Twenty Centuries. Twenty-Four Timezones. Two Hemispheres. One Church.
Sept. 4, 2023

What Do Catholics Have to Believe? (#137)

What must someone believe as infallible "dogma" in order to be "in the Catholic faith?" How does that differ from doctrines, teachings, and recommended beliefs? There are important but subtle differences that carry different levels of authority. This...

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Considering Catholicism

What must someone believe as infallible "dogma" in order to be "in the Catholic faith?" How does that differ from doctrines, teachings, and recommended beliefs? There are important but subtle differences that carry different levels of authority. This is the second half of Greg and Cory's conversation about knowledge, belief, and faith (see the episode, "What is Faith?" for the first part).

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Transcript
1 00:00:02,030 --> 00:00:38,919.999 If you ache for truth, goodness, and beauty, If you're hungry for a Christianity with substance and strength, if you long for a faith that's big and bold and biblical and all about Jesus Christ, if you're inspired by the idea of one church that has spanned twenty centuries, twenty four time zones, and two hemispheres, enfolding every race, nation, and language, then you're considering Catholicism. 2 00:00:42,93.914656772 --> 00:00:55,363.914656772 So welcome back to a conversation that Corey and I have been having sitting out here in the piney woods on the shore of a great lake at the secret compound on an evening as the sun sets to the west. 3 00:00:56,263.914656772 --> 00:01:02,833.914656772 Over the lake and if that gives any of you like a clue now, we have to move you've given away our location That's right. 4 00:01:02,843.914656772 --> 00:01:09,813.914656772 Like if you want to You want to get on google earth? and do some Figuring out about where we might be. 5 00:01:09,813.914656772 --> 00:01:30,873.908071141 I was actually pretty easy to figure out where we are the hint is That as the sun sets it's setting over this great lake from our perspective So in any case we've been out here this evening and we just finished an interesting conversation, which was the last episode at least I think it was interesting about knowledge and belief and faith and sort of what faith is. 6 00:01:31,183.908071141 --> 00:01:33,912.027308713 This is part of sort of a, little bit of a series we've been doing. 7 00:01:33,952.027308713 --> 00:01:40,362.02730871 Corey and I talked for several episodes about faith and science and the history of Catholicism and scientific. 8 00:01:41,507.02730871 --> 00:01:48,17.02730871 And then Ed and I did several episodes about the Bible, Old Testament, New Testament and the authority of scripture. 9 00:01:48,417.02730871 --> 00:01:55,967.02730871 And so we just kind of thought it'd be interesting to kind of keep this going and talk about faith and what we believe and what we're required to believe and what we know and what we know by faith and so forth. 10 00:01:56,467.02630871 --> 00:02:02,449.8155242 So in the last episode, we were talking about the kind of three things, knowledge. 11 00:02:02,628.40604998 --> 00:02:21,762.61691095 And belief and faith and what those differences are so you can go back and listen to that episode Yeah, but we're going to keep this going and drill down a little bit on faith and the things that we believe by faith and in a sense the things that we are required to believe by faith and catholicism Is a faith it is the catholic faith. 12 00:02:21,772.61691095 --> 00:02:29,89.64352513 It has a substance to it Catholicism is not just showing up to mass and it's not just going through the motions. 13 00:02:29,99.64352513 --> 00:02:34,686.02985203 It is actually believing And having and holding The Catholic faith. 14 00:02:34,726.02985203 --> 00:02:37,396.02985203 There is intellectual and assent involved. 15 00:02:37,626.02985203 --> 00:02:47,901.48796898 There's intellectual assent and then as we look in Hebrews 11, right? That intellectual assent, that certainty and assurance translates into action. 16 00:02:47,961.48796898 --> 00:02:51,1.48696898 And that's the whole point of Hebrews 11 is by faith. 17 00:02:51,200.54100214 --> 00:03:06,73.34238888 People act and so what we want to talk about here in this conversation is what the Catholic faith asks us to believe because I think there's a lot of people listening who go, All right, I'm sort of attracted to some aspects of Catholicism. 18 00:03:06,73.34238888 --> 00:03:07,993.34238888 I find some of this super interesting. 19 00:03:07,993.34338888 --> 00:03:09,143.34238888 I'm considering it. 20 00:03:09,803.34238888 --> 00:03:23,295.99372866 But I want to know what I have to believe and particularly with Catholicism, like, I'm assuming that most of the people who listen to this, if, if they already are maybe a Christian or Protestant or whatever, you know, they believe in God and they believe in Jesus. 21 00:03:23,865.99372866 --> 00:03:38,821.92632904 But what are the peculiarities of Catholicism? And they wonder, do I have to believe in every miracle, any, every Marian apparition, every dogma that's, or doctrine that's handed down by a Pope? And I know. 22 00:03:39,61.92632904 --> 00:03:48,411.92632904 That a lot of my protestant friends, and when I was a protestant, one of my concerns was, if I become catholic, is the pope just gonna make up crazy stuff and I'm required to believe it? Right. 23 00:03:48,411.92632904 --> 00:03:51,651.92632904 Is it shifting sands under my feet? It might, might change tomorrow. 24 00:03:51,681.92632904 --> 00:03:58,531.92632904 Well, were that or is it just crazy stuff like that? Can the pope just make stuff up? And so anyway, we want to get into that. 25 00:03:58,531.92632904 --> 00:04:10,992.074376 What is the substance of the catholic faith? And what are we? Asked to believe, what are we required to believe, what is doctrine and dogma and how is all that defined, right? Yes. 26 00:04:11,172.075376 --> 00:04:16,28.94516238 Now, Corey is going to do some of the heavy lifting here because he's, bright and scholarly and has looked up all this stuff. 27 00:04:16,91.83839337 --> 00:04:31,283.25677568 because, Catholicism, you know, as Chesterton said, one else has spent 2, 000 years thinking about thinking, and it really has a very well developed system, sort epistemology of knowledge, that there are certain sort of categories of belief. 28 00:04:31,513.25677568 --> 00:04:37,623.25677568 There are things that you are required to believe, things that you are recommended to believe, things that, right? Yep. 29 00:04:37,693.25677568 --> 00:04:40,543.25677568 So, Corey is going to break all that down a little bit. 30 00:04:40,573.25677568 --> 00:04:56,233.25677568 So, Corey? If that's who you really are, as we said in the last episode, for all I know, you could be a, an imposter and witness protection, go back and listen to the last episode and I'll explain that, but Corey, if that's your real name, why don't you go ahead and run with this? Okay, I will. 31 00:04:56,533.25677568 --> 00:05:00,758.15677568 Um, so, the easiest way to do this, I think, is going to be to... 32 00:05:00,913.24140921 --> 00:05:33,197.76034015 walk through the different categories first, so that we have language and definitions to use to talk about this, and then we can talk about particulars, because I know any given listener might have a question about a particular type of teaching or document or whatnot, put out by And so the, the way I'm going to approach this is that, if you were going to be invested with the authority to teach the Catholic faith, if you were going to be a bishop or a seminary rector or something like that, you would be required to take an oath. 33 00:05:33,724.15983832 --> 00:05:38,694.15983832 Profession or an affirmation of faith that you're going to be faithful to the teachings of the church. 