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Author Topic: A bit of Jesuit history  (Read 1177 times)

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Online Freind

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Re: A bit of Jesuit history
« Reply #15 on: Today at 08:06:35 AM »
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  • I see no contradiction.  Explain.

    No contradiction. My mistake.

    You do know the Church has to make decisions that pertain to "double effect" and "lesser evil", right?  Which means the decision was ultimately useful and good. You only look at the "evil" and blame the Church for it. Bad.

    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #16 on: Today at 08:13:51 AM »
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  • There's plenty wrong with emphasizing activity over prayer, where you dispense with the prayer that was considered indispensible from time immemorial for all priests to permit.

    Then you idiotically contradict yourself when you say that the Jesuits did nothing wrong in defying their suppression, because it's what the Church "really wanted".  That's absurd.  So they Jesuits can read the minds of the Pope that the Pope REALLY WANTED them to not be suppressed even after suppressing them, and they were suppressed just by enemies of the Church.  This was after you said that there's nothing wrong with them requesting dispensation from Divine Office "provided they obeyd the Pope" ... I guess, then, except of they decide the Pope "didn't really mean it".

    Comeo on, man ... you can do better than this.

    Did you know the divine office at one time didn't exist? It didn't exist on Pentecost. Which means it can be dispensed with because it was a Church imposed duty, once not existing and then existing.

    The Church still knew the same Jesuit priests were still functioning as priests, the same mindframe, virtually the same personal routines. Are you one to be fooled by "suppress the Jesuits" meaning they were just all laicized and sent home?  St. Alphonsus said we all must honor the Providence of God in such a move, and working with lesser evil and double-effect doesn't "feel" good but are truly useful and good.


    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #17 on: Today at 08:51:37 AM »
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  • Did you know the divine office at one time didn't exist? It didn't exist on Pentecost. Which means it can be dispensed with because it was a Church imposed duty, once not existing and then existing.

    Nonsensical Antiquarianist argument.  Yes, we know ... at one time everyone received Communion in the hand also, and the Immaculate Conception and Papal Infallibility had not been defined dogmas.  Obviously the Divine Office CAN be dispensed with ... strawman, as nobody said otherwise (rendering your point doubly idiotic), but the question is whether it SHOULD be dispensed with.  Over the years, the Church in her wisdom, led by the Holy Ghost (sound familiar, as this is reminiscent of what Pope Pius XII wrote in condemning Antiquarianism) ... had decided that her clergy should be centered around prayer, that being the chief obligation of clergy, to offer the public prayer of the Church on her behalf, and also to sanctify themselves, rather than work on developing "Big Bang" theory (Lemaitre, SJ) or evolution (Teilhard, SJ).  And the Church's wisdom bears in this regard is only confirmed by the fact that by the late 19th and early 20th century, the Jesuits had become the hotbed of all heresies in the Church, propagating their degeneracy to all the youth who had the misfortune of being educated by them in their institutions.

    Paul IV rejected their request, but then Pius IV accepted it ... and then when the suppression was lifted, they came back having to offer the Divine Office, so the last judgment of the Church had been to deny their request.  Why would the Church deny the request?  For the reasons stated above, that it was essential to keep the clergy orthodox and devout.  If you want to go study astronomy and physics without having religious obligations (priests are not strictly obliged to offer Mass on a regular basis), then they're free to do so as laymen.

    At the end, we saw the fruits of their resistance to prayer and religious duty in favor of secular.  There had always been special circuмstances where individual priests were dispensed from the Divine Office, for just cause, but that would depend on the individual priest's mission, e.g. riding out on horseback into the jungle to evangelize pagans ... vs. sitting there looking through a telescope all day attempting to prove the Church wrong and Galileo right.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #18 on: Today at 09:01:13 AM »
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  • In 1616, the Holy Office, on Pope Paul V’s order, stopped Galileo's assertion by declaring the following.

    Thanks for jumping in.  I figured you would, with the relevant factual information.

    Do you have the citation regarding non-geocentrism?

