R
Rock_Happy
Guest
We all are watching the Church flop in the scorching sun like a fish. How do can we reconcile this?
Would you be willing to explain more about what you see as troublesome and needing correction?We all are watching the Church flop in the scorching sun like a fish.
What is the issue with the Church that you believe requires reconciliation?We all are watching the Church flop in the scorching sun like a fish. How do can we reconcile this?
First step: In crease our personal holiness through prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. Start knowing, loving, and serving God where He puts us.We all are watching the Church flop in the scorching sun like a fish. How do can we reconcile this?
want to share?We all are watching the Church flop in the scorching sun like a fish. How do can we reconcile this?
Are you Catholic? Because your religion is listed as Christian, and, frankly, your post displays a rather remarkable ignorance of what the Catholic Church is all about.It seems to me that the historic challenge for the Church has been to reconcile its traditional teachings with current knowledge which comes from science, and so on. The record has been mixed. Sometimes the Church has been progressive and morally correct in the hindsight of historical perspective. Sometimes it has been dreadfully wrong and immoral. I don’t think I need to elaborate on this obvious points, but will if anyone is unaware of Church history.
The current trend in the Church is to resist progress. Historically, the Church has firmly and resolutely embraced moral relativism when it has been at its best, and rejected it when it has been practicing immorally. Yet, we have a pope who identifies moral relativism, the most positive force in Church evolution and progress, as being dangerous and a principal challenge to the integrity of the Church. This has some very serious implications if you consider the history of the Church and care about its vitality and survival. It appears that a single individual intends to abort the path that the Church has followed for many years for his own personal vanity and prejudice. I find this troubling.
While I agree that Pope Benedict is a foe of moral relativism, I disagree that the Church has historically embraced such a philosophy. And I am honestly surprised to read that you consider moral relativism to be a positive force. Would you be willing to explain your viewpoint more fully?IHistorically, the Church has firmly and resolutely embraced moral relativism when it has been at its best, and rejected it when it has been practicing immorally. Yet, we have a pope who identifies moral relativism, the most positive force in Church evolution and progress, as being dangerous and a principal challenge to the integrity of the Church.
As far as I can see, you’re setting up a false example of a contradiction for people to reconcile.It seems to me that the historic challenge for the Church has been to reconcile its traditional teachings with current knowledge which comes from science, and so on. The record has been mixed. Sometimes the Church has been progressive and morally correct in the hindsight of historical perspective. Sometimes it has been dreadfully wrong and immoral. I don’t think I need to elaborate on this obvious points, but will if anyone is unaware of Church history.
The current trend in the Church is to resist progress. Historically, the Church has firmly and resolutely embraced moral relativism when it has been at its best, and rejected it when it has been practicing immorally. Yet, we have a pope who identifies moral relativism, the most positive force in Church evolution and progress, as being dangerous and a principal challenge to the integrity of the Church. This has some very serious implications if you consider the history of the Church and care about its vitality and survival. It appears that a single individual intends to abort the path that the Church has followed for many years for his own personal vanity and prejudice. I find this troubling.
It seems to me that the historic challenge for the Church has been to reconcile its traditional teachings with current knowledge which comes from science, and so on. (Yes, we call it faith with reason.) The record has been mixed. (Do tell!) Sometimes the Church has been progressive and morally correct in the hindsight of historical perspective. Sometimes it has been dreadfully wrong and immoral. I don’t think I need to elaborate on this obvious points, but will if anyone is unaware of Church history. (Please do elaborate on your interpretation of Church history. Distinguish between the Church’s teaching & general response by the Church’s members. One prescribes the medicine, the other rarely takes the full prescription.)
The current trend in the Church is to resist progress. Only progress that uses immoral means or seeks an immoral end. Historically, the Church has firmly and resolutely embraced moral relativism when it has been at its best, and rejected it when it has been practicing immorally. The Church has never embraced moral relativism. Yet, we have a pope who identifies moral relativism, the most positive force in Church evolution and progress, as being dangerous and a principal challenge to the integrity of the Church. The pope’s a dope (i.e., fallible person) without the infallible guidance of the Holy Spirit maintaining the principles & integrity of the Church. The mileage varies from pope to pope in application of those principles. This has some very serious implications if you consider the history of the Church and care about its vitality and survival. Survival is assured per scripture, but vitality at times wax & wanes just as in the OT. It appears that a single individual intends to abort the path that the Church has followed for many years for his own personal vanity and prejudice. Not you? Not me? I’m looking around to route the bum out. I find this troubling. Amen.
Hello Rock Happy,
You wrote:
I think your premise is flawed. The Church has boldly embraced moral relativism for 2,000 years. John Paul II started to change that policy. Benedict XVI has decided to be a radical and oppose Church tradition in this respect.
If you doubt me consider the following:
The Church no longer burns heretics.
The Church no longer admonishes rulers to put Jews in ghettos, restrict their income and wear badges, as it did for more than 700 years.
The Church no longer condemns usury. In fact it is a lender and owns a bank
The Church no longer endorses slavery. Indeed one of the Gregory’s owned a slave.
The Church has radically changed its doctrine on the annulment of marriage.
These are just a few examples of moral relativism over time as has been practiced by the Church. The Church would not exist today if it still advocated the same moral code which it did in 1,200 AD. That is a fact.
You don’t appear to know what moral relativism IS. Your examples prove the exact opposite of what you seem to think they do. Moral relativism is the idea that there are no intrinsic rights and wrongs. Instead, right and wrong are decided by the ethics developed by society based on what works and appears to support a sustainable civilization.I think your premise is flawed. The Church has boldly embraced moral relativism for 2,000 years. John Paul II started to change that policy. Benedict XVI has decided to be a radical and oppose Church tradition in this respect.
If you doubt me consider the following:
These are just a few examples of moral relativism over time as has been practiced by the Church. The Church would not exist today if it still advocated the same moral code which it did in 1,200 AD. That is a fact.
- The Church no longer burns heretics.
- The Church no longer admonishes rulers to put Jews in ghettos, restrict their income and wear badges, as it did for more than 700 years.
- The Church no longer condemns usury. In fact it is a lender and owns a bank
- The Church no longer endorses slavery. Indeed one of the Gregory’s owned a slave.
- The Church has radically changed its doctrine on the annulment of marriage.
Extremely true in cases where men claim to have discerned the wisdom in question via their own maturity and insight. In the case of revelation, one should rationally expect the revelation to exceed the maturity and behavior of the ones it is given to. And so it is…Wisdom is proved by actions, not the words written in dogma.
Don’t worry, the Church will have to change teachings that are contradicted by reason or science.
And anyway, it’s not like Benedict is going to live forever - we might get a progressive Pope next time.
“…and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it”.We all are watching the Church flop in the scorching sun like a fish. How do can we reconcile this?
- Except there aren’t any.
- I don’t suggest holding your breath!