34 00:05:39,64.15983832 --> 00:05:47,329.45573704 And so that oath, an official oath that is given in those circumstances contains the categories of teachings. 35 00:05:47,709.45573704 --> 00:06:31,697.55521772 That are official and that are the different ways that we understand this and so I'll I'll quote a section And then talk about it a little bit just to elucidate it If you want to chip in Greg you chip in at any time And then once we've been through the categories we can talk about particulars So to begin with that person would would affirm the creed so the the Apostles Creed which walks through the the basics of the faith and then sort of joined to that, um, they would vow with firm faith, I also believe everything contained in the word of God, whether written or handed down in tradition, which the church, either by a solemn judgment or by ordinary and universal magisterium, Sets forth to be believed as divinely revealed. 36 00:06:31,867.55521772 --> 00:06:33,67.55521772 So there's a lot of terms in there. 37 00:06:33,494.5828319 --> 00:06:35,334.5828319 this is the category of dogma. 38 00:06:35,564.5828319 --> 00:06:39,194.5828319 And so this is something that the church has recognized to be divinely revealed. 39 00:06:39,204.5828319 --> 00:06:40,914.5828319 God has said it to be true. 40 00:06:41,414.5828319 --> 00:06:44,42.07953908 And so that can, come from a variety of sources. 41 00:06:44,42.07953908 --> 00:06:45,662.07953908 That can be directly from scripture. 42 00:06:46,72.07953908 --> 00:06:49,912.07953908 That can be something that the Pope has dogmatically defined. 43 00:06:50,312.07953908 --> 00:06:54,662.07953908 Um, that can be something that an ecumenical council has dogmatically defined or something. 44 00:06:54,962.07953908 --> 00:07:01,992.07953908 The phrase ordinary and universal magisterium essentially means this is what the church always and everywhere has believed together. 45 00:07:02,623.01233467 --> 00:07:02,833.01233467 Okay. 46 00:07:02,833.01233467 --> 00:07:03,143.01233467 Okay. 47 00:07:03,143.01333467 --> 00:07:03,623.01333467 Just want to. 48 00:07:03,683.01333467 --> 00:07:03,923.01333467 Yeah. 49 00:07:03,943.01333467 --> 00:07:04,203.01333467 Go ahead. 50 00:07:04,563.01333467 --> 00:07:05,493.01333467 Point of clarification. 51 00:07:05,503.01333467 --> 00:07:05,723.01333467 Yep. 52 00:07:05,763.01333467 --> 00:07:06,93.01333467 Okay. 53 00:07:06,412.38102344 --> 00:07:09,922.38202344 you explained it well, but you went kind of quick there and I want to just slow down a little bit. 54 00:07:09,962.38202344 --> 00:07:10,142.38202344 Yep. 55 00:07:10,202.38202344 --> 00:07:11,362.38202344 For anybody who's listening. 56 00:07:12,282.38202344 --> 00:07:13,142.38202344 Dogma. 57 00:07:13,262.38202344 --> 00:07:18,542.38202344 Cause I know you're going to introduce a distinction here between dogma and doctrines, right? Yep. 58 00:07:18,582.38202344 --> 00:07:18,602.38202344 Yeah. 59 00:07:18,907.38202344 --> 00:07:24,907.38202344 And so, just to clarify that, dogma is something that we are required to believe. 60 00:07:25,17.38202344 --> 00:07:27,487.38202344 We're required? You can, you cannot say... 61 00:07:28,377.38202344 --> 00:07:35,417.38202344 That you hold the Catholic faith, unless you hold this by faith, unless you believe this. 62 00:07:35,457.38202344 --> 00:07:35,677.38202344 Right. 63 00:07:35,677.38202344 --> 00:07:37,347.38202344 So this is the category of dogma. 64 00:07:37,659.09617722 --> 00:07:48,389.09617722 it is part of the definition of being a Catholic to hold this belief because the church has defined it to be divinely revealed, that God has told us that this is true. 65 00:07:48,439.09617722 --> 00:07:52,759.09617722 And again, just to be clear, I know you're making this clear, but I want to make it uber clear. 66 00:07:52,769.09617722 --> 00:07:53,29.09617722 Yep. 67 00:07:53,189.09617722 --> 00:07:54,129.09617722 Clarity is a good thing. 68 00:07:54,904.09617722 --> 00:08:03,354.09517722 So we're going to get into, as we move down this hierarchy of knowledge, right, things that you're recommended to believe in, you're going to get to that, right? Yep, we'll get there. 69 00:08:03,434.09617722 --> 00:08:11,484.09617722 Uh, you know, the belief that the Shroud of Turin is real, you can believe it or not believe it, or that, you know, the Virgin Mary appeared at, We'll get there. 70 00:08:11,494.09617722 --> 00:08:12,404.09617722 Lords, we'll get there. 71 00:08:12,444.09617722 --> 00:08:12,604.09617722 Yeah. 72 00:08:12,624.09617722 --> 00:08:21,684.09517722 But, but I just want to say for those who are listening, not everything in the Catholic faith is required, but there are things that you cannot say. 73 00:08:21,684.09617722 --> 00:08:32,914.09617722 And I say this not only to non Catholics considering Catholicism, but I say to those of you who are Catholics who, you know, you know who you are, who are maybe a little loosey goosey. 74 00:08:33,804.09617722 --> 00:08:57,206.27283836 And I think one of the things that We struggle with today is a lot of syncretism, in the postmodern church, individualism, individualism, syncretism, where we, we sort of say, Hey, you know, I've got what I really believe is some kind of weirdo combination of Catholicism and Buddhism and UFO ology and, you know, and stuff that I got off Star Trek and, you know, Star Wars or whatever. 75 00:08:57,206.27283836 --> 00:09:00,916.27283836 And it's all sort of, you know, kind of become this goulash in my mind. 76 00:09:01,836.27283836 --> 00:09:06,431.27283836 And that's, You can't do that, at least with respect to these things that are dogmatic. 77 00:09:06,451.27283836 --> 00:09:11,651.27183836 You have to hold these or you are not holding the Catholic faith. 78 00:09:11,671.27283836 --> 00:09:15,771.27283836 And in some sense, Corey, is your salvation in danger? Well, you're in error. 79 00:09:16,0.74571549 --> 00:09:20,884.85797373 and that is a problem that can, error in belief can lead to error in action. 80 00:09:21,340.16704371 --> 00:09:28,170.16804371 and so simply being mistaken about something doesn't necessarily mean that you have lost your salvation, but it is, it is risky business. 81 00:09:28,200.16804371 --> 00:09:32,20.16804371 And you, if you are corrected and you do not. 82 00:09:32,300.16804371 --> 00:09:33,510.16804371 Heed the correction. 83 00:09:34,30.16804371 --> 00:09:36,720.16804371 Then that's the category of heresy that we talked about. 84 00:09:36,720.16804371 --> 00:09:36,840.16804371 Yeah. 85 00:09:37,890.16804371 --> 00:09:43,210.16804371 A few episodes we talked about heresy, but, you know, going back to our last episode about knowledge and belief and all these kinds of things. 86 00:09:43,544.53014685 --> 00:09:46,294.53014685 it's one thing to say, well, I was mistaken. 87 00:09:46,944.53014685 --> 00:09:58,794.53014685 Like just because maybe my Sunday school teachers didn't make it clear, somebody I, you know, was not paying attention in class, you know, in confirmation class. 88 00:09:58,794.53014685 --> 00:10:14,938.43413304 And I just, you know, I, I, I can be mistaken, but if you deliberately choose to believe something contrary to dogma, right? Because you don't want to believe it, then you need to go to confession and you need to change. 