    Ironically, despite Freind here promoting "heliocentrism", the fact is that nobody holds that anymore, not even mainstream science ... since according to Newtonian physics, the sun is not immovable, nor is it the center of the world (by which they mean created universe), but rather event the solar system moves around the barycenter of the solar system, which depending on the planetary alignments, isn't necessarily even within the physical boundaries of the sun.  In addition, mainstream science now holds that the sun and the planets with it, are hurtling through space at the rate of between a half million and a million MPH around the galaxy (another number they keep changing), and then when you factor in the (all alleged of course) movement of the galaxy through the universe, it's "many millions" and I'm unable to find a more precise calculation, though it's not necessary for our purposes.

    So no modern astronomer holds that the sun is immovable, and the center of the world.  So despite Freind here claiming that "heliocentrism" is tenable ... that's great, except nobody even holds it anymore.

    Consequently, the decree condemning a non-geocentrism is far more important.

    As for why the prohibition of heliocentrism had been lifted later ... it's fascinating how you explain that the Pope had been duped (willingly) into believing that the original condemnation only had to do with a specific type of heliocentrism that had been promoted in Galileo's day, but that the version during HIS day was no longer subject to the condemnation.

    As you point out, there was no such qualification in the original condemnation, and this sounds like a "Modernist" type of "development of doctrine" under the guise of "deeper understanding" if ever there was one.

    This pattern appears to me similar to what they did with usury, where the Church had always condemned it, but then of course the typical apologetic is that the modern banking system is "different" and not subject.  If anything if's far worse, making Shylock's medieval usury appear rather respectable and honest by comparison.

    This also reminds of my oldest son when he was little.  At one time he was tapping his pencil on his desk rhythmically, causing a distraction.  So we asked him to stop tapping his pencil on the desk.  He stops for a moment.  Then suddenly we hear the tapping again.  We look up, and ask him why he hadn't obeyed, and he said that he did ... and pointed out that he was now using a pen for the tapping.

    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #19 on: Today at 09:13:53 AM »
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  • Nonsensical Antiquarianist argument.  Yes, we know ... at one time everyone received Communion in the hand also, and the Immaculate Conception and Papal Infallibility had not been defined dogmas.  Obviously the Divine Office CAN be dispensed with ... strawman, as nobody said otherwise (rendering your point doubly idiotic), but the question is whether it SHOULD be dispensed with.  Over the years, the Church in her wisdom, led by the Holy Ghost (sound familiar, as this is reminiscent of what Pope Pius XII wrote in condemning Antiquarianism) ... had decided that her clergy should be centered around prayer, that being the chief obligation of clergy, to offer the public prayer of the Church on her behalf, and also to sanctify themselves, rather than work on developing "Big Bang" theory (Lemaitre, SJ) or evolution (Teilhard, SJ).  And the Church's wisdom bears in this regard is only confirmed by the fact that by the late 19th and early 20th century, the Jesuits had become the hotbed of all heresies in the Church, propagating their degeneracy to all the youth who had the misfortune of being educated by them in their institutions.

    Paul IV rejected their request, but then Pius IV accepted it ... and then when the suppression was lifted, they came back having to offer the Divine Office, so the last judgment of the Church had been to deny their request.  Why would the Church deny the request?  For the reasons stated above, that it was essential to keep the clergy orthodox and devout.  If you want to go study astronomy and physics without having religious obligations (priests are not strictly obliged to offer Mass on a regular basis), then they're free to do so as laymen.

    At the end, we saw the fruits of their resistance to prayer and religious duty in favor of secular.  There had always been special circuмstances where individual priests were dispensed from the Divine Office, for just cause, but that would depend on the individual priest's mission, e.g. riding out on horseback into the jungle to evangelize pagans ... vs. sitting there looking through a telescope all day attempting to prove the Church wrong and Galileo right.

    I don't have to say anything more than this....go argue with Church law about dispensations.



    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #20 on: Today at 09:25:20 AM »
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  • You do know the Church has to make decisions that pertain to "double effect" and "lesser evil", right?  Which means the decision was ultimately useful and good. You only look at the "evil" and blame the Church for it. Bad.

