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The Church has no teaching or position on aliens!Hey I can’t give you proof but the official statement of the church on extraterrestrials is ‘maybe’.
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The Church has no teaching or position on aliens!Hey I can’t give you proof but the official statement of the church on extraterrestrials is ‘maybe’.
My feelings about limbo aren’t emotionally driven. For me, it was just the first example of the Catholic Church doing a 180 on something that isn’t dogma. And I don’t blame them for that. Advances in psychology, philosophy, chemistry, physics, medicine, etc. all shed new light on the Church’s teachings. If it’s not dogma, the Church can take advantage of new information.FWIW most of the arguments against limbo are also emotionally driven.
If I have a choice, I’d go where Will Rogers and the dogs and cats are. People are far to petty and mean, for the most part. Not all of them, of course.I’ve been on the board of our local animal shelter for about the last 13 years. For all that time and probably more before then, our most popular selling t-shirts and sweatshirts are the ones that have the Will Rodgers saying on the back, “If dogs don’t go to heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went.” For those of you who have just lost a four legged friend, you might find the poem “Rainbow Bridge” to be comforting. It is not Catholic Church teaching, but it can be very healing when you have lost a family pet.
I think it should. People believe in them in increasingly large numbers. A lot of people are turning away from the traditional Christian God and toward a super-intellectual alien creator. (I’m not, just so no one accuses me of being an atheist again.)The Church has no teaching or position on aliens!
If you are talking about Limbo for Infants there has been ZERO change. It has never been a Church teaching and it still is not a Church teaching. It was only ever a theological hypothesis which Catholics were and are allowed to believe in or not.My feelings about limbo aren’t emotionally driven. For me, it was just the first example of the Catholic Church doing a 180 on something that isn’t dogma. And I don’t blame them for that. Advances in psychology, philosophy, chemistry, physics, medicine, etc. all shed new light on the Church’s teachings. If it’s not dogma, the Church can take advantage of new information.
It was taught in my grandmother’s and mother’s church and school. And by priests!If you are talking about Limbo for Infants there has been ZERO change. It has never been a Church teaching and it still is not a Church teaching. It was only ever a theological hypothesis which Catholics were and are allowed to believe in or not.
The Vatican is under the impression that Limbo for unbaptized infants was definitely a teaching:If you are talking about Limbo for Infants there has been ZERO change. It has never been a Church teaching and it still is not a Church teaching. It was only ever a theological hypothesis which Catholics were and are allowed to believe in or not.
With “all due respect” right back to you: limbo was never a formal teaching of the Church.With all due respect, a priest told my grandmother the same thing, in almost the same words (as my grandmother related it to me) about limbo. An unbaptized baby in the town where she lived had died, and it was not allowed to be buried in consecrated ground, which distressed my grandmother greatly even though she was not related to the child. A priest told her she was being overly-emotional, and the question was settled: all unbaptized babies go to limbo. The Church has now reversed itself on this thinking.
I didn’t compare anything. You must have me confused with someone else. I didn’t even mention the Incarnation.Your comparison falls flat on its face.
You cannot say that “no one knows” it, when the Church does know it.No one knows that. But I believe God takes care of his all creations. Maybe there is a different place for animals, angels etc.
The Church doesn’t know. We will ALL know…someday. If only humans are part of the New Creation, it’s going to be a pretty sterile one. I can’t see that coming from Christ. I believe, and always will, that when that day arrives the earth will be filled with birdsong, cows and horses grazing peacefully in flower-filled fields, the lion lying beside the lamb, and every pet every one of us has known at our side, happy and healthy, just as we are.You cannot say that “no one knows” it, when the Church does know it.
Same answer: just because you don’t know it, that does not change the fact that the Church does know it.FrDavid96:![]()
The Church doesn’t know.You cannot say that “no one knows” it, when the Church does know it.
Oh, I know it.Same answer: just because you don’t know it, that does not change the fact that the Church does know it.
I agree with your entire post, PaladinSword, and especially what I quoted. Great post, filled with wisdom.But no one has a monopoly on God or what he decides to do or how he chooses to reveal himself.