I should have prefaced my comments with “In my opinion”. While I don’t believe I am saying anything contrary to my faith, I know of no official statement on the matter other than “outside of the Church there is no salvation”. Now I don’t want to derail the thread on a discussion of exactly what that means, but it is certainly in line with what I am saying. If you are not part of God’s family (the Church) then you are with the enemy, knowingly or unknowingly. As to each individual’s culpability, we rely on an all-merciful God to make his judgment.
TheAtheist;10191924:
I tend to frequent other religious boards from various different faiths. It would be most…interesting to bring up as a point of conversation.
TheAtheist;10191924:
In my own experience dealing with some of the professionals working within the structure of your Church, I tend to find a bandwidth of opinion. For sake of convenience for the audience reading, I usually pick out two extreme examples such as Opus Dei on one end and the Jesuits on the other.
Although they share the same faith…judgments about certain issues tend to be as different as night and day.
Theological arguments don’t constitute a rejection of the Christian faith, which is a rejection of Christ.
I suppose this point where condemnations come out about one being too 'reactionary" and the other being too “liberal.” - to which i can confess I have nothing to contribute to that line of questioning given that i am not a member of your faith.
Be that as it may, let us for sake of argument accept that what you just stated is a universally valid point. Even if other religious traditions find their origin “in Satan” as you said, your Curia’s treatment and relationships with other religious institutions isn’t exactly equal on all terms.
Whereas you might say that the lone Hindu farmer when he gets down on his knees praying for the safety of his loved ones and thanking Lord Vishnu for another day of living has been duped by the devil, your not quite saying he is actively worshipping the devil.
However, that is precisely the accusation that is often hurled at the Wiccans and various NeoPagan sects that then to sprout up in Europe and America. They are actively worshipping the devil, even if they do not know it.
Which leads me back to my question again: Why the difference in treatment?
Is there some sort of criterion or rubric that’s being used that differentiates one from the other that i’m not aware of?
If one believes that Jesus Christ is who he claimed to be, the Son of the living God, then it follows that any system of beliefs that leads one away from him, rather than towards him, would be from the enemy, regardless of the sincerity of the believer.
Whether one actively worships the devil is beside the point. There are many very good and well meaning people who have been duped by him. Pagans, who basically worship creation, have been led away from the true worship that belongs only to the Creator, God, whom they reject.
My comments boil down to the fact that as a Catholic I believe that I am involved in a spiritual war (the Church Militant). It is between Christ and Satan and the spoils of that war are our souls. If we are not led to Christ, then we are led away from Christ, and all of this comes from the evil one.