It is certainly not magisterial teaching and I would bet that the Catholic school’s reason for denying admittance had nothing to do with the person being Baha’i. This is like being called a racist if I disagree with my current president’s agenda.
“Our president is black. You are white and disagree with him therefore you are racist.”
“My child is Baha’i and was refused admittance into a Catholic School, therefore the School discriminates against Baha’i children”.
Baloney.
No I didn’t say that it discriminates “just” against Baha’is, it discriminates against all non-Christians. Here are the prioritisations for Catholic schools around the globe:
*** Children of Catholic families
(* who are actively involved in the parish on which the school depend)
Children of families residing in other parishes in which they are actively involved
Children of families affiliated to Churches in communion with the Roman Catholic Church, such as the Maronite Church
Children of Catholic families residing within the parish/parishes on which the school depends
Children of Catholic families residing in other parishes
Children of Orthodox or other Christian families
Children of families of other religious convictions
Children from non-Catholic backgrounds are accepted in most schools, but acceptance will depend on vacancies.***
There are 7 categories of children which take precedence over the category of “non-Catholic background”.
I thought we judged a person by the quality of their character, not the beliefs of their parents and forefathers? (cf Martin Luther King speech)
Don’t get me wrong, its a problem within Islamic and Jewish schools too. I struggle sometimes to understand that things like this can be done, and the Catholic Church washes its hands away from it by saying what you said Steve, “it is not magesterial teaching”
The things that hide behind the scenes in the name of Catholicism which is not magesterial teaching, and Islam, which is not Quranic teaching, is something fair-minded people are getting tired with…