mercy. Even when the superior is wrong or one believes the superior to be wrong, God in his mercy will pour forth his grace upon the obedient disciple and the authority in error will have to answer for his error and that which he causes for others.
- Germany is a sovereign nation. Whether we agree with their law or not, it is not a law that causes moral harm to its citizens or to the world. There is no justifiable reason for the bishop to violate their law.
- Lifting the excommunication is not going to save the bishop’s soul. Salvation has to be worked out by the individual who cooperates with grace. It is in the bishop’s hands.
- Lifting the excommunication is not an endorsement of the bishop’s statements regarding the Shoah.
- The Holy Father and Bishop Fellay have ordered the bishop to distance himself from this position. Being a religious, I know the difficulty that obedience to this kind of order presents. It requires that you put aside your personal opinion and accept the opinion of your superior. To those of us who are vowed to obedience, this is often the most difficult part of religious life; but it is what we have chosen. Like Paul, we have chosen to submit to the voice of authority in all things but sin. The Holy Father is not asking the bishop to sin. He is asking him to change an opinion or keep silent. In this sense, Evengelical obedience is contra natura or against nature. It is not in our human nature to give up our own thoughts and opinions that easily. Yet, this is what we are called to do for the sake of the Kingdom. This is what Jesus prayed for in the Garden, to do the Will of his Father.
- There is another layer. The bishop is now under the direct authority of the Congregation for Bishops. He not only has to respond to the Holy Father, but also to the Congregation. He’s going to have many people ordering him about. He’ll either have to obey or he may find himself in the same situation that he was in before the lifting of the excommunication. One is not going to be excommunicated for not believing in the holocaust, but one can certainly be suspended indefinitely for not obeying one’s religious superiors, whomever they are. The idea that only disobedience to the Pope is a valid reason for a canonical censure or penalty is not true at all. Any person in a vow of obedience must surrender his will to legitimate authorities above him, even state authorities. The key word being legitimate. The Congregation for Bishopps is a legitimate authority, Ecclesia Dei Commision is a legitimate authority, a synod of bishops is a legitimate authority and when you’re in a nation, its government is a legitimate authority.
Like Francis, there are many such positions regarding obedience in the Tradition of the Church, beginning with St. Benedict’s rule and teachings, which are the best writings on the subject of obedience.
Whether the laity agrees with the bishop or the Pope, the bottom line is that no Catholic can justifiably disagree with the bishop’s obligation to obey, since all bishops make a vow of obedience. The vow not only includes the Magisterium, but also specific persons. This is what lay people often do not know about puublic vows of obedience. They are worded so that one is bound to obey God, Church and very specific individuals and they are interpreted by those individuals whom one is to obey. That’s included in the vow itself. One promises to obey one’s superior and the interpretation that one’s superior should choose to apply to his wishes and to what he considers obedience. Religious obedience is not like obeying mom and dad. It’s not that black and white.
Fraternally,
JR![]()