    Which decision now ... Divine Office, or the one regarding heliocentrism?  Yes, obviously some decisions are made based on prudential judgments, and my very point regarding Divine Office is that prudential judgments are not protected as infallible, and many popes have made poor prudential judgments that were later understood to have been such (even by the Popes themselves) ... such as Pius XI regarding the Cristeros, and of course Pius XI and Pius XII filing to perform the consecration of Russia to Our Lady of Fatima, among many others.

    So, the Jesuits agitating to be dispensed from the Divine Office demonstrated their prioritization of "activity" over prayer, which the Church had long know to be a recipe for disaster, which is why she had LONG insisted of the clergy saying the Divine Office.  That spirit manifested itself, and then bore fruits.  Now, another aspect of why the Jesuits became an unmitigated disaster is their immersion into secular study.  While there was some benefit to it ... the drawback was that they also imbibed the spirit of the world's academia, which especially in scientific matters, beginning with the time of Darwin and Lyell, had become openly hostile, anti-Christian, and atheistic.  At some point, instead of the Jesuits influencing broader academia, they were poisoned by it.

    That's akin to what happened in Vatican II, where Roncalli claimed to believe that by opening the doors of the Church to the world, the world would be sanctified (he know this was not true, but that was his story and he stuck to it), but the fact is usually the other way around, where the pollution, some "smoke of Satan" entered the windows.  If you open the windows when you know that you live near a factory that's emitting toxic fog, you're not going to get fresh air coming in your windows.  Similarly, if a priest decides he's going to hang out at a brothel or among drug dealers, attempting to "convert" them, in most cases, they'll gradually become desensitized to the evils there, making them more susceptible to falling into them.  Catholics are instructed to avoid bad friends.  Why?  Because it's more likely that the bad friends will poison the Catholics (to one degree or another), than that the Catholic would convert those bad friends ... unless the Catholic were some saint, which were very of us are.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #21 on: Today at 09:29:58 AM »
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  • I don't have to say anything more than this....go argue with Church law about dispensations.

    I already admitted that the Church CAN dispense from the Divine Office (nobody ever said otherwise), and even added above that the Church certainly did ... on individual case-by-case bases, depending on the nature of individual priests' missions.  Of course, if the North American martyrs were out there in the jungles, they would likely be dispensed, and then if they were unable to say the office for some reason (even without formal dispensation), oh, perhaps because they had their books confiscated and were being actively tortured, they are obviously dispensed ... of if a priest is sick, etc. ... the same types of reasons that a Catholic might miss Mass on Sunday.  But those are case-by-case situations.

    Where the problem lie was with them attempting to get a blanket dispensation so that some guys could sit there looking through telescopes trying to prove Galileo right instead of saying their Divine Office.

    I'm arguing against the prudence of that permission, which is neither protected by infallibility one way or the other ... nor did I ever claim that the Church COULD NOT dispense from the obligation.  I'm simply arguing that this dispensation was the sign of an "attitude" among the Jesuits which very quickly led to problems.

    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #22 on: Today at 09:31:20 AM »
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  • I already admitted that the Church CAN dispense from the Divine Office (nobody ever said otherwise), and even added above that the Church certainly did ... on individual case-by-case bases, depending on the nature of individual priests' missions.  Of course, if the North American martyrs were out there in the jungles, they would likely be dispensed, and then if they were unable to say the office for some reason (even without formal dispensation), oh, perhaps because they had their books confiscated and were being actively tortured, they are obviously dispensed ... of if a priest is sick, etc. ... the same types of reasons that a Catholic might miss Mass on Sunday.  But those are case-by-case situations.

    Where the problem lie was with them attempting to get a blanket dispensation so that some guys could sit there looking through telescopes trying to prove Galileo right instead of saying their Divine Office.

    I'm arguing against the prudence of that permission, which is neither protected by infallibility one way or the other ... nor did I ever claim that the Church COULD NOT dispense from the obligation.  I'm simply arguing that this dispensation was the sign of an "attitude" among the Jesuits which very quickly led to problems.

    What I just posted speaks for itself on that point.


