po18guy
Well-known member
Those wascally Jesuwits!I couldn’t agree more.
It’s called obedience.

Those wascally Jesuwits!I couldn’t agree more.
It’s called obedience.
Remember the words:That would not be invincible as they would be informed. They would have gained the necessary knowledge. If they reject that knowledge that makes one culpable, not non culpable.
Again, I cannot judge anyone’s culpability. I am speaking generally here. If you are proposing the possibility of a psychlogical block or some similiar thing then I would agree.Remember the words:
They see but cannot perceive;
they hear but cannot comprehend.
The priest, and all his witnesses may believe that a satisfactory, cogent, and compelling proof has been given, but if the mindset of the listener is somehow fixed, then the proof cannot be grasped.
It is this fixedness of mindset which is the cause of invincible ignorance.
We cannot judge what mental trauma has caused this fixedness, thus we cannot judge the culpability of its results.
Fixed mindsets are actually quite common.
Northern Ireland was, and to some extent still is a place where they are common. They are also very common in the Middle East, and the Southern States.
Maybe they are a lot more common than you would expect.
Common sense is not as common as you might wish.
You don’t. That’s why you don’t need it.How do you know when your conscience is wrong?
Yep, that must be why so many of us decide to excise it when it becomes inconvenient.You don’t. That’s why you don’t need it.
It’s like the appendix.
I have the Catechism. Why do I need a conscience, especially if it disagrees with the Catechism?Yep, that must be why so many of us decide to excise it when it becomes inconvenient.
Because no teaching contains all of the morally correct responses to every possible choice we have to make. God gave us an intellect. He expects us to use it.I have the Catechism. Why do I need a conscience, especially if it disagrees with the Catechism?
I have a math book. It claims 2+2=4. I disagree. Does that make me correct? The math book explains subtraction. I still have to apply those principles in many diverse situations. I may make mistakes. That does not mean the principles in the book are wrong and I am right.I have the Catechism. Why do I need a conscience, especially if it disagrees with the Catechism?
The math book also does not contain the exact numbers involved in your current transaction; nor would it be convenient to carry the math book out with you shopping, and continually look inside it to find out how much you are spending, or how much change you should be getting - for that, you need to inform your brain by learning the principles of addition and subtraction, so that you can calculate how much you will be paying for your purchases, and how much change you should be getting back from the money that you give to the cashier.I have a math book. It claims 2+2=4. I disagree. Does that make me correct? The math book explains subtraction. I still have to apply those principles in many diverse situations. I may make mistakes. That does not mean the principles in the book are wrong and I am right.
Because consulting the Catechism before every decision is quite laborious (even wading through that index once is quite a chore!)I have the Catechism. Why do I need a conscience, especially if it disagrees with the Catechism?
Ah. So the purpose of the conscience is to interpret and apply the principles outlined in the Catechism?I have a math book. It claims 2+2=4. I disagree. Does that make me correct? The math book explains subtraction. I still have to apply those principles in many diverse situations. I may make mistakes. That does not mean the principles in the book are wrong and I am right.
Are mathematical principles true even without a math book?Ah. So the purpose of the conscience is to interpret and apply the principles outlined in the Catechism?
Obey the Church. Your conscience will change for the better.It’s a simple question really…what if:
You cannot reconcile your conscience with church teaching?
Sometimes people within the Church were wrong and the Crusades were not wrong if it were not for the crusades I might be muslim. I thank God for the Crusades. Even though some may have gone too far in some countries with the Inquisition we could sure use an Inquisitor today.Some times the Church is wrong. For example: Crusades, Inquisition. It depends on what the topic is. I’d suggest talking to a trusted priest or deacon about your problem with the Church’s teaching. There may be a misunderstanding somewhere.
This is worth thinking about. Usually discussions of conscience don’t bring to the fore the question of if the person has a conscience that is telling them they must act, and the Church says not, or if the person has a conscience that is telling them it is okay to act, and the Church says not.If you don’t think it is a sin either way then go the way of the Church.
I am not sure what you are getting at here? I always try to read things by Cardinal Pell on this topic as he conveys information very clearly:This is worth thinking about. Usually discussions of conscience don’t bring to the fore the question of if the person has a conscience that is telling them they must act, and the Church says not, or if the person has a conscience that is telling them it is okay to act, and the Church says not.
If it is a case of you think it would be okay to act, but the Church says otherwise, then don’t act. That is in accordance with your conscience.
Unfortunately, some people find themselves in the other situation. I’m surprised that the common advice then is to break your conscience. I disagree with that. In fact, I find it hard to understand a situation where your conscience has already ruled on the matter and then you go on and consider the Church teaching after that, at least for a well-informed Catholic. Whatever the Church teaches would be included in the deliberations prior to the ruling of the conscience. If you are calling something the ruling of your conscience, then that is what it is. You are done considering. There is no considering afterwards, otherwise you hadn’t decided yet, and so your conscience had not yet ruled on the matter.
The only way that this common advice makes sense to me is if they are using a different definition for conscience. Maybe they mean “conscience” is how you feel about the situation or something. IF that is the case, then the advice makes perfect sense. I tend to think of “conscience” as your last, best judgment of what is right in the situation. (ie, after all factors are duly considered). Clearly you ought to follow such a judgment (and yes, the judgment could be erroneous, and even could be culpably erroneous, and lead to harm). It is, what do you call it, almost vacuously true.
note: I’m trying to use both meanings of “conscience” in this post, hoping it will be clear which I mean at each point.
…this view is often dressed up with the claim that conscience is a special faculty that speaks to us, rather like an oracle, and it may even be elevated to the status of a doctrine: the “primacy of conscience.” But however it is presented, it stands in contrast to the view that conscience is instead simply the mind thinking practically and morally. We think well when we understand moral principles and apply them in clear and reasonable ways; we think badly when we ignore or reinvent moral principles, or apply them in ambiguous and unreasonable ways. “Good conscience,” in this way of understanding, means a good grasp and a good application of moral truth—for it is the truth that remains primary, the truth that is grasped and applied by the practical mind.
John Henry Newman was well aware of this position, which represents the best of Catholic thinking on the topic (for instance, the thinking of St. Thomas Aquinas in De Veritate). Newman carefully distinguishes himself from those who equate conscience with integrity, sincerity, or preference. In a passage in the Letter to the Duke of Norfolk (quoted in the Catechism of the Catholic Church), he writes: “Conscience is not a long-sighted selfishness, nor a desire to be consistent with oneself; but it is a messenger from Him, Who, both in nature and grace, speaks to us behind a veil, and teaches and rules us by His representatives. Conscience is the aboriginal Vicar of Christ.”
I haven’t read that article in a few years, so I’ll just go with the clip you provided. Also, perhaps this from Thomas will indicate the direction of my thoughts. Go to article 5, on whether the will is evil when it is at variance with erring reason. The “I answer that” portion is the most helpful.I am not sure what you are getting at here? I always try to read things by Cardinal Pell on this topic as he conveys information very clearly: