T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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866.3 | Moved from topic 91 | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Feb 24 1994 09:56 | 16 |
| >If I remember correctly, can't the Pope speak ex cathedra, or infallibly,
>if he so chooses or feels so moved? By no small stretch, believing
>this about the Pope is close to diefication.
The doctrine of Papal Infallibility specifies that when the Pope, in unison
with the bishops of all the world, under the influence of the Holy Spirit,
makes a specific, solemn declaration that a matter of faith or morals is
a revealed doctrine, it must be given the assent of faith by all Catholics.
The doctrine was formally defined only in the last century and has been
used exactly twice. In both cases it was to end disputes over traditions
almost 2000 years old that, although constantly believed in some form or
other by most Christians in both East and West, did not have sufficient
biblical evidence for a precise, undisputed formulation.
/john
|
866.2 | Moved from topic 91 | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Feb 24 1994 11:16 | 4 |
| Sorry to continue the rathole, John, but what were the two disputes that
were settled by ex cathreda declarations by the Pope?
-- Bob
|
866.1 | Relevant replies | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Thu Feb 24 1994 15:25 | 96 |
| <<< LGP30::DKA300:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CHRISTIAN-PERSPECTIVE.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Discussions from a Christian Perspective >-
================================================================================
Note 91.3389 Christianity and Gays 3389 of 3394
HURON::MYERS 30 lines 23-FEB-1994 20:37
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RE: Note 91.3387 by NITTY::DIERCKS
> You're taking me too literally.
I thought you meant what you said, yes.
> ...the pope is, to some people, an all knowing, all seeing,
In matters of Church dogma he is considered to be the final word, but
he is not considered omniscient. This is simply not true, but is a
popular vision of Roman Catholics held by non-RC's.
> ..."better do what he says" kind-o guy.
Well he *is* the head of the Roman Catholic Church. I guess he gets to
make up the rules of what RC teachings will be. They don't keep him locked
in the closet, though. He's allowed to consult with others in the RC
hierarchy.
> I just want to yell "can't you make up your own mind?"
Well, many R. Catholics do. Many churches have female alter server,
women Eucharistic Ministers. It's even been reported that at least one
Catholic couple was seen purchasing condoms.
You're right though. Generally speaking Roman Catholics don't make it
up as they go along; it's not a "feel good" theology. I hear that the
UU church is more open to personal theology though.
Eric "Pat Sweeney" Myers
================================================================================
Note 91.3391 Christianity and Gays 3391 of 3394
TOHOPE::HUTTO_G 12 lines 24-FEB-1994 08:29
-< Ex Cathedra? >-
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re: .3388
> Sticking up for Roman Catholicism, it is erroneous to say that the Pope
> is deified. Highly revered, yes. The head of a global hierarchy, yes.
> A deity, no.
Richard,
If I remember correctly, can't the Pope speak ex cathedra, or
infallibly, if he so chooses or feels so moved? By no small stretch, believing
this about the Pope is close to diefication.
George
================================================================================
Note 91.3392 Christianity and Gays 3392 of 3394
PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON "DCU fees? NO!!!" 19 lines 24-FEB-1994 08:47
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
George
>If I remember correctly, can't the Pope speak ex cathedra, or
>infallibly, if he so chooses or feels so moved? By no small stretch, believing
>this about the Pope is close to diefication.
Calling someone a deity in a Christian (or even a C-P) conference
is a very serious statement. The First Commandment is that the
LORD is God - and we shall have no other gods before Him. There
is one and only one God.
I expect that anytime you choose to call someone other than God a
deity, you will get a response (or multiple responses) correcting
you. Being able to speak "truth" is not something that is confined
to God alone - God Himself chooses to speak truth through people
such as you and me at times. This does not make and will never make
someone a deity.
Collis
================================================================================
Note 91.3393 Christianity and Gays 3393 of 3394
COVERT::COVERT "John R. Covert" 16 lines 24-FEB-1994 09:56
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>If I remember correctly, can't the Pope speak ex cathedra, or infallibly,
>if he so chooses or feels so moved? By no small stretch, believing
>this about the Pope is close to diefication.
The doctrine of Papal Infallibility specifies that when the Pope, in unison
with the bishops of all the world, under the influence of the Holy Spirit,
makes a specific, solemn declaration that a matter of faith or morals is
a revealed doctrine, it must be given the assent of faith by all Catholics.
The doctrine was formally defined only in the last century and has been
used exactly twice. In both cases it was to end disputes over traditions
almost 2000 years old that, although constantly believed in some form or
other by most Christians in both East and West, did not have sufficient
biblical evidence for a precise, undisputed formulation.
/john
|
866.4 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Feb 24 1994 15:43 | 14 |
| >Sorry to continue the rathole, John, but what were the two disputes that
>were settled by ex cathreda declarations by the Pope?
Immaculate Conception of Mary (Mary was miraculously saved, through the
salvation of Jesus Christ applied retroactively, from any stain
of original sin from the very moment of her conception by her
parents Joachim and Anna).
and
Assumption of Mary (At the end of her earthly life, Mary was taken bodily
into heaven, as we all will be someday.)
/john
|
866.5 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Thu Feb 24 1994 17:15 | 8 |
| Thanks, John.
As far as I know, the Methodist church doesn't recognize either of these
doctrines, and I would guess that this is also the case for other
Protestant denominations. Are they recognized within the Anglican and
Episcopal churches?
-- Bob
|
866.6 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Feb 24 1994 17:38 | 18 |
| In the Book of Common Prayer we pray "O God, you have taken to yourself
the blessed Virgin Mary, mother of your incarnate Son: Grant that we,
who have been redeemed by his blood, may share with her the glory of
your eternal kingdom..."
This is not the full dogma of the Assumption, but it is close.
Whether she has already received her glorified body or not is
not considered revealed. But, if her body was not taken into
heaven, where is it? There are relics of just about every other
saint, including Peter.
As for the Immaculate Conception, we would agree with St. Augustine,
and not even wish to talk about any sin on the part of Our Lord's
Mother. (Absolutely no "Yo Mamma" allowed.) But again, we would
not formulate it as required dogma in the manner specified by the
Roman dogma.
/john
|
866.7 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Tue Mar 01 1994 13:47 | 11 |
| I did not grow up in a hierarchical church. I was brought up in a
church which is fiercely egalitarian in its polity (Congregationalist).
I've tended to stay with churches which lean toward a democratic
process in decision and policy making (Quaker, United Methodist).
As a result, I tend to take seriously what the Pope says, but I
do not allow my life to be ruled by papal instructions and declarations.
I hear there are Roman Catholics who feel pretty much the same.
Richard
|
866.8 | Right On! | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 01 1994 14:21 | 12 |
| RE: .7
Indeed! That was just the problem that I had, and why I left the
Roman Catholic faith.
The Pope said that you could not pick and chose what you wanted from
the Catholic church. Either you agreed with it ALL, or you didn't and
could not be true to your faith.
I agreed with this comment from the Pope...that is why I left.
Marc H.
|
866.9 | Re: Perceptions concerning the Pope | QUABBI::"[email protected]" | | Wed Mar 02 1994 14:10 | 33 |
|
In article <866.4-940224-154259@valuing_diffs.christian-perspective>, [email protected] (John R. Covert) writes:
|>Title: Perceptions concerning the Pope
|>Reply Title: (none)
|>
|>>Sorry to continue the rathole, John, but what were the two disputes that
|>>were settled by ex cathreda declarations by the Pope?
|>
|>Immaculate Conception of Mary (Mary was miraculously saved, through the
|> salvation of Jesus Christ applied retroactively, from any stain
|> of original sin from the very moment of her conception by her
|> parents Joachim and Anna).
|>
|>and
|>
|>Assumption of Mary (At the end of her earthly life, Mary was taken bodily
|> into heaven, as we all will be someday.)
|>
|>/john
|>
Hi,
Perhaps I'm jumping in here a bit late, but could someone please point me to
the Book, Chapter and paragraph of the bible where this is stated (The 2nd
declaration)? Also does
it matter which bible? I.E. NIV vs. NAS vs. New Jerusalem vs. etc...
Thanks,
Bob.
[posted by Notes-News gateway]
|
866.10 | | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Wed Mar 02 1994 15:20 | 13 |
| Re: Immaculate Conception of Mary and
Assumption of Mary
The Bible does not deal with either of these events.
Perhaps that is why many Bible-believing Protestants
do not accept either of these (Roman Catholic) doctrines
as true.
If you want the extra-Biblical evidence for these beliefs,
you'll need to ask someone more knowledgable than myself.
Collis
|
866.11 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Wed Mar 02 1994 15:58 | 36 |
| re Note 866.9 by QUABBI::"[email protected]":
> Perhaps I'm jumping in here a bit late, but could someone please point me to
> the Book, Chapter and paragraph of the bible where this is stated (The 2nd
> declaration)? Also does
> it matter which bible? I.E. NIV vs. NAS vs. New Jerusalem vs. etc...
If one could merely point to a chapter and verse for a Papal
pronouncement, then the Papal pronouncement would be
redundant and unnecessary.
If one accepts Papal infallibility (and I don't), its purpose
would be to definitively settle doctrinal issues that are not
otherwise definitively settled. These could be differences
in Scriptural interpretation, or understanding which of the
many oral traditions is true revelation as opposed to
"traditions of men."
For those issues on which Scripture (appears to) speak
clearly, it would hardly make sense for the Pope to make a
formal declaration.
I must admit that I believe the existence of infallible
doctrinal authority in the Church is supported by the same
arguments which support the need for inerrant Scripture:
inerrant Scripture doesn't settle all doctrinal disputes, and
thus if doctrinal unity were one of God's objectives for
Christians then some infallible interpretive authority would
be needed as well.
I don't believe doctrinal unity is one of God's objectives,
but if I did I certainly wouldn't be a Protestant for that is
one of the "don't gets" when there is no authority beyond a
text.
Bob
|
866.12 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:52 | 12 |
|
A feminist's view (hopefully not *the* feminist view) of the pope:
"We will live to see the day that St. Patrick's
Cathedral is a child care center and the pope is no
longer a disgrace to the skirt the he has on."
Gloria Steinem's perception of the Pope, from an AP story. Whatever
respect I might have had for Ms. Steinem as a feminist has evaporated.
Eric
|
866.13 | ;-) | PCBUOA::DBROOKS | | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:08 | 5 |
| ..she didn't mention Pope Joan did she?
Never mind,
D.
|
866.14 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:21 | 8 |
|
RE .13
Nah. I'm pretty sure she was mainly pissed at JP2 and his message
regarding sexual responsibility. You know that whole abstinence
before marriage and pro-life thing. :^)
Eric
|
866.15 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:27 | 6 |
| Eric,
given the contexts of Gloria Steinem's message, what is it that
infuriates you about the message.
Can you catch a glimpse of why she might make a statement like that!
|
866.16 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:45 | 9 |
| If I may...I read what Eric wrote and the first thing that came to mind
was, "Gee, this woman sure as heck does not value diversity at all.
Furthermore, she apparently has very little tolerance or regard for
other faiths and the precepts of those particular faiths."
In other words, the utopians of the diversity movement need to clean
their own closets before pointing fingers at others!
-Jack
|
866.17 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:55 | 16 |
| Perhaps she does not think that a church needs elegant expensive
buildings as many people of the world starve to death.
The anger at the Pope's attempted interference in the reproductive
rights of women is a feeling that many women share. The fact that the
Catholic church comes to its decisions about women's bodies and women's
reproductive rights while excluding women from all decision making in
the Church is a further insult to the world's women Catholic and non
Catholic.