    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #23 on: Today at 09:46:58 AM »
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  • So, with regard to geocentrism (since heliocentrism as condemned is no longer held, as no one holds the sun to be the immobile center of the universe, "mundus", created world) ... here's what the the proposition that was condemned, albeit with a lesser note than heresy, namely as being "at least erroneous in faith

    The earth is not the centre of the universe (mundi); it is not immobile but turns on itself with a diurnal movement.

    Based on this, the proposition that the earth is not the center of the universe, not immobile, but rotates ... this is condemned as "at least erroneous in faith".




    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #24 on: Today at 09:49:57 AM »
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  • Which decision now ... Divine Office, or the one regarding heliocentrism?  Yes, obviously some decisions are made based on prudential judgments, and my very point regarding Divine Office is that prudential judgments are not protected as infallible, and many popes have made poor prudential judgments that were later understood to have been such (even by the Popes themselves) ... such as Pius XI regarding the Cristeros, and of course Pius XI and Pius XII filing to perform the consecration of Russia to Our Lady of Fatima, among many others.

    So, the Jesuits agitating to be dispensed from the Divine Office demonstrated their prioritization of "activity" over prayer, which the Church had long know to be a recipe for disaster, which is why she had LONG insisted of the clergy saying the Divine Office.  That spirit manifested itself, and then bore fruits.  Now, another aspect of why the Jesuits became an unmitigated disaster is their immersion into secular study.  While there was some benefit to it ... the drawback was that they also imbibed the spirit of the world's academia, which especially in scientific matters, beginning with the time of Darwin and Lyell, had become openly hostile, anti-Christian, and atheistic.  At some point, instead of the Jesuits influencing broader academia, they were poisoned by it.

    That's akin to what happened in Vatican II, where Roncalli claimed to believe that by opening the doors of the Church to the world, the world would be sanctified (he know this was not true, but that was his story and he stuck to it), but the fact is usually the other way around, where the pollution, some "smoke of Satan" entered the windows.  If you open the windows when you know that you live near a factory that's emitting toxic fog, you're not going to get fresh air coming in your windows.  Similarly, if a priest decides he's going to hang out at a brothel or among drug dealers, attempting to "convert" them, in most cases, they'll gradually become desensitized to the evils there, making them more susceptible to falling into them.  Catholics are instructed to avoid bad friends.  Why?  Because it's more likely that the bad friends will poison the Catholics (to one degree or another), than that the Catholic would convert those bad friends ... unless the Catholic were some saint, which were very of us are.

    Suffice is to that the Church has huge dilemmas constantly to deal with, and you are not the one to judge whether which decision was decided involved the principle of lesser evils or double effect UNKNOWN to you. That is like you being a mindreader. You simply are way out of line criticizing a pope, against proper Catholic piety.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #25 on: Today at 09:54:05 AM »
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  • What I just posted speaks for itself on that point.

    No, it really doesn't ... but is beside the point.  Nobody ever contested that the Church can and has dispensed from the Holy Office, so you're fighting imaginary windmills here, and strawmen, where you think you've addressed my point by attacks another point that I never made.

    I'm arguing that the request for a blanket dispensation from the Divine Office reflects an attitude among the Jesuits that later contributed to their becoming the hotbed for heresy and Modernism as time went on.

    At no point have you addressed this, but have argued that the Church can dispense them, and does often dispense individual priests for various reasons, etc. ... but that has absolutely nothing to do with the point above (in italics).

    I also argued that the lifting of their suppression was a terrible mistake, that they should have remained suppressed, or else completely reformed.

    None of these are theological points.  Prudential judgments are not protected by infallibility.  Either the Pope who suppressed them made an error in judgment, or else the Pope who lifted the suppression made an error in judgment.

    You argued that the Pope who suppressed them did, claiming that he had been pressured by anti-Catholic forces to do so.  Then you went on to claim that it was OK for the Jesuits to continue operating despite the suppression because the Pope "didn't really want to do it".  What kind of nonsense is that?  Where you claim that someone could try to read the mind of the pope and disobey him based on some light that he "didn't really mean it".  Sounds like the Bennyvacantist argument that Bergoglio "meant" his heresy, but that Wojtyla and Ratzinger didn't "really mean it", when they taught the same things.


