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Brendan_64
Guest
Yes I do know that, and nothing in anything I have posted has suggested anything to the contrary.Yes, we are bound to accept what the Council really said, not what the Council didn’t say (about abortion, contraception, marriage, the family, sexuality, liturgy, the call to holiness, the laity as full participants in the life of the Church but not challengers of the teachings of the Church, the Church being both vertical and horizontal-not one OR the other–, transubstantiation, the prohibition against heterodox interpretation of scripture, the prohibition against sola scriptura, the affirmation of the all-male ministerial priesthood, the requirements of Faithful Citizenship – voting as conscientious Catholics, not detached secularists, etc.) The Council did not reverse any of that. Maybe you know that, but (again) more than half of living Catholics do not know that, and another segment has possibly convinced themselves of something they know did not occur.
I was merely pointing out that there are Catholics who clearly deny what is written by Vatican II on the meaning of “No salvation outside the Church” as they refuse to acknowledge what is written about theis in Lumen Gentium and Gaudum et Spes, and insist that their ‘harder line’ interpretation is the correct interpretation. I have also has Catholics tell me that it is wrong to attend a service (of any sort) in a Protestant Church, even though Unitatis Redintegratio states otherwise. I have had Catholics tell me that Muslims do not worship the same God as we do and that Islam is in fact a religion that worships Satan, despite what is written in Nostra Aetate. As requested by a previous poster I have quoted from these Vatican II documents to support these points.
I agree entirely that we are bound by what Vatican II actually said. It did not soften our position on morals at all, and those who think it did are very much misguided. On the other hand though, we are also bound by what is written in Vatican II and are not a liberty to take a more ‘hard line’ interpretation on issues such as the ones I referred to above.
Taking a more conservative interpretation of teachings than that of the Church’s own stated interpretation, is just as much a deviation from Church teaching as taking a more liberal interpretation. We are not a liberty to do either, we are fully bound by the Church’s position as stated at Vatican II.