Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Pope Francis and Gay People
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Richard Barrett
I see no venom. The central question being discussed here (correct me if I'm wrong), lest this get buried under obfuscation, is whether at least in principle the Catholic Church might eventually recognise gay equality. Examples of how that church has changed its stance on various issues have been adduced in support of this principle, whereas on the other hand scottycelt has insisted in a because-I-say-so kind of way that the church has never done any such thing, and that the church's attitude towards gay people is based on an "interpretation" of the words of Jesus, who however is not recorded as having expressed himself on the subject, so presumably he could equally have been "interpreted" as having had views quite different from those held by the apostle Paul and his followers. It's striking that the one professedly devout Catholic posting here always shies away from bringing in what is presumably the highest authority he recognises on such subjects, namely the bible.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe way some members attack people with religious beliefs with such passion and venom suggests to me they have doubts in their stance. Why else do they protest too much?Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostIt's not just religion that gets them going; try mentioning the Monarchy, or dare to state that you are even slightly patriotic, or not in favour of mass immigration, and the same venom won't take long to appear. Even a mention of BSkyB can set them off.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by jean View Post
Why this modern obsession with style and personality?
I see absolutely no difference between Francis and Benedict other than the former has a more outgoing manner and can 'mix it' with 'ordinary folk' probably better than his predecessor. He knows all about football. Nothing much wrong with that!
Benedict, in contrast, had(s) a rather different personality, being somewhat more reflective, and with a particular love of classical music, especially Mozart. Nothing much wrong with that as well!
Yet, when it comes to the crunch, they believe and preach exactly the same about the issues being discussed here.
So ... the world goes on very much the same as before ...
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThat's a rather strange assumption
Such as Malcolm Muggeridge and T.S.Elliot...
Then they jumped ship.
I'm waiting for Richard Dawkins to do the same.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostPeople who feel secure in their beliefs don't need to "defend" them by attacking others.
(b) nobody is being attacked
(c) for every atheist who has "jumped ship" I'm sure I could find you numerous ones who didn't, but that would prove nothing, and I wonder why you bother bringing it up at all
This is not a discussion about whether religious belief in itself is true or false, but about whether the Catholic church's attitude towards gay people is immutable or not, and (tangentially) where that church's current attitude stems from, if not (as would seem to be the case) from Jesus himself.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
This is not a discussion about whether religious belief in itself is true or false, but about whether the Catholic church's attitude towards gay people is immutable or not, and (tangentially) where that church's current attitude stems from, if not (as would seem to be the case) from Jesus himself.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIs that an official view ?
Same old Vatican, same old corruption, same old abuse, same old hypocrisy ?
Quite frightening, eh ... ?
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The strange thing is that the Catholic church appeared to be rather more tolerant of homosexual acts in the past than Protestants .
Pope Francis's rather more liberal attitude could be due to recent assessments that suggest that 40% of Catholic clergy are gay - well an ideal place to go for a child of religious parents who knew he was not going to be interested in girls ! and Pope Francis realising that the vatican is run by gay priests .
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post(a) the position taken by myself and (presumably) others has nothing to do with feeling secure in any belief but is rather a scepticism applied to the supposedly secure beliefs of others, in particular wondering why those beliefs are so secure when (as in scottycelt's seeming belief in the immutability of the Catholic church's attitude) they can so easily be shown to be false
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Postnobody is being attacked.
Especially you, Richard ...
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostWell, of course, the Church itself originates from Christ and the very first Pope, St Peter...
There were other versions of Christianity, though. Perhaps the most significant were the Ebionites, whose leader was James the brother of Jesus (and one of whose leading lights was Peter, whom the Pauline Christians would later treat as being their first Pope, although he'd never been one of them). This was a Jewish sect whose members had to adopt Jewish practices such as circumcision. They followed Jesus's teachings and prepared for the Kingdom of Heaven (a well understood idea from Judaism) when the pre-Babylonian Jewish state would be restored under the Son of God (another well understood Jewish term for a mortal favoured by God - David had been described as the Son of God, for instance). Jesus, who had been an apocalyptic preacher, taught that this would happen soon, within the lifetimes of some of the disciples, and that the Kingdom of God (that is the new Israel) would be divided into twelve parts, each headed by a disciple. (This is all in Mark and Matthew - Mark is the earliest surviving gospel.) In this earliest form of Christianity Jesus was not divine but was a man - a Son of God as David had been.
There was also a fairly loose collection of Christian sects we now call Gnostic Christians. They had in common a belief that they had to attain the 'knowledge' of the impure state of mortals and the purity of immortals. Jesus had been a mortal, but his body had been used by a divine spirit, which then left Jesus as he hung on the cross ("My God, my Gd, why do you forsake me?"). The distinction between the earthly Jesus and the divine God was central to their beliefs. Some writings were later excluded from the Bible by Pauline Christians because they were too 'Gnostic' - the Gospel of Peter, for instance, where the divine spirit leaves Jesus's body and hovers over the cross, laughing, as Jesus dies (the point being they're killing the wrong person).
Under the Paulines, Gnosticism was called a heresy. The Ebionites were also heretics because they denied the divinity of Jesus, but they also fell foul of the Pauline anti-semitism that flourished in later centuries, when The Church taught that the Jews followed Satan and that they were responsible for Jesus's death.
As for following the teachings of Christ, well it's interesting to see how Jesus's divinity develops. As time went by and no Kingdom of Heaven appeared, writers altered the teachings to make them fit the idea of a divine spirit that promises redemption after death, and the Kingdom of Heaven became a supernatural entity. Just compare Mark (written about 70 CE) and John (about 95 CE) to get a flavour of this.Last edited by Pabmusic; 04-08-13, 00:25.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostDo carry on ... why did you suddenly stop at the very point when you got to the crucial bit?!!
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