What's the Jack Chick Equivalent for "Traditional Catholics?"

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Because the Catholic faith tells us so! Are you even Catholic, Ethelzguy!!???

I am 100-percent, pure-dee Catholic to the core. 👍

You are just another example of the subtle modernism rampant in the Novus Ordo church.

There you go again, denigrating the NO Mass, in defiance of forum rules.
I’m just another example of an obedient Catholic, in full Communion with Rome…and NOT supportive of excommunicated, disobedient bishops and their followers…nor do I support rogue tradtionalists who place themselves above the authority of the HMC and it’s clergy.
 
I’m just another example of an obedient Catholic, in full Communion with Rome…and NOT supportive of excommunicated, disobedient bishops and their followers…nor do I support rogue tradtionalists who place themselves above the authority of the HMC and it’s clergy.
Ohhh how little you know!..
 
Apparently NOT. I Believe in One God, The Father, Almighty…I simply stated that there are others who worship other gods.
This is why precise language is important: False religions worship what they think are gods. This is why they are correctly referred to as “false religions.” Your statement indicates that other gods exist. I’m sure you don’t believe that, do you?
 
Am I missing something? The statement “other people worship other gods” isn’t an affirmation of the actual, ontological existence of such gods. They don’t exist, but people do in fact worship them. What is everyone jumping on Ethelzguy?
 
the church has changed it’s teaching on the relationship between church and state in the west including catholic countries. for the most part, post vatican II **novus ordo catholicism is banal **and nearly a different faith than that of the church prior to vatican II. the liturgy is completely different, disciplines are different and the way people practice the faith is different. objectively speaking, it’s changed substantively.

so in a way, i’m glad they’re not forcing the novus ordo church on america or any other country. the traditional movement wouldn’t exist otherwise. it’s ironic. if given the choice, i’d rather see eastern orthodox forced down everyone’s throat because the catholic church here in america is not orthodox enough. in the end, bible christians and the orthodox are better off staying where they are until the catholic church get’s its act together.
Are you a Catholic Christian?

Your remarks are so stultified and cutting to the Catholic Church that I am seriously wondering how one could make such a post and be a Catholic? Are you EO as you mention?
 
I have a question for you. Do you embrace and accept the teaching contained in the document Dignitatis Humanae from the Second Vatican Council?

If so, I would be very eager to hear your explanation of how you, and all Catholics who agree with this document, are not liberal. It seems very clear that the document proposes liberal ideas.
Please give examples of those ideas you consider libeal.
 
I have a question for you. Do you embrace and accept the teaching contained in the document Dignitatis Humanae from the Second Vatican Council?

If so, I would be very eager to hear your explanation of how you, and all Catholics who agree with this document, are not liberal. It seems very clear that the document proposes liberal ideas.
That would be me.

"Such comments are definitely “canned.” The cannery is called “the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.”

No, liberal and modern namby-pambyism hadn’t been invented yet when the New Testament was written. However, Jesus Christ knew that someday it would exist, so he left us a Church and Tradition so future faithful could combat it.
The “something else” were reading are the teachings of our Popes and Church Fathers.

Try reading some real Catholic literature instead of the “liberation theology” you’ve been perusing and you’ll find out.
Is this a liberal or conservative quote? Shall we take a vote on it?
Such comments are definitely “canned.” The cannery is called “the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.” I would expect a statement like this to be spit out of the mouth of a blighted, benighted believer in nothing. Go figure.:rolleyes:
 
I would define them as traditional Catholics. Or, Catholics who accept the teaching of the magisterium about religious liberty previous to the Second Vatican Council.

Dignitatis Humanae cannot be reconciled with previous magisterial teaching. It explicitly embraced liberal errors which had already been condemned by the Church:

*77. In the present day it is no longer expedient that the Catholic religion should be held as the only religion of the State, to the exclusion of all other forms of worship. – Allocution “Nemo vestrum,” July 26, 1855. *

78. Hence it has been wisely decided by law, in some Catholic countries, that persons coming to reside therein shall enjoy the public exercise of their own peculiar worship. – Allocution “Acerbissimum,” Sept. 27, 1852.

(From the Syllabus of Errors condemned by Pius IX)
So how should 77 and 78 read? “In the present day it is now expedient that the Catholic religion should be held as the only religion of the State, to the exclusion of all other forms of worship”.

Hence it has been wisely decided by law, in some Catholic countries, that persons coming to reside therein shall not nenjoy the public exercise of their own peculiar worship".