I would bet that Gloria Steinam, like myself identifies the Catholic
church with the Body of the world's Catholics and not with the
Male Only leadership of the church.
Fortunately, American's have a habit of not idolizing leaders, political
or religious. The Pope is only one man. He is not God.
|
866.18 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:14 | 11 |
| ZZZ The Pope is only one man. He is not God.
Well, I for one agree with you on this. I believe that God's
representative to the world is the body of believers.
However, I still believe this is a sign she doesn't value diversity.
Under the rules of Christian-Perspective, we are supposed to be
tolerant of all religions. Therefore, I am hard pressed accepting any
excuse for Gloria's remarks.
-Jack
|
866.19 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:32 | 19 |
|
First of all, I'm Catholic and I admit I can't help but react somewhat
viscerally to anti-catholic rhetoric. The comment struck me as having
the same intellectual content of Rush Limbaugh's diatribes -- just
coming from the opposite pole.
She wasn't taking about setting up a child care centers, she was
advocating the closing of a church (one might say the collapse of the
Church) to make a child care center. She wasn't disagreeing with the
Pope's ideas on contraception and abortion, She was ranting about the
symbolism she saw in the Papal vestments as female garments.
For my money, she crossed the credibility line in rhetoric. This sort
of attack on the Catholic church and the Pope does not advance the
cause of care for children and women's health. It merely gives
ammunition to those who already oppose such worthy causes, and those
who refer to feminists as "feminazis." This is too bad.
Eric
|
866.20 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:48 | 13 |
| Eric:
In regards to Gloria Steinham...not to worry. Gloria lost her
credibility years ago.
I heard a speech once on Satan. In the life of a believer Satan is
like a rooster with it's head cut off. The thing will still move and
walk around, with it's head cut off. It will kind of give you the
creeps but in actuality, it is only as harmless noise maker.
That is how I've perceived Steinham for years!
-Jack
|
866.21 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:53 | 5 |
| It is interesting how a fairly mind criticism of the Pope is equated
with "FemiNazism" and "Satanism"
A bit of an overreaction.. Don't you think!
|
866.22 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:12 | 8 |
| See, this is why I make it a point not to get "offended" when I hear
remarks like this. Be it Limbaughs stupid remarks about Chelsea's
looks, Steinhams stupid remarks about the church, Clinton's stupid
remarks about right wing extremists...
Just shrug shoulders, consider the source, then move on!
-Jack
|
866.23 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:14 | 9 |
| re Note 866.16 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN:
> In other words, the utopians of the diversity movement need to clean
> their own closets before pointing fingers at others!
That's like saying that Christians must be perfect before
they start preaching the gospel to others.
Bob
|
866.24 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:20 | 2 |
| You're right. I'll just limit my remarks toward people like Steinham
who simply can't keep their foot out of their mouth!
|
866.25 | ditto | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:23 | 6 |
|
Re.23
Thanks, Bob - my sentiments exactly!
Cindy
|
866.26 | in case you didn't know | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:25 | 11 |
|
Re.18
Jack,
>Under the rules of Christian-Perspective, we are supposed to be
>tolerant of all religions.
Gloria doesn't actively note here. (;^)
Cindy
|
866.27 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:26 | 8 |
| Cindy,
Let's localize this a little and you can tell me if this is a fallacy
or not and why. If somebody here agrees with Steinham, then they don't
have the right to say we should all respect other religions...since
Steinham is obviously disrespecting the Catholic church. Right?
-Jack
|
866.28 | Re.27 - my current view | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:39 | 23 |
|
Jack,
It has more to do with interpretation. One person's definition of
'disrespecting the Catholic Church' is different from another.
For example, when I referred to Mary as a Goddess, there was a certain
person here who said he was offended, but I responded saying that a lot
of what he said I found offensive too.
Therefore, I, personally, did not find Steinham's remark offensive per
se...and also I make allowances for the fact that she could very well
have been quoted out of context, so it's important to allow for that as
well before passing judgment. She may have also meant something
totally different than how it was intended. I'm not making excuses for
her...rather I have read a lot of her material in the past, and so I'm
taking that into consideration as well when I read this statement.
