Is that a threat?jack shite wrote:all you people that voted senile old prick better look both ways before crossing the street.
/voted 'senile old p'
You've got it backwards, I think, actually--the less you've done, the more you're liked when you're gone. There's some natural law to be found here, I'm sure--the ones who hated you always speak louder than the ones who were fond of you, so the more you've done, no matter what it was, the more hate and hate-flavored indifference you get to collect on the death bed. Am I right or what?abecedarian wrote: If a person can so easily dismiss the entire life of a man who has accomplished as much as he has, then how easy will it be for others to call me worse when I'm dead?
Sparks, you can't blame him for establishing the precepts. However, you can hold him accountable for upholding them.sparks wrote:I don't think you can blame the pope for the established precepts of his wacky religion.
No, he is infallible, so his job is tell other people how they should be living their lives. Or go to Hell if they don't.sparks wrote: It's a nasty rule, but it's there, and it's his job to live and to instruct others according to those principles.
Actually no. The doctrine of papal infallibility states that the pope is infallible on theological matters, not moral ones. It was introduced as a last ditch attempt to quieten a rash of theological disputes.j$ wrote:No, he is infallible, so his job is tell other people how they should be living their lives.
[nit]15-16 puzzle wrote:If you want a religion that changes it's rules and does things that benefit people on earth and whatever else, find one.
Obviously we're all aware of that. Theological wranglings are generally about underlying moral issues anyway. I was just saying that the pope is in strict terms only held to be infallible on cosmogenic matters. The trouble is though, this blurs into the grey area of biblical interpretation.J$ wrote:Kapitano, religious infallibility becomes a moral issue when the edicts which claim to be religious in root effect a crisis which has nothing to do with religion.
"I come to make everything new" - Jesus.15-16 puzzle wrote: But crap, he's the Pope. He's not going to change the game he's playing just because other people want to play a different one.
Because thinking about stuff is hard work?15-16 puzzle wrote:Why can't people just not have Catholicism be a part of their lives?
actually, all it took was hugging one small boy on a visit to san francisco and the pope did more to present the seriousness and compassion towards AIDS than anyone did or ever has done since. he brought awareness of AIDS on a global scale.j$ wrote:When you post a series of pictures with the Pope talking with the x million Catholic AIDS victims, I will agree with you.
j$
Woah! We're gonna have to agree to disagree on that statement, Jack, on more than one level, but I don't want / never meant to upset anyone by offering an opinion differing from the one the media has chosen to present us with.jack shite wrote:it's really shameful the way some of you disrespect a great man.
Yes, the distinction is quite clear. The problem as I see it is that it's impossible to have a relationship with god.j$ wrote:Lots of people do, I guess, the semantic difference I am arguing (not veyr successfully by the looks of it) is that Catholicism is a seperate entity from the Catholic Church, and that I personally feel that some people would have a healthier relationship with their God if they were more honest about recognising that the Catholic Church is simply an organisation that on more than one occasion recently has failed in its moral duty to its human members. Certainly it is no worse or better other a hundred other organised religious