Do you really think that the above statements as I have written them would induce Protestants and other non-Catholic folk to convert to Catholicism?

Oh yes, that would go over real well. What are you thinking?
 
I would define them as traditional Catholics. Or, Catholics who accept the teaching of the magisterium about religious liberty previous to the Second Vatican Council.

Dignitatis Humanae cannot be reconciled with previous magisterial teaching. It explicitly embraced liberal errors which had already been condemned by the Church:

*77. In the present day it is no longer expedient that the Catholic religion should be held as the only religion of the State, to the exclusion of all other forms of worship. – Allocution “Nemo vestrum,” July 26, 1855. *

78. Hence it has been wisely decided by law, in some Catholic countries, that persons coming to reside therein shall enjoy the public exercise of their own peculiar worship. – Allocution “Acerbissimum,” Sept. 27, 1852.

(From the Syllabus of Errors condemned by Pius IX)
This is why precise language is important: False religions worship what they think are gods. This is why they are correctly referred to as “false religions.” Your statement indicates that other gods exist. I’m sure you don’t believe that, do you?
Good Grief! Precisely. :rolleyes:
 
Am I missing something? The statement “other people worship other gods” isn’t an affirmation of the actual, ontological existence of such gods. They don’t exist, but people do in fact worship them. What is everyone jumping on Ethelzguy?
JKirkLVNV. In my opinion you haven’t missed a thing.😉
 
Am I missing something? The statement “other people worship other gods” isn’t an affirmation of the actual, ontological existence of such gods. They don’t exist, but people do in fact worship them. What is everyone jumping on Ethelzguy?
The Pope can hardly instruct non-Catholic countries. There should be no doubt, though, that the Church desired all nations to be Catholic.

The Pope was condemning the error that says it is no longer expedient for the Catholic religion to be the religion of the state.

You’re playing semantic games if you think that this means the Pope is only suggesting the Catholic religion be the religion of the state. This isn’t the only document of the Church which dealt with religious freedom, and the Church very clearly and consistently proposed that every nation should be Catholic.

No. This clearly isn’t the meaning of the document. You’ve latched on to the word “expedient” and read too much into it. The Pope was condemning these statements, not proposing the literal opposite.

Public practice of false religions could only ever be permitted in order to prevent a greater evil, but the idea of free, public practice of false religion has always been condemned as evil, whether or not Catholics are in the majority.

Here are some more statements of the Catholic position:

"Whatever, therefore, is opposed to virtue and truth, may not rightly be brought temptingly before the eye of man, much less sanctioned by the favor and protection of the law” (Pope Leo XIII, Immortale Dei).

“They do not hesitate to put forward the view which is not only opposed to the Catholic Church, but very pernicious for the salvation of souls — an opinion which Gregory XVI, Our Predecessor, called absurd. This is the view that liberty of conscience and worship is the strict right of every man, a right which should be proclaimed and affirmed by law in every properly constituted state… When they rashly make these statements, they do not realize or recall to mind that they are advocating what St. Augustine calls a liberty of perdition”
(Pope Pius IX, Quanta Cura).

There’s no getting around the Catholic position: the Catholic religion should be the official religion of the state, and false religions should not be publicly practiced
What happened to “Render to Caesar that which is Caesar’s and to God, that which is God’s”? Sounds to me as though Christ knew what a can of worms we would crawl in to if religion and secular government weren’t separated.

Christ said, “That all may be one”. How will this happen if people are"forced" to have only the Catholic Church available to them? And that in essence is what you are saying you would want.l
 
What happened to “Render to Caesar that which is Caesar’s and to God, that which is God’s”? Sounds to me as though Christ knew what a can of worms we would crawl in to if religion and secular government weren’t separated.

Christ said, “That all may be one”. How will this happen if people are"forced" to have only the Catholic Church available to them? And that in essence is what you are saying you would want.l
It’s what the Magisterium has said it wants. If you really understand the teaching, you would realize that it doesn’t force people to do anything - only to refrain from certain public activities. It requires the state to act in the interest of its people’s salvation, while still respecting that the Catholic faith must be freely chosen.

Christ’s statement refers to what is required from a Christian citizen, not what is ideally required from the state.
 
Do you really think that the above statements as I have written them would induce Protestants and other non-Catholic folk to convert to Catholicism?