Do I *agree* with it? Not necesarily. I think she has a valid point,
yes. But I don't see the disrespect that you do, at least not to the
level of intensity that you do.
Cindy
|
866.29 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:53 | 12 |
| Besides, some radicals (like myself) think that the greatest respect
one could have for a church is to have faith that the church will
eventually reform itself from the evils in which it is wrapped up.
The Catholic church has an excellent record of reforming itself from
past sinfulness. It has demostrated the ability to look inward at
itself and move toward a "more perfect" organization.
The elimination of women from all positions of power and decisionmaking
in the church is one of those sins that I have faith the church will
eventually repent and atone for. That is just not enough though for
women right now!
|
866.30 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 14:26 | 29 |
|
First of all, I just want to distance myself from the Satanism thing. I
never meant to imply anything satanic about Gloria Steinem's remarks.
Secondly, I don't consider myself an anti-feminist, but I'll let those
who consider themselves feminist advocates (I don't mean that
pejoratively) judge me there.
I typed the comment in it's totality as it appeared in the Sunday
newspaper. As I said it was from an AP story. I have double checked and
I transcribed it correctly.
Maybe Ms. Steinem didn't mean what she said. Maybe she meant "One day
the Catholic Church will spend as much money on child care centers as
they do on their church buildings." Maybe she meant "The papal view on
contraception and abortion will only further the problems of unwanted
children and back alley abortions in this country." Maybe... but that's
not what she said.
I guess it has to do with who's ox is being gored. I'm upset partly
because the Pope, warts and all, is the representative of my faith
(such as it is). Perhaps my criticism of the statements attributed to
Ms. Steinmen, hit a nerve in others because she is seen as a
representative of a movement others hold dear (and a movement which, by
and large, I support). If the comments were directed toward Pat
Robertson would I have blinked... nah, probably not. If the comments
were made by some unknown, would the good feminists here have
questioned my surprise?
|
866.31 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 14:32 | 8 |
| My guess, (And I use the word guess strongly) is that in order for a
change like this to happen there would have to be a paradigm shift in
the church hierarchy. Also since Catholicism is a universal church
throughout the world, it would seem there would have to be wide support
throughout different cultures for this change. I don't see it
happening in countries like Portugal for example.
-Jack
|
866.32 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 14:37 | 19 |
|
> The elimination of women from all positions of power and decisionmaking
> in the church is one of those sins that I have faith the church will
> eventually repent and atone for. That is just not enough though for
> women right now!
Just a nit or two. Women haven't been "eliminated." That would imply
that they once were in those positions :^)
On a more serious note, women do play a role in Catholic theology and
decision making, albeit an subordinate one. Women are not treated as
baby making, food cooking, slipper fetching, chattel in the Catholic
church. Compared to some Christian sects, the Catholic church is down
right left wing. At the local level, it has been my experience that
women play a *very* active role in the Catholic church. However, I
agree with you; I look forward to the day when gender is not an issue
in matters of faith.
Eric
|
866.33 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 14:42 | 9 |
|
RE .31
Yes there would be opposition if the church were to ordain women
priests. But then again, I still hear some of the old folk wax
nostalgic for the Latin mass! The Vatican doesn't base its
pronouncements on wide international support.
Eric
|
866.34 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 09 1995 15:10 | 3 |
| Eric,
I understand your note of concern about Gloria Steinem's remark even as
I understand Feminist anger at institutional sexism.
|
866.35 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Mon Oct 09 1995 22:33 | 12 |
| I appreciate Pope John Paul II. I don't agree with everything he maintains.
I don't think I'm alone on this.
Gloria Steinem is not among the feminists who have impressed me very much.
I'm much more impressed by the feminists I've known, some of them Roman
Catholic, some of them members of religious orders.
I can understand the frustration. I suspect the pope can as well.
Pax vobiscum,
Richard
|