The Supreme Canuck wrote:So what's with the plaudits?
The Supreme Canuck wrote:... They've always said that being gay isn't a sin; engaging in gay sex is the sin. And that's what the pope just said...
Hap wrote:Have you never trained an animal?
The Supreme Canuck wrote:Charlie: Extra-marital sex of any kind is frowned upon by the church. But gay sex is considered to be "fundamentally disordered" whereas straight sex is not. And it doesn't matter if the gay sex is within marriage or not, since the church does not recognize same-sex marriages as being real.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:Why the hell are we praising the pope about gay people?
Swift wrote:Hap wrote:Have you never trained an animal?
"Who's a good Pope? Who's a good Pope? Who wants a biscuit, who wants a biscuit?"
Pope Francis, in the first extensive interview of his six-month-old papacy, said that the Roman Catholic Church had grown “obsessed” with preaching about abortion, gay marriage and contraception, and that he has chosen not to speak of those issues despite recriminations from some critics.
In remarkably blunt language, Francis sought to set a new tone for the church, saying it should be a “home for all” and not a “small chapel” focused on doctrine, orthodoxy and a limited agenda of moral teachings.
Earlier this month, Bishop Thomas Tobin of Providence, R.I., told his diocesan newspaper that he was “a little bit disappointed in Pope Francis” because he had not spoken about abortion. “Many people have noticed that,” the bishop was quoted as saying.
The 12,000-word interview ranges widely, and may confirm what many Catholics already suspected: that the chameleon-like Francis bears little resemblance to those on the church’s theological or political right wing. He said some people had assumed he was an “ultraconservative” because of his reputation when he served as the superior of his Jesuit province in Argentina. He pointed out that he was made superior at the “crazy” young age of 36, and that his leadership style was too authoritarian.
“But I have never been a right-winger,” he said. “It was my authoritarian way of making decisions that created problems.”
geonuc wrote:I'll wait until he admits the bible shouldn't be taken literally before I praise him.
gethen wrote:geonuc wrote:I'll wait until he admits the bible shouldn't be taken literally before I praise him.
If I recall my long ago Catholic school education correctly, the Catholic church has long taught that the Bible is not all to be taken literally. Genesis, for example, is considered allegorical. Evolution is generally accepted as fact. I was taught that the Bible consisted of poetry, allegory, and some actual history. I guess that makes it easier to ignore those parts that don't fit your plan.
gethen wrote:.... I guess that makes it easier to ignore those parts that don't fit your plan.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:gethen wrote:.... I guess that makes it easier to ignore those parts that don't fit your plan.
Which explains why the Catholic Church has managed to last over 2000 years........
Swift wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:gethen wrote:.... I guess that makes it easier to ignore those parts that don't fit your plan.
Which explains why the Catholic Church has managed to last over 2000 years........
That's my understanding. Since early in its history the Catholic Church as shown itself to be fairly adaptable when it needs to, so as to attract the locals.
"No, sorry, you can no longer worship the idol of your god Blorp, but I understand that Blorp converted, and you are encouraged to build a new cathedral for Saint Blorp."
Sigma_Orionis wrote:I have the nagging suspicion that Benedict's "early retirement" was due to an internal power struggle between a Catholic Conservative faction and a more pragmatic one.
SciFiFisher wrote:Swift wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:gethen wrote:.... I guess that makes it easier to ignore those parts that don't fit your plan.
Which explains why the Catholic Church has managed to last over 2000 years........
That's my understanding. Since early in its history the Catholic Church as shown itself to be fairly adaptable when it needs to, so as to attract the locals.
"No, sorry, you can no longer worship the idol of your god Blorp, but I understand that Blorp converted, and you are encouraged to build a new cathedral for Saint Blorp."
Saint Blorp? He was awesome. Cured pestilence, converted wine into beer, and healed someone's dead grandma. And he was very humble too.
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