Oh yes, that would go over real well. What are you thinking?
I am thinking that this is sounding like an idea that falls under the umbrella of the heresy of Americanism as outlined in Testem Benevolentia Nostrae papalencyclicals.net/Leo13/l13teste.htm
The underlying principle of these new opinions is that,** in order to more easily attract those who differ from her, the Church should shape her teachings more in accord with the spirit of the age and relax some of her ancient severity and make some concessions to new opinions. ** Many think that these concessions should be made not only in regard to ways of living, but even in regard to doctrines which belong to the deposit of the faith. They contend that it would be opportune, in order to gain those who differ from us, to omit certain points of her teaching which are of lesser importance, and to tone down the meaning which the Church has always attached to them. It does not need many words, beloved son, to prove the falsity of these ideas if the nature and origin of the doctrine which the Church proposes are recalled to mind.
We should never shape our opinions so bring about more convert protestants.
Such a policy would tend rather to separate Catholics from the Church than to bring in those who differ. There is nothing closer to our heart than to have those who are separated from the fold of Christ return to it, but in no other way than the way pointed out by Christ.
I think that His Holiness is clear enough.
 
I am thinking that this is sounding like an idea that falls under the umbrella of the heresy of Americanism as outlined in Testem Benevolentia Nostrae.
Man, it occurs to me that Popes Leo XIII and Pius IX had a lot of junk to deal with… I looked at half a dozen encyclicals of Pius IX the other day, all dealing with the state of the Church in various countries… none of them had a sunny outlook. Satan’s been setting this up for a while now.
We should never shape our opinions so bring about more convert protestants. I think that His Holiness is clear enough.
And I think you’ll find that neither Unitatis Redintegratio, nor Ut Unum Sint, nor Communionis Notio, nor the more recent Responsa ad Quaestiones on the doctrine of the Church disagrees with Pope Leo on this point. They stress the necessity for full exposure to the Catholic faith and that unity based on lowest common denominators or “false truths” is no unity at all.
 
I reference to religious freedom:

If history has taught us anything is that restirction of religous freedom does not deter religions. If anything, it flames the passions caused by repression. It hasn’t been a week since someone started a thread questioning if it was all the converts here that were anti-Traditionalists. I can speak from my own experience that if Catholicism had been a state religion, I probably would not have considered it out of sheer cussedness. That and the implication that any state religion must some how be mostly secular in nature.
 
This is why precise language is important: False religions worship what they think are gods. This is why they are correctly referred to as “false religions.” Your statement indicates that other gods exist. I’m sure you don’t believe that, do you?
ok, let’s try this again.

I believe that to other people, other “supreme being” gods exist. There are many of them.

In addition, there are many material “gods”, that as sinners we are all guilty of “worshipping” at one time or another in our lives, by putting them ahead of God. (money, sex, power, sports, video games, etc)

As for ME, I Believe in One God, The Father Almighty…

Does that clear things up? 🤷
 
Am I missing something? The statement “other people worship other gods” isn’t an affirmation of the actual, ontological existence of such gods. They don’t exist, but people do in fact worship them. What is everyone jumping on Ethelzguy?
My comments provide them an opportunity to espouse their extremist agenda. 👍
 
Interesting… was Pius IX a Cafeteria Catholic?

Buzz phrases may pass muster with most people, but with me, you’re going to have to actually make an argument.
Whether or not religious freedom is the right choice is not a matter of objective morality. It depends on the structure and culture of the society at the time. LilyM explained it well:
There have been countries, plenty of examples in medieval Europe, where a single religion was for all intents and purposes enshrined in law - that was by consent of the majority of the governed, who shared that same faith and WANTED it as the basis of their law.

In such situations it was fine, as it would be in some countries today were those countries to be more or less monocultural in matters of religion and willing to have their shared religion enshrined in law.

Pius’ view is that, at least in certain instances, it might be OK to have a single religion in a country, that country being vast majority Catholic, and the citizens willing, and Catholicism enforced by law.

Paul merely says it’s not OK to FORCE Catholic worship in a country where the citizens are opposed to the enshrining of such a religion and where the country ISN’T majority Catholic.
That’s the difference right there - the reason this change is not a doctrinal contradiction, and the reason you would be just plain wrong to reject the teaching of Dignitatis Humanae.
No, this isn’t what Pius IX said at all. He says clearly that it is an error to say that the Catholic religion should not be the religion of the state, and that false religions should be able to practice and teach in public.
That’s what you claim Pius IX meant. I agree with LilyM:
Firstly Pius IX specifies that he is talking about CATHOLIC countries. A country the majority of whose citizens AREN’T Catholic cannot be called a Catholic country by any definition. Hence what he says does not apply to, for example, Saudi Arabia.

