A
Andreas_Hofer
Guest
But if you contend that one ceases to be Catholic upon apostatizing, why not also upon entering into heresy or schism, which also separate one from the Church? An apostate is just as baptized as a heretic or schismatic - he doesn’t lose the baptism he is abandoning.
- As other people noted previously, a person becomes Catholic when baptized Catholic and does not cease to be Catholic until they formally apostatize.
There does seem to be a division of opinion as to whether a dogma must be formally defined in order to give rise to heresy, but I simply don’t think one can say it must. Heresy is obstinate doubt or denial of a truth that must be held with divine faith. What has been taught infallibly would seem to fall into this category, would it not? But the Church can teach infallibly without positing a formal act, as *Lumen Gentium *teaches:
- A Catholic who rejects defined dogmas is a heretical Catholic. A Catholic who rejects Church teachings that haven’t been formally defined is a dissenting Catholic but not a heretic.
(LG 25)Although the individual bishops do not enjoy the prerogative of infallibility, they nevertheless proclaim Christ’s doctrine infallibly whenever, even though dispersed through the world, but still maintaining the bond of communion among themselves and with the successor of Peter, and authentically teaching matters of faith and morals, they are in agreement on one position as definitively to be held.
So if one rejects something that has been taught infallibly in this manner, despite the lack of a formal definition, I hold that one can be a heretic.
Whence comes the trouble with this assertion, for the evil of abortion most certainly has always, everywhere, and univocally been taught by the Church, meaning that its immorality has been infallibly declared by the universal magisterium.
- A Catholic who rejects the Church’s moral teaching that abortion is sinful is in dissent and in serious error, but is not committing heresy or apostasy.
Problem: the Church has never taught that limbo existed, and she has not now ceased teaching what she never taught to begin with (nor has she formally repudiated the notion of limbo). So one could not previously nor now dissent from that teaching.
- It is usually bad to dissent, but not always. A good example is limbo. Not long ago, it was dissenting against Church teaching to disbelieve in limbo. Now it is dissenting against Church teaching to insist on limbo. A moral example is usury. A few hundred years ago, the Church considered taking any interest whatsoever to be gravely sinful, and to reject that moral teaching would have been serious dissent (and, even though the person rejecting that teaching was right, to go ahead and take interest probably still would have been a sin of scandal).
Interest, on the other hand, is perhaps a decent example, though I think the issue is far more complicated than many give it credit for (i.e., as I read it, the change resulted not from a different opinion about the sources, etc., but from new economic realities that altered the perceived nature of interest).
Same problem with definition, but here I substantively agree with you that there is a category of legitimate dissent. One is bound to give religious assent of mind and will to the teachings of the ordinary magisterium (specifically the ordinary papal magisterium), and yet so long as these are not infallibly defined one need not give assent of faith. Thus if, after long, careful study and discernment one feels that, for instance, a teaching found in only one encyclical is flawed in some respect one could legitimately dissent - though I believe the received opinion is that one may not openly air disputes over these sorts of questions (you can privately disagree, but keep it to yourself!).
- A Catholic may reject Church teachings that haven’t been formally defined, but only after long, careful, full, fairminded study of the issue. To reject a teaching for reasons like “It just seems wrong to me” or “I can’t understand it” or “That’s not what I read” would be grossly negligent and a sin. Due to this requirement for a well-formed conscience, when you come across a dissenting Catholic, you’re probably better off assuming they haven’t put in the study and made an informed critical decision, and you should feel free to inquire after their reasons!