Not PP, but not what I would mean. I'd mean like people who compel others to violate their consciences as by, for example, being required involuntarily to gestate a pregnancy - even when the pregnancy threatens that person's life. Or being prevented from offering needed medical care to a pregnant woman b/c that care might harm a fetus. Just to take a couple of examples. |
Nobody is “required to involuntary” participation. |
No. I’m not confused. You seems confused and indoctrinated instead of thoughtfully understanding. I completely understand that often the men who are bishops and popes are human, full of sin and lust and greed and often rules of the church are from those sinful places instead of Jesus’s. Most the rules discussed here .. celibacy and abortion are not based in the teaching of Jesus, they are born out of greed and lust ((or the lack of control of lust) and that’s expected, since Popes are not infallible . |
You are categorically incorrect in your understanding of the early teachings of the Cathedral church. |
Actually, that’s precisely what conscience clauses are about. |
"Regardless of" is doing a lot of slippery work there, and, of course, you know that. |
Would you please be so kind as to point me to a magisterial document authorizing abortion or saying abortion is not morally sinful? |
lol checkmate |
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The Church’s condemnation of abortion can be traced to not later than the time of the Apostolic Fathers in the first and second centuries. We read in the Didache “You shall not kill an unborn child or murder a newborn infant.”
The Epistle of Barnabas, dating to as early as the year 70 counsels “You shall not slay the child by abortion.” Athenagorus of Athens, in a letter to Marcus Aurelius in the year 177 taught: Those women who use drugs to bring about an abortion commit murder and will have to give an account to God for their abortion.” Similar teaching is found in the Apoligeticus of Tertullian (ca. 197): “For us [Christians], murder is once and for all forbidden; so even the child in the womb, while yet the mother's blood is still being drawn on to form the human being, it is not lawful for us to destroy. To forbid birth is only quicker murder. It makes no difference whether one takes away the life once born or destroys it as it comes to birth. He is a man, who is to be a man; the fruit is always present in the seed.” Clement of Alexandria (ca. 150-220) is in accord: “Women who make use of some sort of deadly abortion drug kill not only the embryo but, together with it, all human kindness.” The great scripture scholar St. Jerome (ca. 340-420) observed that “some unmarried women, when they learn they are with child through sin, practice abortion by the use of drugs. Frequently they die themselves and are brought before the ruler of the lower world guilty of three crimes; suicide, adultery against Christ, and murder of an unborn child.” In the 13th Century, Saint Thomas Aquinas taught that regardless when the human soul might be infused, it was a grave sin against nature to reject God’s gift of a new life. Each of these examples confirms that the Church has condemned abortion from its earliest days. Modern secular writers, particularly those with an axe to grind, frequently confuse (and thereby misrepresent) changes over time in the Canonical penalties for abortion by incorrectly identifying them as changes in the Church’s substantive moral teaching. For example, in 1588, Pope Sixtus V sought to discourage abortion by reserving absolution for that sin to the Holy See (the Pope himself). This proved unworkable so the next Pope, Gregory XIV, returned absolution for abortion to local diocesan bishops. Proponents of abortion claim that this change made abortion permissible. This obviously was not the case. If abortion was not a sin, no absolution would have been necessary. In short, In the Church’s teaching on the evil of abortion remained constant; what changed from time to time was how abortion was penalized administratively, as by excommunication or by some lesser penalty. In 1679, Pope Innocent XI condemned the writings and teachings of theologians who believed that abortion was lawful if the fetus was not yet animated or ensouled. Any distinction in Canon law between “formed” and “unformed” fetuses was removed by Pope Pius IX in 1869, making the administrative penalties for abortion uniforming and underlining Church teaching against abortion at any stage. Modern Popes have likewise been in accord in their condemnation of abortion, as are the documents of the Second Vatican Council. The Church’s teaching on abortion is not set forth in summary articles like those linked on this thread, even less so is it found in abstracts thereof. It is found in the traditions of the Church dating to Apostolic times and in the Church’s magisterial (teaching) documents. |
You write long flowery sentences and use many fancy words, and have read quite a bit of Catholic theology. Having said that, you also have a very small mind. You’ve chosen to lock yourself up in an ivory tower surrounded by dusty teachings and writings of mostly dead Europeans. You’ve closed off your mind to the objective truth that God’s creation is FAR more vast, FAR more complex, FAR more awesome, and FAR more beautiful that any one person, any one denomination, or any one faith can fully comprehend. Having one Church say smugly that it has all the answers about what constitutes “truth” — the sheer sinful hypocrisy of said Church’s leaders set aside for the moment — mocks the very God it purports to worship. Creation is “grey.” It’s not “black and white.” |
Of course the Roman Catholic Church is going to say “relativism” is a great heresy! It represents a clear and present danger to the power that Catholic clergy have exercised over the masses for two thousand years. Gotta keep the sheep dumb and stupid. Don’t want them to open their eyes, perk up their ears, start looking around, start looking at the sky, and begin to ponder the vastness of God’s creation while asking: “God’s absolute truth can only be found in one belief system (among hundreds) on one planet (among trillions) in one galaxy (among billions)?” No. No. No. Gotta tell them that line of thinking leads straight to the Devil! Keep your eyes shut, keep your ears closed, and do whatever His Holiness, His Excellency, or Father tells you because only the Roman Catholic Church has access to the fullness of God… |
Sorry, the US Bishops, whether as an office or an individuals, are not entitled to my respect. Not even close. Like everyone else, they must earn it. And they have not. When and if they start calling out politicians who support the death penalty (and aggressively use it) and who oppose fair treatment of immigrants at the same level as they speak out about abortion, I might listen. And, yes, there are many other sources of moral guidance. |
NP. Nuanced? Yes. Checkmate? No. “The introductory section notes that the Church has consistently opposed abortion as evidence of sexual sin but has not always regarded it as homicide because Church teaching has never been definitive about the nature of the fetus. In addition, the prohibition of abortion has never been declared an infallible teaching.” |