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#81 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 5,363
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Have those naughty nuns been lighting the grail shaped beacon again?
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#82 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 5,363
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I don't think it realizes how bad off it really is. The current whacky Vicar of Christ is so removed I don't think he really understands how unimportant he is. He talks about birth control and gets ignored. Neither major US party has an agenda he can support and Catholics are the largest single denomination in the country.
What really surprises me here is the risk they took. The nuns could simply ignore the RCC. Then what? The RCC risks everyone seeing how little power they really have. |
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#83 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 3,975
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#84 |
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Monkey
Posts: 30,112
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Airing the whole "birth control is a sin" thing again was a mistake. Ever since the Pill hit the market, otherwise devout Catholic women have been taking it. Four or more kids is simply not feasible for most families. The Church has been looking the other way for decades because it knew that churchgoing Catholic women outnumber the men by a good bit. And in "mixed" marriages it's usually the mother's religion that gets passed on to the kids. Pissing off women is the fastest way to empty pews. Does the Church honestly believe that demonizing contraception will fill its congregations with happy born Catholics? It won't. It will remove the women and their planned-for children permanently.
When I was a kid and dragged to church, you saw ten women for every man present, and half of those women were senior citizens. What's it look like, now? Between contraception and all those sex scandals, whose supposed to show up to church anymore? I come from a Catholic family. The only churchgoers among us now are the surviving siblings of my grandmother, and they're all over eighty years old. Nobody in the three generations after them goes. Why would they? It's a different world, and increasingly incompatible with reality. Two thousand years is a good run, but about a hundred years too many. |
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__________________
One cannot expect wisdom to flow from a pumpkin. |
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#85 |
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a carbon based life-form
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 26,780
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#86 |
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Muse
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: East coast, U.S
Posts: 623
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Come on oh Eternal Catholic Church, come on. Your dogmas and the rules you play by are "eternal", right? So why not just do to these nuns what you would have done say about 300 years ago? What has changed since then? Why are you letting those evil secular humanists and liberals tie your hands? Even if you lose this fight, history will say you went down fighting!
Don't forget how much more powerful you were centuries ago! People trembled at the thought of doing or thinking anything heretical in Catholic lands. When the Pope spoke, people listened. Now when the Pope speaks, people either laugh at him or ignore him, and this includes most Catholics nowadays. Then again, just how "Catholic" are these people anyway? The Catholic Church is right. The secularists are indeed ruining everything for them. Worse yet, a fairly large number of Catholics are secularists. Can't murder people just for opposing you, just like in the good ol' days, thanks to the secularists. But then again, doesn't God want you to kill people? Wasn't that the old excuse in the old days when heretics were burned at the stake? Does this mean you are now ignoring God, and making God's law subservient to secular law? Does this mean that even the Pope is a secularist? Or has God become weaker? Maybe God changed his mind? How come no one ever answers these questions? |
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#87 |
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Cythraul Enfys
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 28,961
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No one ever expects The Inquisition: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbcyiFt5VEs
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() May not be SFW, but is not in violation of any rule I know here. |
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__________________
There is no problem so great that it cannot be fixed by small explosives carefully placed. Wash this space! We fight for the Lady Babylon!!! |
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#88 |
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Sarcastic Conqueror of Notions
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: A floating island above the clouds
Posts: 23,835
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The Catholic church has only made ex cathedra statements twice: The Assumption of Mary (she floated up to Heaven at the end of her life) and the Immaculate Conception (of Mary, not Jesus, where she was born without sin, as if she had been baptized already).
That the church runs around slobbering ex cathedra everywhere is an old Protestant bugaboo. |
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__________________
"Great innovations should not be forced [by way of] slender majorities." - Thomas Jefferson The government should nationalize it! Socialized, single-payer video game development and sales now! More, cheaper, better games, right? Right? |
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#89 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 3,975
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No it's not, more's the pity! The infallibility in general of pontifical pronouncements is repeatedly asserted, and it often contaminates discourse within that church. It was copiously invoked in relation to the disastrous encyclical Humanae Vitae. See for example http://www.ewtn.com/library/Theology/AUTHUMVT.HTM
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#90 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 3,975
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When in 1905 France adopted a law providing for the separation of Church and State, Pope Saint Pius X hit back with an Encyclical Vehementer Nos in which he slobbered the following astonishing statement regarding the authority of the leaders of the Church:
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#91 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 9,848
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Actually, that's wrong. There are only two official ex-cathedra pronouncements by the POPE -- well, if you ignore half a dozen more which do meet the requirements anyway -- but church councils can also be infallible, if they pronounce something as fundamentally incompatible with the Catholic faith or being saved.
