Solzhenitsyn wrote:I have spent all my life under a communist regime and I will tell you that a society without any objective legal scale is a terrible one indeed. But a society with no other scale but the legal one is not quite worthy of man either. A society which is based on the letter of the law and never reaches any higher is taking very scarce advantage of the high level of human possibilities. The letter of the law is too cold and formal to have a beneficial influence on society. Whenever the tissue of life is woven of legalistic relations, there is an atmosphere of moral mediocrity, paralysing man's noblest impulses.
He Continues....
In today's Western society, the inequality has been revealed between the freedom for good deeds and the freedom for evil deeds... It is time in the West, to defend not so much human rights as human obligations. Destructive and irresponsible freedom has been granted boundless space. Society appears to have little defence against the abyss of human decadence, such as, for example, misuse of liberty for moral violence against young people, motion pictures full of pornography, crime and horror. It is considered to be part of freedom and theoretically counter balanced by the young people's right not to look or not to accept. Life organised legalistically has thus shown its inability to defend itself against the corrosion of evil.
macgamer wrote:the Church has a duty to preach the truth
(there wasn't a smiley face available to express a broader grin than this one)macgamer wrote:I would say that love of God and love of one's neighbour is reflected in all of the Church's doctrines.
macgamer wrote:I came across this piece written by Solzhenitsyn, which seems relevant to what was discussed on this thread:Solzhenitsyn wrote:I have spent all my life under a communist regime and I will tell you that a society without any objective legal scale is a terrible one indeed. But a society with no other scale but the legal one is not quite worthy of man either...
In today's Western society, the inequality has been revealed between the freedom for good deeds and the freedom for evil deeds... It is time in the West, to defend not so much human rights as human obligations. Destructive and irresponsible freedom has been granted boundless space. Society appears to have little defence against the abyss of human decadence, such as, for example, misuse of liberty for moral violence against young people, motion pictures full of pornography, crime and horror. It is considered to be part of freedom and theoretically counter balanced by the young people's right not to look or not to accept. Life organised legalistically has thus shown its inability to defend itself against the corrosion of evil.
jollytiddlywink wrote:No, the secondary uses are still perfectly valid provided that some (not all) of the individuals alive at any given time pass on their genes, and indeed the secondary uses can, and obviously do, provide survival benefits to the genetics of the species as a whole. The non-procreational uses of sex in this case includes homosexuality.
jollytiddlywink wrote:You can't have it both ways. You cannot resort to biology as evidence to support your arguments and then reject it when it supports my arguments. It is especially egregious for you to argue your case from a biology=morality standpoint and then deny my biologically-based points on the basis that they do not conform to your moral codes. This is intellectually bankrupt, and so is the case you attempt to build on such shoddy foundations. This includes the excerpt you quote from Aquinas:
The supposed 'end intended by nature' is, as I have demonstrated, frequently violated by nature itself, every time an orang-utan masturbates, every time that dolphins have oral sex, and every time that numerous animal species (including humans) engage in homosexual sex. As logical support for bigotry, this passage is useless. It falls and breaks a leg or four at the first hurdle.
Aquinas on Voluntary Acts wrote:Now in order for a thing to be done for an end, some knowledge of the end is necessary. Therefore, whatever so acts or is moved by an intrinsic principle, that it has some knowledge of the end, has within itself the principle of its act, so that it not only acts, but acts for an end. On the other hand, if a thing has no knowledge of the end, even though it have an intrinsic principle of action or movement, nevertheless the principle of acting or being moved for an end is not in that thing, but in something else, by which the principle of its action towards an end is not in that thing, but in something else, by which the principle of its action towards an end is imprinted on it. Wherefore such like things are not said to move themselves, but to be moved by others.
[b]Whether there is anything voluntary in irrational animals?
I answer that, As stated above (Article 1), it is essential to the voluntary act that its principle be within the agent, together with some knowledge of the end. Now knowledge of the end is twofold; perfect and imperfect. Perfect knowledge of the end consists in not only apprehending the thing which is the end, but also in knowing it under the aspect of end, and the relationship of the means to that end. And such knowledge belongs to none but the rational nature. But imperfect knowledge of the end consists in mere apprehension of the end, without knowing it under the aspect of end, or the relationship of an act to the end. Such knowledge of the end is exercised by irrational animals, through their senses and their natural estimative power.