    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #26 on: Today at 10:05:08 AM »
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  • Suffice is to that the Church has huge dilemmas constantly to deal with, and you are not the one to judge whether which decision was decided involved the principle of lesser evils or double effect UNKNOWN to you. That is like you being a mindreader. You simply are way out of line criticizing a pope, against proper Catholic piety.

    Ridiculous ... coming from the guy who claimed that it was OK for the Jesuits to ignore the papal suppression order based on their mindreading that the Pope didn't really mean to do it.

    Your propose these absurdly erroneous principles such as that the Church cannot "err" even in the non-condemnation of error, implying that if the Church hasn't condemned an error, that must make it true.  This isn't the first time I've heard this same idiocy from the radical dogmatic SV types.

    But you ignore the elephant in the room and this results in some kind of psychosis, which does in fact manifest itself in weird mental issues among dogmatic SVs ... where if you have Pope B contradicting Pope A, neither one of them is wrong.  They're both right, and to claim otherwise is "against proper Catholic piety".  So this leads to a requirement to adhere to contradictory propositions, and that results in psychological problems.

    You absolutely refuse to address the problem ...

    Pope A condemned non-geocentrism as "at least erroneous in faith".

    Pope B said that non-geocentrism was permitted to be held and written about.

    One of these is wrong.  But you refuse to address this elephant in the remove but instead sanctimoniously gaslight about "proper Catholic piety".

    Unfortunately, the dogmatic SVs have in fact created the very strawman of papolatry that the anti-Catholics attack ... in overreacting to the grave errors of R&R.

    Bottom line is that if you accept the teaching of Pope B above, then you're criticizing Pope A.  But if you accept the teaching of Pope A, you're criticizing Pope B.  You can't just plug your ears, deny reality, and then gaslight about how both of them must be right.

    If you claim both are right, then explain how they're not in contradiction with one another ... something you refuse to do.  Instead you distract, create starwmen, and gaslight about "proper Catholic piety".

    You've had numerous absolute degenerates holding papal office ... and by your criteria they cannot be criticized, but we're supposed to say, that "oh, yes, your Holiness ... your fornication and bearing of children out of wedlock are so wonderful".

    Strangely, the Church canonized St. Catherine of Siena despite the fact that she continuously excoriated the Pope for having abandoned Rome for Avignon.

    Offline cassini

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #27 on: Today at 10:14:11 AM »
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  • Did you know the divine office at one time didn't exist? It didn't exist on Pentecost. Which means it can be dispensed with because it was a Church imposed duty, once not existing and then existing.

    The Holy Office that our friend comments on:

    So, what was the Holy Office of 1616? Well, in the wake of the Protestant rebellion, Pope Paul III (1534-1549) set up various congregations to assist the Catholic Church in its task of safeguarding the apostolic faith held ‘in agreement with Sacred Scripture and apostolic tradition.’ One of the most important of these was the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Inquisition, otherwise known as the Holy Office, set up in 1542. The function of this body was specifically to maintain and defend the integrity of the faith, to examine and proscribe errors and false doctrines by way of the censorship of books and other measures, but most of all to combat heresy at the highest level.
       
    The Congregation of the Index, otherwise known simply as the Index, was established in 1572. It was a body placed by the Supreme Sacred Congregation in charge of heretical and offensive book censorship, a practice that had been ongoing since the early years of the Church. Made up of ten cardinals, its decrees were normally signed only by its chief officers. Later, in 1588; Pope Sixtus V (1585-90) gave the Holy Office even more explicit powers in the Bull Immensa Dei (God who cannot be encompassed). In this directive he made the reigning pope Prefect of the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Inquisition. This gave the Catholic world to understand that decisions assigned to its judgment, before publication, would invariably be examined and ratified by the Pope himself as supreme judge of the Holy See, and would go forward clothed with such formal papal authority. Finally, in 1620, Pope Paul V placed all other departments of the Church in Rome under the Supreme Sacred Congregation. 

    ‘I found it laid down by such distinguished representatives of the Ultramontane school as Cardenas, La Croix, Zaccaria, and Bouix, that Congregational decrees, confirmed by the Pope and published by his express order, emanate from the Pontiff in his capacity of Head of the Church, and are ex cathedrâ in such sense as to make it infallibly certain that doctrines so propounded as true, are true.’--- Fr W. Roberts.