89 00:10:15,388.43413304 --> 00:10:17,208.43313304 You need to change, right? But it is a sin. 90 00:10:17,218.43413304 --> 00:10:18,178.43413304 It's a mortal sin. 91 00:10:18,808.43413304 --> 00:10:19,368.43413304 You know, okay. 92 00:10:19,468.43413304 --> 00:10:19,768.43413304 Right. 93 00:10:19,808.43413304 --> 00:10:31,413.43413304 I mean, in, in, in Catholicism, you go, if I have chosen to deliberately believe something Contrary to the dogma of the church, I am in mortal sin, if that's a deliberate choice, not just an error, you know, I'm mistaken. 94 00:10:31,423.43413304 --> 00:10:32,333.43413304 That's the vital distinction. 95 00:10:32,343.43413304 --> 00:10:45,699.97509254 Then I need to go to confession and confess my error, and if you are a Catholic and you're listening and you have chosen to willfully, contradict the dogma of the church or believe something contrary to the dogma. 96 00:10:46,43.39681446 --> 00:10:55,521.82731723 you are immortal sin and you are an heir and you need to seek confession and, and, and of course that implies that you, amend your ways. 97 00:10:55,921.82731723 --> 00:11:03,67.56157601 Now I, I say all that because I want to emphasize, as Corey is, the seriousness of these dogmas, these dogmatic teachings. 98 00:11:03,67.56157601 --> 00:11:03,237.56157601 Right. 99 00:11:03,277.56157601 --> 00:11:03,677.56157601 Okay, go ahead. 100 00:11:03,757.56157601 --> 00:11:04,47.56157601 Okay. 101 00:11:04,507.7150134 --> 00:11:07,227.7150134 so that's sort of at the high end, the very high end. 102 00:11:07,247.7150134 --> 00:11:10,910.98988357 And then in this oath, we get to the next part, in which you would vow. 103 00:11:11,270.98888357 --> 00:11:19,10.98888357 I also firmly accept and hold each and everything definitely proposed by the church regarding teaching on faith and morals. 104 00:11:19,700.98888357 --> 00:11:23,810.98988357 And so to, to parse that a little bit, so this is also infallible teaching. 105 00:11:24,50.98988357 --> 00:11:32,907.39057694 This, this is held by the church to be true, without error, but it's not something that we know that God has directly revealed to us. 106 00:11:32,907.39057694 --> 00:11:40,56.60682832 This isn't like the level of dogma of, you know, God has revealed that Christ is God, holy God and holy man. 107 00:11:40,66.60482832 --> 00:11:42,286.60582832 Give us, give us two practical examples. 108 00:11:42,616.60582832 --> 00:11:45,486.60482832 Give us a practical example of a dogma. 109 00:11:45,946.60582832 --> 00:11:49,814.4138007 And contrast that with a practical example of, a doctrine that you're talking about. 110 00:11:49,894.4138007 --> 00:11:55,315.03094067 Okay, so like what I was just saying, it's dogma that Christ is fully God and fully man. 111 00:11:55,535.03194067 --> 00:11:57,375.03094067 That Jesus died and rose again. 112 00:11:57,375.03094067 --> 00:11:59,5.03094067 Jesus died on a cross and rose again. 113 00:11:59,5.03094067 --> 00:12:00,125.03094067 He was bodily resurrected. 114 00:12:00,135.03194067 --> 00:12:02,825.03194067 That, that God is Trinity, three in one. 115 00:12:03,195.03194067 --> 00:12:08,825.03194067 Those, those are examples of dogs, basically the Nicene Creed or the Apostle Nicene Creed and, and some other things. 116 00:12:08,825.03194067 --> 00:12:11,385.03194067 We can talk more about specific examples. 117 00:12:11,705.03194067 --> 00:12:14,785.03094067 I believe in God, the father almighty maker of heaven and earth and Jesus Christ is only son. 118 00:12:14,785.03194067 --> 00:12:14,895.03194067 Right. 119 00:12:15,255.03194067 --> 00:12:19,615.03094067 And there are things that have been defined by councils and popes to be God has revealed this. 120 00:12:19,625.03194067 --> 00:12:19,815.03194067 Okay. 121 00:12:20,155.03094067 --> 00:12:23,85.03194067 Um, and then there are things, the canon of scripture. 122 00:12:23,440.03194067 --> 00:12:26,590.03194067 Dogmatic, that would fit in this category. 123 00:12:26,600.03194067 --> 00:12:31,837.82674179 So that, that is something that is free to, disbelieve in the canon of scripture. 124 00:12:32,67.82674179 --> 00:12:33,547.82674179 You are not free to disbelieve in it. 125 00:12:33,567.82674179 --> 00:12:36,377.82574179 It is infallibly defined, but it's not at the level of dogma. 126 00:12:36,387.82674179 --> 00:12:38,457.82674179 So it's at this, this second level. 127 00:12:38,457.82674179 --> 00:12:44,337.82674179 So these are things that are essentially derived or deduced by the church authoritatively from dogma. 128 00:12:44,337.82674179 --> 00:12:48,627.82674179 So given dogma, then the implications of dogma are doctrine. 129 00:12:48,777.82674179 --> 00:12:51,487.82674179 And so a lot of moral teaching would fall in this category. 130 00:12:51,717.82674179 --> 00:12:52,407.82674179 Give us an example. 131 00:12:53,29.22523995 --> 00:12:57,779.22423995 the, sort of the classic example from the last couple of generations is contraception. 132 00:12:57,916.71316629 --> 00:13:03,978.73419484 Pope Paul VI, Saint Paul VI, teaching on the immorality of artificial contraception. 133 00:13:04,338.73419484 --> 00:13:06,28.73419484 It was based on tradition. 134 00:13:06,68.73419484 --> 00:13:09,708.73419484 It was based on the natural law and the law of the church on scripture. 135 00:13:09,965.13488822 --> 00:13:12,455.13488822 and so it was in that sense deduced. 136 00:13:12,495.13488822 --> 00:13:22,785.13488822 It's not as if God directly told us at the level of dogma, contraception is wrong, but the church has defined this in a way that is not disputable for the Catholic. 137 00:13:22,795.13488822 --> 00:13:23,75.13488822 Okay. 138 00:13:23,105.13488822 --> 00:13:31,136.37894899 Since we're sitting out here in the forest and the sun is setting and there's nobody, you know, within a long way around us other than Sasquatch. 139 00:13:31,941.37994899 --> 00:13:50,108.39339192 And I have an adult beverage and an In Vino Veritas, I'm going to say to you, then, is it licit for a Catholic to be pro abortion? No, that would be an example of this category, that it's a, it's an infallible moral teaching of the church based on divine revelation. 140 00:13:50,128.39439192 --> 00:13:53,68.39339192 So, think divine revelation, thou shalt not kill. 141 00:13:53,427.91551807 --> 00:14:06,234.31282102 there, there are specific things in the Bible and in apostolic tradition that prohibit, Moral actions, like abortion, and then the church has reasoned from those things to have that progression. 142 00:14:06,234.31282102 --> 00:14:07,374.31282102 Let's do lightning round here. 143 00:14:07,994.31282102 --> 00:14:08,894.31282102 Okay? Okay. 144 00:14:08,934.31182102 --> 00:14:18,154.31282102 So if I, if I say, all right, let's talk about contemporary Catholics, whether they are individuals or people in positions of influence, like politicians. 145 00:14:18,814.31282102 --> 00:14:22,694.31282102 Uh, someone who says, I'm a faithful Catholic, but I just believe in abortion. 146 00:14:23,149.31282102 --> 00:14:23,459.31282102 Illicit. 147 00:14:23,499.31282102 --> 00:14:23,939.31282102 Illicit. 148 00:14:24,179.31282102 --> 00:14:24,649.31282102 Illicit. 149 00:14:25,209.31282102 --> 00:14:29,9.31282102 I am a faithful catholic, but I believe in same sex marriage. 150 00:14:29,119.31282102 --> 00:14:29,599.31282102 Illicit. 151 00:14:30,78.80618211 --> 00:14:34,742.63784758 I am a Catholic but I don't believe in the real presence in the Eucharist. 152 00:14:34,853.11656064 --> 00:14:37,679.34868423 I think that it's just a symbol that would be illicit. 