Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are Leonard Leo/Bannon extreme right Catholics and modern day real life Catholics
So are the "real life" ones pro-life? And do they stand with truth regarding biological sex?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are Leonard Leo/Bannon extreme right Catholics and modern day real life Catholics
So are the "real life" ones pro-life? And do they stand with truth regarding biological sex?
What do you mean by "do they stand with truth"? Is this the same as "are they honest"? I'm not familiar with the phraseology and think it might be
language that fundamentalist Christians usually use among themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are Leonard Leo/Bannon extreme right Catholics and modern day real life Catholics
So are the "real life" ones pro-life? And do they stand with truth regarding biological sex?
Anonymous wrote:There are Leonard Leo/Bannon extreme right Catholics and modern day real life Catholics
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious about how Catholics are thinking about the current position of the Pope, which is decidedly against the Trump administration's immigration policies.
If you're Catholic and opposed legal abortion because the Catholic church was against it (although the government obviously supported it), are you now opposing these immigration policies for the same reason? And if not, how can you reconcile that with being Catholic?
Catholic here. Catholic school and college. Go to church. Pope is just the Pope. Someone not to be listened to really. What he says just disappears. Matters not who is Pope. One's relationship with God is their own. This is the correct Catholic view. Anything else is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:As a practicing Catholic, I thought his remarks should have been kept "in house". He could have gone about it in many ways that might have been more effective in changing policy. Or changing Vance's mind but he had to do a public shaming. I thought it was hypocritical. When Obama was in office and deportations were at an all time high, he met with Obama to discuss climate. Now that it's Trump, he is splashing his views across the world. Smh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question misunderstands the nature of the Catholic faith. The Pope is only considered infallible in very specific matters of church doctrine. His random thoughts about US politics are not that and hold no extra weight.
—I’m not Catholic, but I do have a basic education
This is the correct answer.
Yup. And abortion is moral doctrine, the Pope can't change the teaching on that even if he wanted. Immigration is considered prudential policy and his musings on it have no authority over policymakers.
Please explain the logic or lack thereof on why the Catholic Bishops do not actively oppose the death penalty in the same way that they oppose abortion. No non-Catholic gives a sh-t about the Catholic doctrine on the differences, as those are religious views (to which Catholics are entitled to hold). The real difference is abortion issues effects the mother and the fetus and is a personal decision. The death penalty is a state decision.
Catholics are against the death penalty.
They didn’t say Catholics they said the bishops.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question misunderstands the nature of the Catholic faith. The Pope is only considered infallible in very specific matters of church doctrine. His random thoughts about US politics are not that and hold no extra weight.
—I’m not Catholic, but I do have a basic education
This is the correct answer.
Yup. And abortion is moral doctrine, the Pope can't change the teaching on that even if he wanted. Immigration is considered prudential policy and his musings on it have no authority over policymakers.
Please explain the logic or lack thereof on why the Catholic Bishops do not actively oppose the death penalty in the same way that they oppose abortion. No non-Catholic gives a sh-t about the Catholic doctrine on the differences, as those are religious views (to which Catholics are entitled to hold). The real difference is abortion issues effects the mother and the fetus and is a personal decision. The death penalty is a state decision.
Catholics are against the death penalty.
+1 The Catholic Church is firm on its stance against the death penalty. Honestly, why do people who don’t have the first idea about Catholicism keep posting?
Did the Bishops threaten to withhold communion from AG Barr when he went out of his way to restart the Federal death penalty? Did any of the Bishops call AG Barr a cafeteria Catholic over the death penalty?
Anonymous wrote:As a practicing Catholic, I thought his remarks should have been kept "in house". He could have gone about it in many ways that might have been more effective in changing policy. Or changing Vance's mind but he had to do a public shaming. I thought it was hypocritical. When Obama was in office and deportations were at an all time high, he met with Obama to discuss climate. Now that it's Trump, he is splashing his views across the world. Smh
Anonymous wrote:Were't most germens Catholic during WW2? There was still resistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious about how Catholics are thinking about the current position of the Pope, which is decidedly against the Trump administration's immigration policies.
If you're Catholic and opposed legal abortion because the Catholic church was against it (although the government obviously supported it), are you now opposing these immigration policies for the same reason? And if not, how can you reconcile that with being Catholic?
Catholic here. Catholic school and college. Go to church. Pope is just the Pope. Someone not to be listened to really. What he says just disappears. Matters not who is Pope. One's relationship with God is their own. This is the correct Catholic view. Anything else is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious about how Catholics are thinking about the current position of the Pope, which is decidedly against the Trump administration's immigration policies.
If you're Catholic and opposed legal abortion because the Catholic church was against it (although the government obviously supported it), are you now opposing these immigration policies for the same reason? And if not, how can you reconcile that with being Catholic?
Catholic here. Catholic school and college. Go to church. Pope is just the Pope. Someone not to be listened to really. What he says just disappears. Matters not who is Pope. One's relationship with God is their own. This is the correct Catholic view. Anything else is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a Catholic who is a liberal Democrat like most of my family. Nothing to reconcile.