    This then is the Holy Office that presided over the Galileo case in 1616. It is the same Inquisition that 16 years earlier found Bruno guilty of many heresies and false doctrines he refused to repent; the same Holy Office that condemned him to death after a long trial lest he, as a cleric, spread his heresies leading to the loss of many other poor souls with him.

    Online Freind

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #28 on: Today at 10:18:57 AM »
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  • Ridiculous ... coming from the guy who claimed that it was OK for the Jesuits to ignore the papal suppression order based on their mindreading that the Pope didn't really mean to do it.

    Your propose these absurdly erroneous principles such as that the Church cannot "err" even in the non-condemnation of error, implying that if the Church hasn't condemned an error, that must make it true.  This isn't the first time I've heard this same idiocy from the radical dogmatic SV types.

    But you ignore the elephant in the room and this results in some kind of psychosis, which does in fact manifest itself in weird mental issues among dogmatic SVs ... where if you have Pope B contradicting Pope A, neither one of them is wrong.  They're both right, and to claim otherwise is "against proper Catholic piety".  So this leads to a requirement to adhere to contradictory propositions, and that results in psychological problems.

    You absolutely refuse to address the problem ...

    Pope A condemned non-geocentrism as "at least erroneous in faith".

    Pope B said that non-geocentrism was permitted to be held and written about.

    One of these is wrong.  But you refuse to address this elephant in the remove but instead sanctimoniously gaslight about "proper Catholic piety".

    Unfortunately, the dogmatic SVs have in fact created the very strawman of papolatry that the anti-Catholics attack ... in overreacting to the grave errors of R&R.

    Bottom line is that if you accept the teaching of Pope B above, then you're criticizing Pope A.  But if you accept the teaching of Pope A, you're criticizing Pope B.  You can't just plug your ears, deny reality, and then gaslight about how both of them must be right.

    If you claim both are right, then explain how they're not in contradiction with one another ... something you refuse to do.  Instead you distract, create starwmen, and gaslight about "proper Catholic piety".

    You've had numerous absolute degenerates holding papal office ... and by your criteria they cannot be criticized, but we're supposed to say, that "oh, yes, your Holiness ... your fornication and bearing of children out of wedlock are so wonderful".

    Strangely, the Church canonized St. Catherine of Siena despite the fact that she continuously excoriated the Pope for having abandoned Rome for Avignon.

    It just shows how out of touch you are on the subject when you bring up fornication by a pope. SO out of touch with the subject. You couldn't even address about the intrinsic/extrinsic factor. I'm not going to talk to you about the subject any more. Your voluminous content escalates and you go farther from the heart of the subject, and ignore very important points.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Re: A bit of Jesuit history
    « Reply #29 on: Today at 10:57:31 AM »
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  • It just shows how out of touch you are on the subject when you bring up fornication by a pope. SO out of touch with the subject. You couldn't even address about the intrinsic/extrinsic factor. I'm not going to talk to you about the subject any more. Your voluminous content escalates and you go farther from the heart of the subject, and ignore very important points.

    Yeah ... because you've got nothing rational to say, just these one-liners, stupidity, strawmen, gaslighting, made up non-existent principles about how someone can't disagree with any pope, since it's "contrary to piety", and more BS about "out of touch" on the degenerate popes.

    YOU are the one who's "ignored" every single argument here, battling strawmen of your own invention, and then you resort to some gaslighting and bow out.

    Unfortunately, you dogmatic SV types, on overreacting to the errors of R&R, have set up this bizarre framework of papolatry that causes mental problems among you, where you will entertain contradictory propositions at the same time, and then when you're asked to explain which pope was correct ...

    Pope A (condemning non-geocentrism)

    Pope B (permitting it)

    ... you simply disappear, bowing out with a final "ad hominem" gaslight about my being "out of touch".

    You're refusing to "talk to [me] about the subject anymore" ... because YOU HAVE NOTHING TO SAY.  Your contradiction has been exposed, and having no way to address it, you scurry away.