153 00:14:38,89.34768423 --> 00:15:01,314.43280806 Okay, not not valid Yeah, that would violate this category of infallible teaching that one arguably could be called dog mind I'm not 100% sure about that one because it's scriptural but so dogma You're in mortal sin if you deliberately disbelieve in it, and doctrine are those things that dogma, and therefore carry a sort of weight. 154 00:15:01,594.43280806 --> 00:15:20,712.92125215 So if I, for example, if I believe something willfully against dogma, but I am an error, I'm not, it's not illicit if I act on that, right? So I'm not a confessor, so I'm certainly open to the correction of, priests and moral theologians. 155 00:15:20,713.02125215 --> 00:15:22,22.92225215 Yeah, I'm curious about that. 156 00:15:22,32.92225215 --> 00:15:29,542.92325215 Um, but what, what I understand from these categories is that both dogma and doctrine here are infallible teachings. 157 00:15:29,998.37055498 --> 00:15:37,89.04726427 what I would say to our listener, neither, obviously, Corey, I mean, I've been a, I was a Protestant pastor, but I've obviously never been a Catholic confessor. 158 00:15:37,579.04726427 --> 00:15:52,712.98211698 But I would just say as a, brotherly suggestion that if I found myself really doubting the doctrines of the church and I found myself tempted or finding myself falling into believing in things that are not licit, I certainly would go to confession. 159 00:15:52,812.98211698 --> 00:15:56,782.98211698 Well, if I was, if I was tempted to, or I was doubting. 160 00:15:56,992.98211698 --> 00:16:05,77.69511704 Probably what I would first do is I would talk to my priest or talk to a, a faithful Catholic who I feel could, you know, talk me through this. 161 00:16:05,77.69511704 --> 00:16:11,637.69411704 Because if you're at the level of doubts and temptations, then you may not have committed the sin. 162 00:16:12,847.69411704 --> 00:16:15,267.69411704 If you figure out that you have, then I would go to confession. 163 00:16:15,683.00921269 --> 00:16:19,333.00921269 but if, if you're in the position where you have definitely. 164 00:16:19,442.49947969 --> 00:16:25,62.49947969 decided that you oppose the teachings of the church and that's not just you've acted on it. 165 00:16:25,62.49947969 --> 00:16:31,632.49947969 So, in other words, not just you've had an abortion or you've practiced contraception, but that you basically have decided that you disagree with the church. 166 00:16:31,992.49947969 --> 00:16:36,892.49847969 I would recommend going to confession and hearing what your confessor has to say. 167 00:16:36,942.49947969 --> 00:16:38,157.39947969 The thing about it, too, is that. 168 00:16:38,567.49947969 --> 00:16:42,367.4994797 In order for him to validly absolve you, you would have to actually be contrite. 169 00:16:42,367.4994797 --> 00:16:47,47.4984797 So you would have to be confessing a sin, not going into confession to say, Ha ha, I believe. 170 00:16:47,57.4994797 --> 00:16:52,417.4994797 But I would be concerned about myself and I would go in there and say, Hey look, I'm really struggling. 171 00:16:52,417.4994797 --> 00:16:55,177.4994797 So if you're concerned about it, then that means that... 172 00:16:55,642.4994797 --> 00:17:04,162.4994797 Either you're the Holy Spirit is working in your heart and leading you away from sin, or you're, you're contrite for something, some sin that you have committed. 173 00:17:04,422.4994797 --> 00:17:07,762.4994797 And so if you're, if you're worried about it and you're feeling bad about it, that's a good sign. 174 00:17:08,40.1010373 --> 00:17:11,947.9702048 get thee to a confessional and listen to what your confessor says. 175 00:17:11,947.9702048 --> 00:17:12,857.9682048 Right, exactly. 176 00:17:13,261.451918 --> 00:17:17,271.451918 so to sum up those, those two top tier categories are both infallible. 177 00:17:17,391.452918 --> 00:17:20,43.5302925 The church teaches them, as without error. 178 00:17:20,43.5302925 --> 00:17:21,423.5302925 The first is dogma. 179 00:17:21,813.5302925 --> 00:17:24,733.5302925 That stuff God has told us, so we know it's true. 180 00:17:25,163.5302925 --> 00:17:27,653.5302925 The second level, we can use the word doctrine for that. 181 00:17:27,683.5302925 --> 00:17:33,833.5302925 It's teachings of the church that have been derived from dogma that are still considered infallible. 182 00:17:33,873.5292925 --> 00:17:35,423.5302925 No, I keep interrupting your narrative here. 183 00:17:35,423.5302925 --> 00:17:36,53.5302925 No, go ahead. 184 00:17:36,183.5302925 --> 00:17:49,317.5807668 But, I know there's gonna be people out there who are gonna say, Well, how am I supposed to understand Catholics who are in positions of influence or in positions of ecclesial office? Mm-hmm. 185 00:17:49,887.5807668 --> 00:17:56,767.5807668 who run around, whether they're a ca, a professor at a Catholic university, or they're a priest, right. 186 00:17:57,847.5807668 --> 00:18:02,357.5807668 Or even a bishop who makes public statements. 187 00:18:03,42.5807668 --> 00:18:06,442.5807668 And teaches things that seem contrary to the doctrines of the church. 188 00:18:06,492.5807668 --> 00:18:12,522.5797668 Aren't they, are they licit or illicit? Because, like, I'm just, let's put our cards on the table. 189 00:18:12,832.5807668 --> 00:18:28,654.7709262 You can go on the, on Google, and in five seconds, find priests, professors, even some bishops, who say things that sound like they're pro abortion, pro gay marriage, you know, all the things that you mentioned. 190 00:18:29,364.7709262 --> 00:18:38,904.7709262 And so it is causing a lot of confusion and concern, not only among the faithful, but among. 191 00:18:39,794.7709262 --> 00:18:46,34.7709262 Those who are considering joining the Catholic Church and going, wait a minute, you guys can't even, your own house isn't even in order. 192 00:18:46,332.452233 --> 00:18:49,300.578006 so what, what's real and what's not real? Let's say you. 193 00:18:49,350.579006 --> 00:18:51,980.578006 Yeah, I mean, you bring up a real problem. 194 00:18:52,51.384249 --> 00:19:00,586.384249 and to one degree or another, it's always been a problem because Human beings are sinful and they, they have errors or they mess up or they do bad things. 195 00:19:00,926.384249 --> 00:19:11,808.5744085 And so yes, you're going to find people in positions of authority in the church who are going to be speaking against the truths of the faith, whether they're dogmatic truths or doctrinal truths, infallible truths of the faith. 196 00:19:12,274.4467551 --> 00:19:19,484.4457551 and that does not change the truth just because someone is speaking in error doesn't mean either that the truth is uncertain or that. 197 00:19:19,739.4467551 --> 00:19:28,251.5726476 What the church was teaching as true has changed or was false the whole time, and that doesn't change the fact that it's a grave scandal. 198 00:19:28,331.5716476 --> 00:19:30,986.865321 Like you say, it, it fills people's minds with doubts. 199 00:19:30,986.865321 --> 00:19:32,856.864321 It, it scares them off of the church. 200 00:19:32,856.864321 --> 00:19:35,316.865321 It, it causes all kinds of problems. 201 00:19:35,536.4188549 --> 00:19:43,366.3198549 so I'm not excusing it in that sense, but it also doesn't change a person in authority spouting off it. 202 00:19:43,646.4198549 --> 00:20:06,330.3061896 Against the truths of the faith doesn't change the truths of the faith and I would say to any listener out there who's concerned about that and I'm not going to name names, but you can go on Google and find some prominent Catholic professors, priests and bishops who seem to be saying things that are not licit and like, look, I'm just going to say this. 203 00:20:07,930.3061896 --> 00:20:10,160.3061896 You don't know how this story ends. 204 00:20:11,200.3061896 --> 00:20:24,549.0658272 I can go back to scripture and I can see examples not only in the New Testament but the Old Testament of unfaithful priests and that over time God dealt with them. 205 00:20:25,319.0910862 --> 00:20:29,779.0910862 You know, and I'm not, you know, saying that some, right, it's not, it's not up to me. 206 00:20:29,779.0910862 --> 00:20:30,179.0910862 I'm not. 207 00:20:30,419.0910862 --> 00:20:30,749.0910862 Right. 208 00:20:30,969.0910862 --> 00:20:33,759.0900862 But, you know, you don't know how this is going to turn out. 209 00:20:34,39.0910862 --> 00:20:42,664.2271301 I think, you know, the one that comes to my mind is the sons of Samuel, right in the old Testament, the priest Samuel, the one who anointed David, Yeah. 210 00:20:42,664.2281301 --> 00:20:44,484.2281301 Your sons do not follow in your ways. 211 00:20:44,484.2281301 --> 00:20:44,834.2281301 Yeah. 212 00:20:44,834.2281301 --> 00:20:46,954.2281301 And his, his sons were corrupt. 213 00:20:47,724.2281301 --> 00:20:56,944.2766481 And they were taking the tithes and offerings and they were doing all kinds of other sort of corrupt things and, it was a scandal for a long time and in the end it, God dealt with it. 214 00:20:57,374.2766481 --> 00:21:01,4.2756481 So, you know, for those of you who feel like you turn... 215 00:21:01,494.2766481 --> 00:21:37,564.3065805 On the internet and you scroll through the news and you go Father so and so or bishop so and so or professor so and so is saying these crazy things and it really distresses me what's happened to the church Aren't we supposed to be faithful to the truth and to the dogmas and the doctrines? Yep Yeah, but and and but be patient because you don't know how this turns out and the wheel of history grinds slowly And I think you bringing up this issue both helps to clarify something about these first two categories and also as a good segue to the next thing we're going to talk about the next set of things we'll talk about in terms of clarifying what we've already talked about. 216 00:21:37,824.7791424 --> 00:21:46,124.0438396 this speaks to the source of Dogmas or of infallible doctrines, dogmas, as we said, are something that's divinely revealed. 217 00:21:46,398.2414332 --> 00:21:48,898.2404332 doctrines are derived from those divinely revealed things. 218 00:21:48,898.2414332 --> 00:22:00,289.0038317 And so the obvious question there is who decided that this was divinely revealed, or that it follows, reasonably from divine revelation and what it says in this oath and what is true is that it's, it's the church. 219 00:22:00,644.0038317 --> 00:22:24,564.6134374 Big C in the sense of this is something that's been defined, by the universal creeds of the church or by an ecumenical council or by the Pope teaching, with his full authority, not just any old thing he says, which we'll get to, because that gets to our, one of our other categories, but this isn't just Father Father Jim, who said something once, or even Bishop Jim. 220 00:22:24,684.6134374 --> 00:22:39,644.6134374 Just because Professor Peabody at Georgetown University published a scandalous article, or just because Father Martinez runs around saying things that seem to contradict the doctrines of the church, or just because Bishop Butterpants Published an article. 221 00:22:39,654.6134374 --> 00:22:40,884.6134374 These names are getting weirder and weirder. 222 00:22:40,884.6134374 --> 00:22:41,134.6134374 Yeah. 223 00:22:42,174.6134374 --> 00:23:07,809.5762662 Well as the sun sets and and I enjoy my hot toddy here i'm, i'm getting a little more creative but uh, look But I would introduce another d You talked about doctrine and dogma and doctrine and there's another d that's at play here and that's discipline And the the discipline of god of the discipline of the church sometimes grinds slowly if you look at church history look at the Aryan heresy, of the 4th century. 224 00:23:07,809.5762662 --> 00:23:12,629.5762662 It took a hundred years, a hundred and fifty years for that to be, work itself out. 225 00:23:13,149.5762662 --> 00:23:19,599.5762662 History grinds slowly, and the Catholic Church is 2, 000 years old, and things are not always going to be resolved. 226 00:23:19,856.3638041 --> 00:23:23,238.4197564 In, five years or ten years or a hundred years. 227 00:23:23,488.4197564 --> 00:23:25,78.4197564 Okay, so I've interrupted you enough. 228 00:23:25,328.4197564 --> 00:23:27,328.4197564 Dogma, doctrine, go. 229 00:23:27,428.4187564 --> 00:23:34,565.8326488 Okay, and so the third part of this oath, I'm glad you brought up the word discipline, because I think that's, that's a good, word to have in mind when we get to this third part. 230 00:23:35,105.8112265 --> 00:23:46,740.8112265 so it says, Moreover, I adhere with religious submission of will and intellect to the teachings which either the Roman pontiff, so that's a pope, Or the College of Bishops enunciate when they exercise their authentic magisterium. 231 00:23:46,760.8112265 --> 00:23:52,820.8112265 So that's them teaching officially, even if they do not intend to proclaim these teachings by a definite act. 232 00:23:53,210.8102265 --> 00:24:01,240.8102265 So this is something that a legitimate authority in the church, so the Pope or the College of Bishops, is asserting not definitively. 233 00:24:01,490.8112265 --> 00:24:06,751.5950473 So this could be a disciplinary measure, or, as, as you mentioned that word. 234 00:24:06,751.5950473 --> 00:24:10,141.5940473 So this is, we think that this position over here. 235 00:24:10,456.5950473 --> 00:24:33,645.2857447 Seem shady don't entertain that Or it could be this is a this is a theological idea that is not divine revelation or hasn't been defined by the church But this is my opinion as your bishop or as your Pope and I teach this And it's not contrary to the dogma or doctrine and I'm teaching this And so, the, phrase used here is, religious submission of will and intellect. 236 00:24:33,655.2857447 --> 00:24:35,735.2857447 So this is, this is a matter of authority. 237 00:24:35,735.2857447 --> 00:24:46,340.0891073 This is, I'm submitting myself to the authority if they're teaching something that, that's reasonably under the, umbrella of Catholic teaching, but isn't asserted to be definite. 238 00:24:47,207.4144739 --> 00:24:59,168.709299 And see, this is where I think the rubber meets the road, and the difference with Protestantism, because in a sort of Protestant, sort of theological worldview, I am the ultimate Arbiter. 239 00:25:00,8.709299 --> 00:25:00,158.709299 Yeah. 240 00:25:00,188.709299 --> 00:25:05,508.709299 I had somebody writing, a couple of people write emails and say that, um, they don't like my pronunciations of words. 241 00:25:05,948.709299 --> 00:25:14,118.709299 And my, what I fall back on is that I grew up in the, uh, surfer beach communities of Southern California. 242 00:25:14,118.709299 --> 00:25:21,98.709299 And so, My Southern California drawl, which has been conditioned by moving and traveling all around the world. 243 00:25:21,448.709299 --> 00:25:24,78.708299 Uh, I don't know, I don't know, whatever. 244 00:25:24,118.709299 --> 00:25:28,108.709299 Arbiter, arbitire, tomato, tomato, whatever. 245 00:25:28,348.708299 --> 00:25:31,918.709299 Right, so, so like, I'm the ultimate judge. 246 00:25:32,548.708299 --> 00:25:35,968.708299 Right, because the notion that I can read scripture. 