But even leaving the issue of whether the Council Of Trent is infallible or not -- though I think it would open a can of worms by itself if the church were to admit that it was just a bunch of guys talking out the ass, as stuff from there is pretty important for the current dogma -- the issue still remains that Mary's immaculate conception is defined as, you know, being free of sin starting from conception. As opposed to others who aren't. The clue of it being about conception is, you know, right in the title of the doctrine. I don't think one can keep that as infallible, if they were to decide that a foetus doesn't actually have a soul right from conception. |
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#92 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 9,848
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@Craig:
Indeed, they repeatedly maintain that they know better than the plebs, and it's meant to be so. However, infallibility goes one step further, and makes it absolute truth that even another pope or council can't change any more. The difference may seem subtle in the short run, but in the long run it's pretty massive. You can undo what pope X knew better than you, by having pope Y be even smarter than pope X and say it ain't so. But if it's infallible, then it's absolute truth handed down by God (as the Holy Spirit), and no pope can be smarter than God. Basically if (as a hypothetical illustration) some medieval pope were to declare, dunno, that the Earth is flat and rests on four pillars, a later pope could still say some form of, "yeah, he was more informed and had better judgment than his flock, but nowadays we're even more informed and can say he was wrong." But if that were packed in an ex-cathedra pronouncement, that's it, you'd be stuck with it for ever. It's the kind of stuff that is usually not a problem in the short run, but give it a few hundred years and an infallible pronouncement can bite you in the ass. |
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#93 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Japan
Posts: 15,788
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__________________
“Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them. With Major Major it had been all three.” ― Joseph Heller, Catch-22 |
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#94 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 3,975
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Hans
True. However my point was that unthinking obedience to the Pope is enjoined even where ex-cathedra infallibility is not explicitly invoked. That monarchical centralism is the "Protestant bugaboo" that Beerina was deriding. In fact, concerns about this extend well beyond the ranks of Protestantism, and they are well founded. Uncritical assent to papal pronouncements does much harm, eg in the area of artificial birth control, and in other fields where compassion and good sense find themselves in conflict with religious sexual taboos. |
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#95 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 3,975
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The first time I saw it, I thought it was an anti-clerical hoax or spoof, and I had to look it up to convince myself that it was an authentic transcription of words addressed by a religious leader, now regarded as a Saint, to the citizens of one of the most advanced and civilised countries in the world at that time.
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#96 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Dublin (the one in Ireland)
Posts: 7,134
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I believe Gladstone put it well. After the First Vatican Council he stated that catholics had "forfeited their moral and mental freedom" and described the church as "an Asian monarchy: nothing but one giddy height of despotism, and one dead level of religious subservience" and said the papacy wanted to impose its own arbitrary tyranny hiding these "crimes against liberty beneath a suffocating cloud of incense".
Interestingly Cardinal Newman responded by arguing that individual conscience, which he said was supreme, was not in conflict with papal infallibility. |
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#97 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 3,975
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Indeed not! Many Catholic teachers have a rather strange definition of what "conscience" means. Here is a modern disquisition on the topic.
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#98 |
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Muse
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 562
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There's a saying in politics that some organizations are looking outward for converts, while others are looking inward for heretics. The Vatican's in full heretic hunting mode.
I love this quote from the LA times:
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#99 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 356
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#100 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Belgium (Flatland)
Posts: 31,480
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Reminds me of the joke about the Pope and the Seven Dwarfs.
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__________________
Yesterday upon the stairs I met a man who wasn't there He wasn't there again today I wish that he would go away. |
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#101 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 1,947
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#102 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: London, UK
Posts: 2,277
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__________________
Eat ****, coprophage! |
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#103 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 64
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The Church is already running low on nuns. Where do they expect new ones to come from? This could rattle the resolve of the few young women left who look at becoming nuns in a positive light.
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#104 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 1,489
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__________________
"When they come around sweet talkin', don't listen" - Willie Stark |
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#105 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: up in the air
Posts: 9,999
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#106 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Japan
Posts: 15,788
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__________________
“Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them. With Major Major it had been all three.” ― Joseph Heller, Catch-22 |
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#107 |
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a carbon based life-form
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 26,780
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#108 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Japan
Posts: 15,788
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__________________
“Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them. With Major Major it had been all three.” ― Joseph Heller, Catch-22 |
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#109 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Dublin (the one in Ireland)
Posts: 7,134
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Damn. I *did* do a search for 'nuns' before starting this thread.
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__________________
Yes I gave in and configured an avatar. |
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