Consequently perfect knowledge of the end leads to the perfect voluntary; inasmuch as, having apprehended the end, a man can, from deliberating about the end and the means thereto, be moved, or not, to gain that end. But imperfect knowledge of the end leads to the imperfect voluntary; inasmuch as the agent apprehends the end, but does not deliberate, and is moved to the end at once. Wherefore the voluntary in its perfection belongs to none but the rational nature: whereas the imperfect voluntary is within the competency of even irrational animals.
jollytiddlywink wrote:You earlier said "This authority has been passed down through the Popes to the current successor and Vicar of Christ, Benedict XVI."
Again, you cannot have it both ways. You cannot insist that church tradition has been handed down from human to human over the past 2000 years, infallibly and incorruptibly, and then lightly dismiss any fallible and corrupt behaviour as the failings of 'just the person in the office,' especially when you earlier insisted that the authority was passed down through the people. In any case, the office of the pope cannot transmit tradition, only the holders of that office, and the other lower posts in the church, can transmit tradition. The howling corruption and scurrilous behaviour of the Borgia popes may not alter the truth of the faith, but it certainly altered the transmission of church tradition down the centuries. Many of the popes of that era appointed 'nephews' of theirs to be cardinals, with 'nephew' being a more or less open secret name for an illegitimate son. And you still maintain that these popes were infallible in the teaching of faith and morals?
jollytiddlywink wrote:With regard to your comment on the homosexuality/SSA argument:
I think we'll argue to disagree on this one. It really isn't that important.
No, I won't agree to disagree. This is important. You're wrong.
Words are very important. If you think that calling a group of people "disordered" and applying a label to that group of people which is used only by extremists seeking to demonise and dehumanise that group of people is unimportant, that simply shows how callous you really are, and it makes your half-hearted protestations about how parents should not do physical violence to their homosexual children ring all the more false.
The term is homosexuality. Use it.
macgamer wrote:You acknowledge that children are an irrelevance to civil and legal marriage, and you further recognise that canon law is separate from any consideration of civil and legal considerations. I take it, then, that you support civil marriages (rather than civil partnerships) between any two adults who care to enter into such an undertaking, particularly if they do not consider the purpose of marriage to be having as many catholic children as possible?
jollytiddlywink wrote:So I take it that "employing whatever works best for the couple" extends to a man marrying another man, because that is what works best for some people.
jollytiddlywink wrote:And please don't attempt to reframe the debate as your efforts to resist a society with "no other scale but the legal one". That isn't what this thread is about, and it isn't relevant, either.
macgamer wrote:our sources of morality are diametrically opposed
jollytiddlywink wrote:No, the secondary uses are still perfectly valid provided that some (not all) of the individuals alive at any given time pass on their genes, and indeed the secondary uses can, and obviously do, provide survival benefits to the genetics of the species as a whole. The non-procreational uses of sex in this case includes homosexuality.
macgamer wrote:'Obligate homosexuals' are unable to pass on their genes not because they necessarily chose not to, but because their sexuality is incompatible with procreation. In this sense homosexuality is a malfunction of the sexual faculties when considering their primary purpose.
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:You can't have it both ways. You cannot resort to biology as evidence to support your arguments and then reject it when it supports my arguments. It is especially egregious for you to argue your case from a biology=morality standpoint and then deny my biologically-based points on the basis that they do not conform to your moral codes. This is intellectually bankrupt, and so is the case you attempt to build on such shoddy foundations.
The supposed 'end intended by nature' is, as I have demonstrated, frequently violated by nature itself, every time an orang-utan masturbates, every time that dolphins have oral sex, and every time that numerous animal species (including humans) engage in homosexual sex. As logical support for bigotry, this passage is useless. It falls and breaks a leg or four at the first hurdle.
You are confusing animals which do not possess abilities of reason and humans who do. Here is some more Aquinas:
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:You earlier said "This authority has been passed down through the Popes to the current successor and Vicar of Christ, Benedict XVI."
Again, you cannot have it both ways. You cannot insist that church tradition has been handed down from human to human over the past 2000 years, infallibly and incorruptibly, and then lightly dismiss any fallible and corrupt behaviour as the failings of 'just the person in the office,' especially when you earlier insisted that the authority was passed down through the people. In any case, the office of the pope cannot transmit tradition, only the holders of that office, and the other lower posts in the church, can transmit tradition. The howling corruption and scurrilous behaviour of the Borgia popes may not alter the truth of the faith, but it certainly altered the transmission of church tradition down the centuries. Many of the popes of that era appointed 'nephews' of theirs to be cardinals, with 'nephew' being a more or less open secret name for an illegitimate son. And you still maintain that these popes were infallible in the teaching of faith and morals?