247 00:25:36,528.709299 --> 00:26:07,360.0085262 And decide for myself, right? So so the priesthood of all believers the purpose skewity of scripture all these things that protestantism and calvinism teaches Says I can look at scripture and come to my own decisions And I don't have to submit to authority and you know, you're the chesterton, walking Encyclopedia this quote machine on this but doesn't chesterton have a quote about uh, the the thing about catholicism is acknowledging That there's People who are smarter than you. 248 00:26:07,390.0085262 --> 00:26:07,730.0085262 Sure. 249 00:26:07,790.0085262 --> 00:26:08,130.0085262 Sure. 250 00:26:08,200.0085262 --> 00:26:12,270.0085262 Right? I mean at the end of the day, right? Like I want to believe that I can read my Bible. 251 00:26:12,270.0085262 --> 00:26:13,170.0085262 I can flip it open. 252 00:26:13,170.0085262 --> 00:26:40,900.0085262 I can decide what's right and what's wrong Right, but there's no controlling authority in Protestantism I was talking to somebody about that the other day if you look at classical Protestantism you and I were talking about this Yeah, if you look at classical like confessional Protestantism like in the first hundred years after the Reformation you had these synods like Um, the Westminster Confession or the Augsburg Confession or the Heidelberg Confession, but that kind of thing hasn't happened in 500 years. 253 00:26:41,150.0085262 --> 00:26:54,370.0085262 There is no legitimate confessional authority because any denomination in the United States or Europe right now, and I mean, just go on the news or if you're a part of one, as soon as you come to serious disagreement, the denomination just divides. 254 00:26:54,510.0085262 --> 00:27:06,135.0085262 Nobody has authority in the, you and I have talked about this a lot, that people will write in and say, What is the Protestant position on X? And you go, there is no such thing as a Protestant position because nobody has authority. 255 00:27:06,405.0085262 --> 00:27:21,215.0085262 And I think this is really, really super important about if you're considering Catholicism, it is the humility and the willingness to, what's the phrase? Submit religious submission of will and intellect, religious submission of will and intellect. 256 00:27:21,235.0085262 --> 00:27:44,148.4940761 And, you know, as somebody who spent, you know, my life as an evangelical, Protestant or Calvinist Protestant to say, I am going to acknowledge that there are authorities that I have to religiously submit to, my will and intellect to, even if I don't completely understand or maybe don't even completely agree, I acknowledge that there's legitimate authority. 257 00:27:44,198.4940761 --> 00:27:44,418.4940761 Right. 258 00:27:44,568.4950761 --> 00:27:50,528.4950761 And this, and in this category, this isn't something that is being asserted to be definitive or divinely, divinely revealed. 259 00:27:50,528.4950761 --> 00:27:54,649.166112 So this will, this category would often, touch on disputed. 260 00:27:55,294.228612 --> 00:28:05,994.227612 Okay, so let me throw, let me throw one out that I think is disputed in the Catholic Church and about which there are disputes and it's something that I had to wrestle with, okay? And that's, um, the Catholic position on the death penalty. 261 00:28:06,54.228612 --> 00:28:07,244.228612 I was gonna bring that one up. 262 00:28:07,274.228612 --> 00:28:16,415.3226917 Okay, so here's the deal about the death penalty, right? um, there are still some Catholics who argue because in Catholic tradition there is, or just war theory. 263 00:28:16,585.3226917 --> 00:28:17,925.3226917 Yeah, which are related. 264 00:28:18,75.3226917 --> 00:28:18,885.3226917 Which are related. 265 00:28:19,195.3236917 --> 00:28:48,869.7682774 In which, uh, you can go back to the great Catholic thinkers and doctors of the church, and Thomas Aquinas will defend these things, and then people will say, well, yeah, but the Catholic, and I think one of the things for me about when I entered the Catholic Church, I had several people in my life, right, who said, well, wait a minute, doesn't Catholicism require you to, you know, kind of let go of the death penalty? And I said, well, I don't know for sure if it does, but it seems to, and last few popes have certainly seemed to say that. 266 00:28:48,899.7682774 --> 00:28:54,249.7672774 And I said, you know, it seems to me part of the religious submission of my will. 267 00:28:54,327.0712217 --> 00:28:57,507.0283771 an intellect to say, you know, I gotta let this one go. 268 00:28:58,454.2642178 --> 00:29:40,132.6269073 when I am inclined to say I think maybe the death penalty or just war in certain instances are legitimate I think at a certain point I I had to say, you know What to become catholic is to be humble enough to say I maybe not only do I not have all the answers but sometimes Maybe the answers that I think I have I have to be willing to submit to a higher authority Yeah and that doesn't mean that there can't still be debate and dispute about these kinds of things It does it just means that I'm not allowed to you know Blow up the conversation and leave the table flip the table over there and these issues are not dogma So so I think this is where Protestants get confused. 269 00:29:40,442.6269073 --> 00:29:45,332.6279073 So the Catholic position on the death penalty or whatever Is not dogmatic. 270 00:29:45,762.6279073 --> 00:29:51,2.6279073 That's not part of that level of dogma that is required to not asserted it infallibly. 271 00:29:51,12.6279073 --> 00:29:56,392.6279073 The church is reasoning with scripture and with the deposit of the faith, but it has not made a definition on this. 272 00:29:56,402.6279073 --> 00:30:12,472.6279073 If you think about this like a series of dominoes or implications, like you can say, okay, here's the first thing that pushes the first domino, right? And that's, those, those are those dogmatic truths, right? Jesus was the son of God, the second person of the Trinity, died on the cross, rose on the third day. 273 00:30:13,24.1470309 --> 00:30:14,114.1470309 That's the first thing. 274 00:30:14,314.1470309 --> 00:30:31,595.9549911 Then there is a series of dominoes that if that is true, if then, if then, if then, and when you get to things like the death penalty or whatever you're three or two or three or four or five or however many degrees removed from that. 275 00:30:31,895.9549911 --> 00:30:51,877.0110629 So in a sense, I'm called to submit maybe to my To my bishop, and not contradict the bishop of the diocese of which I am a member but i'm not required to believe it in the same way That I believe that jesus rose on Easter Sun. 276 00:30:52,77.0110629 --> 00:30:52,337.0110629 Right. 277 00:30:52,527.0110629 --> 00:30:56,158.063298 And the phrase here is adherence with, submission of will. 278 00:30:56,448.063298 --> 00:30:58,308.063298 And so that's not the same as assent. 279 00:30:59,318.063298 --> 00:30:59,648.063298 Right. 280 00:31:00,18.063298 --> 00:31:00,308.063298 Right. 281 00:31:00,548.063298 --> 00:31:05,138.063298 I made, I may humbly disagree, but I also humbly obey. 282 00:31:06,128.063298 --> 00:31:35,378.136075 And you know, I think this is really the hard thing I think for a lot of people about coming into Catholicism and it, frankly, it's hard for a lot of Catholics who are maybe not, maybe living their Catholic faith, who say, I just My positions, and if you look at things like contraception, I saw a statistic today on the internet that 89% of practicing Catholics, in the American church disagree with the church's position on contraception. 