C
CJECulver
Guest
You yourself said if the opinions expressed here would representative of the Church’s teachings you’d be “finding another religion fast.”Telling a Catholic to leave the Church… How very Christian of you.
You set the parameters; jonathan_hili simply followed up.
Weren’t you just complaining about people misrepresenting your words? jonathan_hili said nothing of the kind.In telling me I should not be listening to the Church
Nowhere is it a dogma that you are free to reject all Catholic teachings that are not official dogmas. That is a very dangerous argument to make. On the issues of homosexuality and SSM the Church has spoken clearly, consistently and unequivocally. Arguing that you are free to ignore what the Church has said here just because it hasn’t been elevated to the status of dogma sounds suspiciously like an argument looking for a loophole.And, indeed, nowhere is it a dogma that I should always and everywhere agree with the Church… But I am free to act within my own conscience about whether or not I agree with what the Church tells the rest of the world to do.
I’ve already referred you to “Considerations Regarding Proposals to Give Legal Recognition to Unions Between Homosexual Persons”, which comes straight from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. When the CDF issues a teaching on a matter of faith and morals, to pretend as if it’s something we’re free to ignore is, quite literally, playing with hellfire.
As to the individual conscience, one is not merely “free” to follow it, one is obligated to do so. But – and this is the part modernists love to ignore – we are also obligated to make sure our consciences are formed according to the moral teachings of the Church. The conscience may be the compass, but the teachings of the Church are True North. Any compass that points elsewhere is a very dangerous guide. And if our compass points elsewhere due to our own religious lethargy or stubbornness of will, then we are culpable for that.
The assertions you’ve been making in this thread are in opposition to the Church’s teaching. That is an objective fact.My words are repeatedly taken and portrayed as opposing the Church
I’m open to correction (and I admit I haven’t ready every post), but I haven’t seen anyone say either. What we have consistently said is that the assertions you make are contradictory to the moral law of God, and that one cannot hold the positions you’ve espoused and still claim to be a faithful Catholic.and that in doing so I am therefore sinful and not Catholic.
No one, not Catholic, not Buddhist, not pagan, agnostic or atheist, has the right to make rules contrary to God’s moral law. We are not, as I’ve already explained on at least two occasions, talking about some set of rules the Catholic Church made up just because it gets its kicks trying to poke its nose into peoples’ private lives. It is the law of God. No man-made law can supercede the laws of God.These people have the right to make their own rules.
You have consistently and repeatedly made assertions contrary to the above, in insisting that the Catholic Church has no business interfering in the affairs of anyone outside the Church. For the Church to bow to your assertions would be to abandon the divinely appoint mission God has bestowed on her. The Church dare not abandon that task. Not even if DexUK wishes it.To the Church belongs the right always and everywhere to announce moral principles, including those pertaining to the social order, and to make judgments on any human affairs to the extent that they are required by the fundamental rights of the human person or the salvation of souls. (CCC No. 2032)
- since this is something he did as Cardinal Bergoglio, opposing same-sex marriage legislation in Argentina.