As debased as their personal morals were they were still Popes and infallible in the teaching of faith and morals. Show me where teaching on faith and morals has changed since their time.
macgamer wrote:Tradition can help to inform the Church today in its mission and ongoing development of doctrine, but some aspects are better off left in the past.
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:With regard to your comment on the homosexuality/SSA argument:
I think we'll argue to disagree on this one. It really isn't that important.
No, I won't agree to disagree. This is important. You're wrong.
Words are very important. If you think that calling a group of people "disordered" and applying a label to that group of people which is used only by extremists seeking to demonise and dehumanise that group of people is unimportant, that simply shows how callous you really are, and it makes your half-hearted protestations about how parents should not do physical violence to their homosexual children ring all the more false.
The term is homosexuality. Use it.
The distinction is clear in my mind, but to cater to sensitivities I shall henceforth refrain from using terms which you find so odious. Just to be clear the Church's philosophy very much defends the human dignity of all mankind and does not demonise any group. You may be thinking of certain Christian sects in America who hate Catholics almost or just as much as homosexuals.
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:So I take it that "employing whatever works best for the couple" extends to a man marrying another man, because that is what works best for some people.
They can pretend that they are married if they want to be, but to for a law to say that they are married would redefine marriage itself.
RedCelt69 wrote:macgamer wrote:our sources of morality are diametrically opposed
Possibly, because jollytiddlywink has reached his own conclusions about the issues. Rather than, say, basing them on the words of a guy in a funny hat...
Frank wrote:I dunno about JTW's celibacy or expertise, but he is a guy and I have seen him in a funny hat or two.
jollytiddlywink wrote:I just wish they'd also emailed the men of the AU... I'd be at that party with bells on. And very little else!

macgamer wrote: However even Jesus himself was harsh against sin in the case of the adulterous woman (John 7:53-8:11) at the end he said 'Neither do I condemn you, go and sin no more.'
) macgamer wrote:Solzhenitsyn wrote:Life organised legalistically has thus shown its inability to defend itself against the corrosion of evil.
John wrote:Stop judging by mere appearances, and make a right judgment.
jollytiddlywink wrote:I note that you have not, so far, advocated killing gays and lesbians. Why are you being inconsistent?
macgamer wrote:The bible is inconsistent that is why we today cannot just pick it off the shelf and understand it from our 21st century outlook. It needs to be interpreted using the knowledge passed down from the Church fathers.
*macgamer wrote:Tradition can help to inform the Church today in its mission and ongoing development of doctrine, but some aspects are better off left in the past.
Wonderboy wrote:Oh you're still banging on about homosexuality. You should preach or something.
Wonderboy wrote:Oh you're still banging on about homosexuality.
RedCelt69 wrote:It's clearly something he cares about and believes to be worth discussing. You should think or something.
jollytiddlywink wrote:However, the infallible pope Honorius was declared a heretic (guilty of heresy: (n) an opinion or belief contrary to the authorised teaching) by the infallible 6th ecumenical council. Disproving infallibility is like finding the proverbial white crow. One instance and you can stop searching. Here we have two supposed infallibilities in conflict, on a matter of faith. Church tradition is not a safe or reliable guide for interpreting the bible
macgamer wrote:I believe I have announced my views quite openly and attempted to establish the justifications for why I hold them. I suppose that for a liberal someone whose conscience does not permit them to agree with the recent moral orthodoxy is a base creature indeed. Anathema sit? Pray tell, what is to happen to these base creatures?
macgamer wrote:jollytiddlywink wrote:However, the infallible pope Honorius was declared a heretic (guilty of heresy: (n) an opinion or belief contrary to the authorised teaching) by the infallible 6th ecumenical council. Disproving infallibility is like finding the proverbial white crow. One instance and you can stop searching. Here we have two supposed infallibilities in conflict, on a matter of faith. Church tradition is not a safe or reliable guide for interpreting the bible
I recommend you read this article on Pope Honorius I:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07452b.htm
The matter is still debated as it was 1330 years ago. However it seems that there is insufficient evidence to prove that Honorius was actually a heretic or speaking ex cathedra when writing letters to known heretics. As much that can be said of him is that he did not act ex cathedra to condemn the monothelite heresy. So unless he made objectively heretical statements ex cathedra the jury would probably give a verdict of 'not proven' as they say in Scotland.
I believe I have announced my views quite openly and attempted to establish the justifications for why I hold them. I suppose that for a liberal someone whose conscience does not permit them to agree with the recent moral orthodoxy is a base creature indeed. Anathema sit? Pray tell, what is to happen to these base creatures?
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