283 00:31:35,538.135075 --> 00:31:36,178.136075 I knew it was high. 284 00:31:36,188.135075 --> 00:31:37,168.136075 I didn't realize that high. 285 00:31:37,567.6906089 --> 00:31:42,157.6906089 you know, and I don't know statistics or stats or stats or stats, right? But it's, it's right. 286 00:31:42,187.6906089 --> 00:31:46,626.7354098 It's something crazy like that and so again, that's not the same as believing Jesus. 287 00:31:47,86.7354098 --> 00:31:54,40.7773739 Rose on Easter Sunday morning, but it is a, an act of submission to the authority of the church. 288 00:31:54,100.7773739 --> 00:31:59,350.7773739 Well, and, and just to be clear, cause we talked about that issue at the level of doctrine. 289 00:31:59,350.7773739 --> 00:32:05,896.9385572 So that, uh, contraception is not in this third category where there's legitimate dispute, but you should submit. 290 00:32:05,996.9385572 --> 00:32:06,546.9385572 Correct. 291 00:32:06,696.9395572 --> 00:32:08,916.9395572 But that's in the previous category. 292 00:32:08,926.9395572 --> 00:32:14,736.9395572 So going down those domino chain, but there are things where I go, you know, even if I'm struggling with it. 293 00:32:15,216.9395572 --> 00:32:27,114.7764935 There is a component of Catholicism that is basically understanding that I, there's apostolic authority, the church, and I, and what was the phrase? Religious submission of will and intellect. 294 00:32:27,494.7764935 --> 00:32:29,344.7764935 Okay, I've interrupted you enough, keep going. 295 00:32:29,394.7764935 --> 00:32:31,934.7764935 Nope, that's good because we're actually done with the oath. 296 00:32:31,974.7764935 --> 00:32:36,484.7764935 If you're going to become a bishop or a seminary rector or something like that, your oath is done. 297 00:32:36,484.7764935 --> 00:32:38,464.7764935 Those are the things that you've promised. 298 00:32:38,841.9209717 --> 00:32:40,671.9209717 but there's another category of stuff. 299 00:32:41,76.9209717 --> 00:32:43,206.9209717 People in the church say we'll get to that. 300 00:32:43,256.9209717 --> 00:32:52,973.6628282 Yeah, but i've interrupted you so many times So why don't you just we want to sum up? I want you to read that oath Okay, just we'll go straight through without me interrupting you. 301 00:32:52,973.6628282 --> 00:33:08,699.4894936 Okay So from the top with firm faith, I also believe everything contained in the word of god whether written or handed down in tradition Which the church either by a solemn judgment or by the ordinary and universal magisterium? sets forth to be believed as divinely revealed. 302 00:33:08,749.4894936 --> 00:33:09,759.4894936 So that's dogma. 303 00:33:09,829.4894936 --> 00:33:11,29.4894936 It's divinely revealed. 304 00:33:11,589.4894936 --> 00:33:13,569.4894936 We know that the church has defined that. 305 00:33:14,699.4894936 --> 00:33:21,829.4894936 I also firmly accept and hold each and everything definitely proposed by the church regarding teaching on faith and morals. 306 00:33:21,999.4894936 --> 00:33:23,659.4894936 So that's infallible doctrine. 307 00:33:23,989.4894936 --> 00:33:31,761.9509041 It's arrived at by reflection on dogmas and It is asserted to be infallible by the church. 308 00:33:32,741.9509041 --> 00:33:46,741.9509041 Moreover, I adhere with religious submission of will and intellect to the teachings which either the Roman Pontiff or the College of Bishops enunciate when they exercise their authentic magisterium, even if they do not intend to proclaim these teachings by a definite act. 309 00:33:47,61.9519041 --> 00:33:57,882.1978961 And so those are teachings sometimes on, issues that are at, are under dispute, but I submit to the competent authority. 310 00:34:00,542.1978961 --> 00:34:02,309.6322109 Take us into the next, Roman numeral. 311 00:34:02,359.6322109 --> 00:34:02,609.6322109 Yeah. 312 00:34:02,839.6322109 --> 00:34:14,229.6312109 So this actually, even though all of those categories are much more important, this is probably where the rubber hits the road for a lot of people, especially in our media saturated world. 313 00:34:14,534.8120994 --> 00:34:23,115.4617129 this is, stuff my priest said, or stuff that the bishop said, or stuff that the pope said on an airplane, or that article that I read. 314 00:34:23,327.4048803 --> 00:34:24,227.4048803 this is opinion. 315 00:34:24,562.4048803 --> 00:34:34,272.4048803 Uh, this is opinion on theology or morals or ethics or prudential judgments on how to live out the teachings of the church. 316 00:34:34,622.4048803 --> 00:34:46,12.4048803 Before you get there, isn't there something between those? And that is, things that are worthy of belief? Right, so what I'm thinking of is things like, that we get a lot of questions about. 317 00:34:46,672.4048803 --> 00:34:47,152.4048803 So... 318 00:34:47,582.4048803 --> 00:35:07,502.9451431 If I become Catholic, do I have to believe that the Virgin of Mary appeared at Fatima? Or, do I have to believe that she appeared to Juan Diego, Right? I mean, those are, there's certain kinds of things That are recommended for belief, but not required, right? Yeah, thank you for introducing that because that is, that does precede what I was going to talk about. 319 00:35:07,552.9461431 --> 00:35:09,502.9461431 And so, this isn't in the oath either. 320 00:35:09,502.9461431 --> 00:35:12,902.9461431 This isn't something that anybody would be required by the church to believe. 321 00:35:13,92.9461431 --> 00:35:19,822.9461431 But this is something that the competent authorities in the church have looked at and have said there's nothing contrary to dogma or doctrine here. 322 00:35:20,82.4627528 --> 00:35:22,122.4627528 this seems legit. 323 00:35:22,142.4627528 --> 00:35:23,512.4627528 It seems like there's nothing... 324 00:35:23,947.4627528 --> 00:35:25,897.4627528 Problematic or dangerous here. 325 00:35:26,407.4627528 --> 00:35:37,923.6459802 Uh, you're not required to believe it, but we neither do we forbid you from believing it? so that that would be things like apparitions or miracles Or certain pious opinions. 326 00:35:37,923.6459802 --> 00:35:47,858.6469802 So let's give a couple practical examples saints Okay, so when you like you have a you have a daughter named lucy named after saint lucy Right? Yep. 327 00:35:48,158.6469802 --> 00:35:48,988.6469802 And so St. 328 00:35:48,988.6469802 --> 00:35:58,475.5220601 Lucy is a little bit of a, little bit of a mysterious figure in the early church, right? In the sense that, you know, there's, there's attribution to her, but we don't know that much about her from a historical record. 329 00:35:58,775.5220601 --> 00:36:01,477.6573779 And yet the church says, well, Um, there was St. 330 00:36:01,477.6573779 --> 00:36:06,351.6920238 Lucie, and, we are recommended to believe in the stories about St. 331 00:36:06,351.6920238 --> 00:36:06,671.6920238 Lucie. 332 00:36:06,681.6920238 --> 00:36:12,531.6920238 So there's actually two categories at play here, because a canonization is an infallible declaration. 333 00:36:12,531.6920238 --> 00:36:15,161.6920238 So if the church tells me that this person is a saint... 334 00:36:15,506.6920238 --> 00:36:32,36.9223079 That I do need to submit to and believe that I need to believe all the stories but all of the stories not necessarily that That's where we come to the the prudential judgments of the the church authorities or of historians or what have you and so Yeah is st. 335 00:36:32,36.9223079 --> 00:36:32,851.8223079 Lucia st. 336 00:36:33,1.9223079 --> 00:36:33,901.9223079 Yes, she is the church. 337 00:36:33,901.9223079 --> 00:36:34,491.9223079 And that's infallible. 338 00:36:34,491.9223079 --> 00:36:36,331.9223079 The church asserts that infallibly. 