R
Roy5
Guest
As** an inquiring Protestant** who always has been very interested in learning Christian history and following the contemporary Catholic Church, after reading these postings I have concluded what my major stumbling block is when it comes to Catholicism. It demands conformity, complete obedience to the Church, apparently with little room for creative thinking or serious dissent. When someone expresses a contrary view s/he comes under heavy fire for being heretical, rebellious, egotistical, ill-informed, and/or some other major shortcoming.
Code:
This may sound harsh, but it brings to mind political systems like fascism and communism, where the government also has demanded full fidelity. I was thinking of that today as we remember the 20th anniversary of the massacre at Taenanmen Square in China, where millions of Christians, Catholics and Protestants both, have suffered for their faith.
I confess that I treasure the freedom to think 'outside the box' - free to question, if you will, When posters do this here they usually catch hell (figuratively speaking, of course). My own view is that God gave us a brain to use, and I enjoy exploring different theological systems without worrying whether or not I am not sufficiently in line with traditional teaching. I believe that none of us has a monopoly on spiritual truth, and that we need not conform to creeds and doctrines written centuries ago, before we had a decent telescope or any microscope. When one reads the Church Fathers, for example, we find considerable wisdom but also many opinions and observations that sound dated and even bizarre in today's world.
"Think and let think" - and I try my best to respect those who believe that we don't need to think so much as to submit to divine revelation. No, I don't go with 'sola scriptura' either. The Bible, tradition, and reason all have as place, as well as the excitement and adventure of creative thinking. None of us really has a handle on this magnificent and mysterious world. Our spiritual ancestors innocently believed that our earth was the center of the universe before Catholics like Copernicus and Galileo had the courage to risk the church's wrath and argue otherwise. Copernicus, of course, did not dare reveal his findings until his death bed, and not long ago the Vatican - praise God - finally recanted its harsh treatment of Galileo.