Secondly, the word ‘expedient’ simply means suitable or advisable. Saying Catholicism as the sole state religion is ‘expedient’ is a far cry from saying it is mandatory for any country, let alone every country.

Finally, making a blanket statement to the effect that it is NEVER expedient in ANY circumstances would indeed be an error according to the syllabus. But Paul nowhere says that. He says much about forcing a state religion on citizens by fear or other imposition, but free choice and consent of the governed don’t constitute any sort of imposition at all. In such a case a law enshrining Catholicism as state religion would be no more an imposition than a law banning murder where all are agreed that murder SHOULD be outlawed.
This clearly means there’s a difference of interpretation on what Pius IX intended to convey.

As a Catholic, I’m of the opinion that it’s the Magisterium which has the authority to interpret Sacred Tradition. It makes no more sense for you or me to reject the Church’s interpretation of Tradition than for a Protestant to reject the Church’s interpretation of Scripture.

So I’ll go with an authoritative ecumenical council’s interpretation of how to apply Pius IX’s teaching on freedom of religion, thanks.
The Pope was condemning the error that says it is no longer expedient for the Catholic religion to be the religion of the state.
Then that must have been the case at the time. For all the reasons explained above, the proper application of these principles depends in part on conditions which differ from society to society.
Here are some more statements of the Catholic position:

"Whatever, therefore, is opposed to virtue and truth, may not rightly be brought temptingly before the eye of man, much less sanctioned by the favor and protection of the law” (Pope Leo XIII, Immortale Dei).
This quote has nothing to do with religious freedom. In all honesty, the first thing it makes me think of is that Catholics today must oppose state-sanctioned homosexual “marriage,” because the state should never promote something objectively disordered and evil.
“They do not hesitate to put forward the view which is not only opposed to the Catholic Church, but very pernicious for the salvation of souls — an opinion which Gregory XVI, Our Predecessor, called absurd. This is the view that liberty of conscience and worship is the strict right of every man, a right which should be proclaimed and affirmed by law in every properly constituted state… When they rashly make these statements, they do not realize or recall to mind that they are advocating what St. Augustine calls a liberty of perdition” (Pope Pius IX, Quanta Cura).

There’s no getting around the Catholic position: the Catholic religion should be the official religion of the state, and false religions should not be publicly practiced
Look, I really am open to persuasion on these things, but whenever “traditionalists” find themselves quoting examples of the Catholic Church changing to contradictory positions, I honestly don’t see the contradiction. Your Pius IX quote proves our point. Just look at the opinion which is rejected as “absurd”:

*liberty of conscience and worship …] should be proclaimed and affirmed by law in every properly constituted state… * - rejected as absurd and false by Pius IX

Part of LilyM’s point about Pius IX’s statements is that it still IS true even according to recent Catholic teaching that “liberty of conscience and worship” is not necessarily morally necessary in every “properly constituted state,” which is EXACTLY what Pius IX said in that quote.

Honestly, this last Pius IX quote just reinforces my confidence in our (mine, LilyM’s, the Catholic Church’s) interpretation.

Maybe if you have authoritative citations from other popes or councils…
 
I reference to religious freedom:

If history has taught us anything is that restirction of religous freedom does not deter religions. If anything, it flames the passions caused by repression. It hasn’t been a week since someone started a thread questioning if it was all the converts here that were anti-Traditionalists. I can speak from my own experience that if Catholicism had been a state religion, I probably would not have considered it out of sheer cussedness. That and the implication that any state religion must some how be mostly secular in nature.
We cannot presume to think that a convert would be turned away from the faith based on any truth, regardless of its perceived importance. We must simply present the faith as it is, else what are we winning converts over to? We must bring converts to the whole truth, least we win converts who do not accept the fullness of the truth, even its lesser points.

I will refer you to my post above which cities Pope Leo XII.
 
ok, let’s try this again.

I believe that to other people, other “supreme being” gods exist. There are many of them.

In addition, there are many material “gods”, that as sinners we are all guilty of “worshipping” at one time or another in our lives, by putting them ahead of God. (money, sex, power, sports, video games, etc)

As for ME, I Believe in One God, The Father Almighty…

Does that clear things up? 🤷
Yes, thanks. I didn’t doubt that you believe in One God. But because other religions worship “other gods” does not mean that they exist. We can never, as Catholics, allow these false religions to feel that we respect their false beliefs. We can respect the people, but not the beliefs.
 
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