superfreddy
(I noticed that Google translation and the newspaper's human translation were fairly close.)
I mentioned "going through the motions". Just like others posters said, why be a Catholic at all and go through all sacraments if the pope himself is saying that God almighty will save you if you're a good guy?
Thanks for the further comment on what you meant by "going through the motions." Catholics and Orthodox hold that their sacraments have supernatural effects in their own right. Especially contentious with Protestants are forgiveness of sins by a priest after confessing them and the Eucharist as perfomed by a priest - and another sacrament for becoming a priest, someone able to do these magical feats.
As the partial list indicates, Catholic and Orthodox spirtual life has other goals in addition to personal attainment of the beatific vision or theosis. (The Orthodox, however, also contemplate attaining some portion of theosis in this life... this is a tricky point between the schismatics, but there is a great deal of parallelism between the Catholic account of salvation and the Orthodox theosis-in-life.)
If you don't believe any of that, then there would be no particular reason to do it. I think we can all - the Pope included - agree on that.
I should also give Protestants "equal time." The following short video clip, taken from television (
Hour of Power aired on 31 May 1997), was controversial among American Protestants. The two speakers, Robert Schuller and Billy Graham, are famous Protestant preachers. What they are saying and stroking each other over is, to excellent approximation, Catholic doctrine.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNCnxA91fHE
The major departure is when Graham says "they are saved." In the Catholic view they are not saved, but rather did not sin in the first place. But I agree with Graham's choice of words. He wasn't explaining Catholic doctrine, and in American Protestant speech "being saved" is effectively a synonym for "being with God in Heaven."
Which brings us to
Craig
In
American speech, whether or not Protestant, "being saved" seems to be effectively a synonym for "being with God in Heaven." Maybe elsewhere in the English-speaking world, too. I haven't surveyed. Our source document, which isn't in English, doesn't have the corresponding phrase. So far as I can see,
ANTPogo responded to another poster's question in her own voice. I'm sure she can call me out if she thinks we have some dire disagreement.
But evidently Eight Bits can't be brought to say that there is salvation outside the church.
Evidently not. I don't believe that there's salvation
inside or
outside the Church. The topic concerns the Pope's point of view, not mine. It would appear that he has gotten a different message from your "earlier Church teachers" than you have. And speaking of what he's gotten,
but if the pope wants to introduce a more liberal version of the doctrine, that represents a step in the right direction.
The Pope doesn't have that authority. There is also nothing in the Pope's statement that offers salvation outside the Church, a simple doctrine which doesn't come in "liberal" or "illiberal" flavors (although Ben16 caused quite a stir by allowing his bureaucrats to accept the Assyrian Church of the East's eucharistic service as sacramentally valid - damned hippies.)