Darn, no footnotes.
"We deny that anyone, Jew or Gentile, believer or unbeliever, private person or public official, is exempt from the moral and juridical obligation before God to submit to Christ's lordship over every aspect of his life in thought, word, and deed."
http://www.angelfire.com/ca4/cor/25articles.html
Arrogant or not?
Huhh?
Most of my life I was content to live and let live, but either because I'm older and more observant or because something has really changed; I now have the impression that many religious groups, Catholics included, are not satisfied with worship in their homes or churches as they seemed mostly to be in my youth, but think they are unfulfilled if they don't work to impose that on everyone else, in one way or another. Kind of like what happens in Islamic countries.
As to is "IT" true; what truth are you talking about? Does God exist? I think there must be another thread on that subject somewhere.![]()
I think what I was meaning was more like...how could you *not* expect the Church to confidently proclaim it's dogma?
-Elliot
When they want to impose laws based on their dogma and apply them to everyone else, I have a problem.
So, did I really have to explain that, or are you just bumping this thread because you were bored somewhere else?
Was I suppose to imaginge aYou really had to explain that, thanks. -Elliot
Was I suppose to imaginge ain that comment?
BTW, you threw in, seemingly at random, this earlier; "Many Catholics are also really into global debt relief."
So? What was your point?
Supposing I said that many Catholics are also into causing million of preventable deaths, not to mention unwanted pregnancies, by their dogmatic opposition to something as simple as condoms?
BTW, wonder what happened to St.JosemariaOraProNo, whatever that name means? Came on strong and then went out with a whimper. With a handle like that sounds like a Bishop somewhere who thought he was into more reality than he could deal with.
Oh. Ok. Sorry for the suspicion. You know how it goes, and needless to say I don't think I've called you stupid.No. My fault if I didn't read you carefully enough, I legitimately thank you for yer clarification.
Yes, obviously that is a fact of life. I threw that critique in there for good measure because I though you were beingBut the Church *is* relevant. You'd be better off talking to world leaders and petitioning them to ignore the Church.
I don't, but I do believe that a condom is much preferable when choice is available and I don't advocate leaving one's faith just to do so, which is why I place the blame on the Pope (starting with).First, I'd congratulate you for recognizing that abortion equals death.
Actually I had in mind disease and AIDS in particular as far more significant than abortion in that regard. Sorry or not making that more clear.Second, I'd suggest that even if the Catholic church had no opinion on abortion, there would still be millions of abortions every year. Why should I share your assumption that the Church's prohibition of condoms is directly linked to abortion? It's phooey. So...you've got people who listen to the Church and don't use condoms...but then they ignore the church and get an abortion. I'm not buying it.
Not sure I understand your point here, but I would venture that there is a tendency for anyone who opposes, or promotes, a point of view to couch their arguments in complexity. Smoke and mirrors and all that....and religions are exceptionally good at that; they've had a long time to perfect the art.Third, I think simplicity is irrelevant when it comes to moral matters. Yes, the Church is dogmatically opposed to lots of thinks. It has nothing to do with complexity, or lack thereof.
Not particularly interested given that he's wimped out. I bet I could come up with some snazzy religious handles too if I wanted to make a weak point.Jose Maria Escriva. Ora Pro Nobis. You could look them up.
He probably has better things to do. He made a pointed and significant contribution. We are grateful for that.

Not quite. It was also applied to the issue of birth control, which is why the Church can't do the obvious reasonable thing and reverse its stance.The much touted papal infallibility has only been used once, IIRC, and then it was to settle an argument about the Virgin Mary.
I don't, but I do believe that a condom is much preferable when choice is available and I don't advocate leaving one's faith just to do so, which is why I place the blame on the Pope (starting with).
Actually I had in mind disease and AIDS in particular as far more significant than abortion in that regard. Sorry or not making that more clear.
Not sure I understand your point here, but I would venture that there is a tendency for anyone who opposes, or promotes, a point of view to couch their arguments in complexity. Smoke and mirrors and all that....and religions are exceptionally good at that; they've had a long time to perfect the art.
Not particularly interested given that he's wimped out. I bet I could come up with some snazzy religious handles too if I wanted to make a weak point.
Really? You are too too kind. He posted a few clips, asked some "genuinely interested" questions and then went back to praying? Rude jerk is what I think.
I hate being stood up![]()
Not quite. It was also applied to the issue of birth control, which is why the Church can't do the obvious reasonable thing and reverse its stance.
You have a point, which I interpret as meaning that anything the Pope (or any religious leader for that matter) says is justified within the context of their beliefs.
In what way is he holier than you? Aren't all believers equally holy, depending on their personal life alone?
Regardless, asking the same question repeatedly and getting no answer repeatedly seems to me to be an exercise in self delusion.
but I suspect you will claim that Your interpretation is the one intended by your god.
what it is with your god that it allows so many to "know" that only their interpretation is correct, and then let you ask "why"? A test? Pretty crude if you ask me. Vicious even.
But then again I have no doubt they would say the same of me, except that I don't claim the ultimate answers to life.
Are you telling me that the Pope doesn''t really have a clue about what his god has created the universe for, or are you telling me that perhaps he has doubts if such a god, if it ever existed, still pays any attention whatsoever to what we do to each other?
Fair enough, but here we are more interested, I think, in what the actual posters think, and above all what they rationalize
Nope. Wrong interpretation.
Who says that we don’t get an answer? It’s just that we are able to accept that the answer is beyond our ability to comprehend. The answer isn’t something we get out of a textbook. The answer is something we have to live. That really is the significant difference between the believer and the unbeliever, the fundamental belief that there is more to reality than “me”, my abilities and my functions. The believer does not need to bottle the world up into neat categories, only to ridicule those things that fall outside of those same categories. The believer accepts the existence of that doubt that makes possible his or her belief.
Once again another ignorant assumption. New flash: I’m Catholic. I don’t have a “your interpretation”. Catholics don’t believe in personal interpretation of Scripture.
Your first assumption, which you posit as a premise, is fallacious, therefore, your conclusion is erroneous.
Really? For someone who does as much dogmatic pontificating as you have done in this thread, I find that assertion laughable. You are just as religious as I am.
Um, no. That’s your position.
Apparently you are. I mean, really, what can I write in reply to that illogic?
From your perspective speaking; God gave us fairly admirable powers of perception and insight yet requires that we put it all into suspended animation whenever we run into a difficult problem?
One factor that confuses me with you and Elliotfc (I am assuming that you also are Catholic), is that your church does not seem to hold science in the same disdain that you do.
What you call neat categories that should simply be taken on faith are to real thinking beings only challenges that need to be considered.
Cute but wrong, of course depending on what you consider "religious" to mean. I read all the astronomy and science information and more, that I can find time for. It's a beautiful fascinating place, existence, but I don't kiss the ground for anything except for the pleasure of being here and trying to understand it. Now, you can call that religious if you wish, but it worships nothing that you call a god; ultimately only my ability to see it to the extent that I can, and also most importantly not distort it with dogma that is pretended to come from anywhere but from myself.
No. We are to use our faculties and our powers of discernment when faced with difficult problems. We are also to understand that we have limitations and that a reality greater than ourselves may not be grasped in the same way we can, and do, grasp many tangible and material concepts and things.
"We are to...."
We may have to but when you say "we are to.." you have already given up the main part of your free will. Run into a difficult problem and all you have to say is "we have limitations and cannot grasp this".
So it has always been with religion.