T
tafan
Guest
JRKH, thanks for the thoughtful reply. No need for a big debate, I agree. It was the lines:
They just came across to me as way to absolute, and as such not in line with Catholic teaching. Pacifism, when it is certainly possible to defeat the evil, is not Christian. That was all.
OTH, adopting a violent approach to evil should be very carefully considered (all other means have been exhausted).
And you are correct in one result: even good and great men, since we are a fallen people, will become damaged by the evil. WWII is a great example of this. Many of the allied leaders were truly good people and great men (by no means always the same), and they had taken up what Warren Caroll referred to as “The Great Just Cause”; yet they utilized measures in the war that can in no way be justified.
andThe most difficult and yet the most effective resistance is often “passive resistance”, or perhaps more accurately, “non-violent resistance”. To me, it is also the most Christian
that I took exception to in your original post.One cannot defeat evil with the tools of evil
They just came across to me as way to absolute, and as such not in line with Catholic teaching. Pacifism, when it is certainly possible to defeat the evil, is not Christian. That was all.
OTH, adopting a violent approach to evil should be very carefully considered (all other means have been exhausted).
And you are correct in one result: even good and great men, since we are a fallen people, will become damaged by the evil. WWII is a great example of this. Many of the allied leaders were truly good people and great men (by no means always the same), and they had taken up what Warren Caroll referred to as “The Great Just Cause”; yet they utilized measures in the war that can in no way be justified.