339 00:36:36,331.9223079 --> 00:36:38,501.9223079 But all of the stories attributed to her. 340 00:36:38,511.9223079 --> 00:36:45,151.9223079 Are all of the details about her martyrdom or about, there are, there are legends that I love about, uh, apparitions of St. 341 00:36:45,151.9223079 --> 00:36:45,611.9223079 Lucie. 342 00:36:45,661.9213079 --> 00:36:45,911.9223079 Oh yeah. 343 00:36:46,121.9223079 --> 00:36:47,991.9223079 Does the church require me to believe those? No. 344 00:36:48,71.9213079 --> 00:36:48,341.9213079 Okay. 345 00:36:48,431.9223079 --> 00:36:49,471.9213079 It doesn't require me to believe those. 346 00:36:49,481.9213079 --> 00:37:32,317.8691193 Okay, secondly, Marian apparitions because this is a huge deal for for protestants who want to convert to catholicism Do I really need to believe that the virgin mary appeared at such and such a time in such and such a place And I think I thought one time I know I taught a lane class about this, but I don't uh, Lakeshore academy of evangelization That cory and I both work at but uh, I don't I think we did a podcast episode about this way back whenever yeah, we have talked about it before but but there's this whole thing about marian apparitions and that all of them are sort of recommended for belief, but not required belief, right? And this gets into a another way of articulating this that's sort of parallel to the structure we've been talking about. 347 00:37:32,347.8691193 --> 00:37:37,441.3056592 And that's if something is, part of public revelation or private revelation. 348 00:37:37,471.3056592 --> 00:37:37,801.3056592 Yes. 349 00:37:37,871.3056592 --> 00:37:41,741.3066592 And so public revelation would fit into that dogma category. 350 00:37:41,741.3066592 --> 00:37:45,322.0089227 So this is the, Sacred scriptures and the sacred tradition. 351 00:37:45,322.0089227 --> 00:37:48,42.0089227 This is something that's dogmatic and required to be believed. 352 00:37:48,72.0089227 --> 00:37:49,412.0089227 That's public revelation. 353 00:37:49,412.0089227 --> 00:38:12,241.1629898 That's for everybody private revelation is something that is not required for belief that god may have legitimately revealed it to you like The virgin mary may have appeared to you Um, and there are cases in which the church has ruled that it's very likely that she did Um, there are the famous ones like fatima or lords by the way for those of you who haven't listened to that Previous episode or taking that class. 354 00:38:12,731.1629898 --> 00:38:15,841.1629898 I think we went through and there's there's only like 11. 355 00:38:16,31.1629898 --> 00:38:20,81.1629898 There aren't many No, yeah, like people think that the catholic church is full of all these things. 356 00:38:20,81.1629898 --> 00:38:32,859.2436925 There's only like 10 or 11 marion apparitions in 2000 years that the church says this is worthy or highly recommended and that's because the the church authorities have Investigated they've gone through the evidence. 357 00:38:32,869.2436925 --> 00:38:44,539.2436925 They've said we think this looks legit You are welcome to believe that this is legit But we cannot and will not require you to assent to this because it's not part of public revelation. 358 00:38:44,539.2436925 --> 00:38:45,269.2436925 It's not dogmatic. 359 00:38:45,289.2436925 --> 00:38:48,689.2436925 It's not dogmatic, it's not doctrinal, and it's not required for salvation. 360 00:38:48,719.2436925 --> 00:38:48,969.2436925 Right. 361 00:38:49,739.2436925 --> 00:38:50,539.2426925 Okay, keep going. 362 00:38:50,799.2436925 --> 00:38:56,11.0225995 Yeah, so, so there's that category that would fall under the ones that are officially enunciated. 363 00:38:56,281.0235995 --> 00:39:12,736.0107622 In that in that oath, and then we get to the one that I was going into about opinion, the thing your priest said, the thing your bishop said, professor Peabody or Father Martinez or Bishop McButterpants, the Pope talking when he's, exhausted after three days in outer Mongolia or whatever. 364 00:39:12,746.0107622 --> 00:39:15,696.0107622 Pope's on an airplane and he starts going on about plastic. 365 00:39:15,716.0107622 --> 00:39:18,706.0107622 Okay, I'm gonna put it on the table because there's a lot of people. 366 00:39:18,936.0107622 --> 00:39:29,696.0107622 I think that most of our listeners, if they are considering Catholicism or not Catholics, we, our audience skews to people who are more theologically conservative. 367 00:39:29,846.0107622 --> 00:39:32,676.0107622 But not necessarily politically conservative. 368 00:39:32,886.0107622 --> 00:39:44,536.0107622 Not necessarily, but I'm just saying theologically that's, and I don't think that we necessarily have a lot of people who are like radical progressives who disagree with the teachings of the church that are like, you know, listening to this podcast. 369 00:39:44,836.0107622 --> 00:39:47,836.0107622 So what I'm going to say is that I think I know from a lot of you. 370 00:39:48,211.0107622 --> 00:40:00,451.0107622 That you get concerned because you go, I read in a news article that Pope Francis was on an airplane and he was on the way, you know, home from wherever on the airplane. 371 00:40:00,471.0107622 --> 00:40:05,271.0117622 And he said, X, Y, Z, and, you know, and I know I'm being. 372 00:40:05,331.0107622 --> 00:40:13,221.0107622 Probably a little bit facetious here, um, but it's like, you know, Pope Francis is against plastic straws because they'll kill the sea turtles. 373 00:40:13,731.0107622 --> 00:40:27,741.0107622 And if I become Catholic, do I have to believe every time that Pope Francis goes on about the plastic straws, am I sort of required as a Catholic to, to make that an article of faith? What say you Corey? Well, the short and simple answer is no. 374 00:40:28,26.0107622 --> 00:40:45,456.0107622 Um, you are not required and I know I'm being kind of facetious, but well, well, and the facetiousness I, I, I know is yeah, relevant to the situation, but this, this would be just as relevant if it was however many years ago, 30 years ago, and this was John Paul the second saying something that you didn't agree with. 375 00:40:45,476.0097622 --> 00:40:58,6.0107622 So if you, for those of you who've ever watched HBO series, the young Pope, if the next Pope is pious the 13th and he's some uber conservative and he starts going on about, I don't know, whatever. 376 00:40:58,86.0107622 --> 00:40:58,376.0107622 Hmm. 377 00:40:58,531.0107622 --> 00:41:14,891.0097622 And it's super conservative stuff, right? I mean, I guess it comes down to what are, if the Pope gases on and gives opinions, how, how obligated are we to believe in that? So if this is a matter of prudential judgment, so this is taking the teachings of the church. 378 00:41:14,941.0097622 --> 00:41:19,11.0107622 So, I mean, let's go with plastic straws because that was the one you brought up. 379 00:41:19,327.1892841 --> 00:41:38,603.0747616 based on, Dogma and doctrine, we know that God created the universe, God wants us to be good stewards of creation, we ought to, treat creation with respect, and part of that is treating it in a way that doesn't harm our neighbor or harms the environment in a way that isn't helpful. 380 00:41:38,894.8518158 --> 00:41:48,854.8518158 I'm not articulating it terribly clearly, but like we, we know those things and those, those, those things are, those things have like, like when we go back to the last episode about knowledge, those things are things that we can say. 381 00:41:49,114.8518158 --> 00:41:51,792.2264024 But then you, then you make an implication from that. 382 00:41:51,802.2264024 --> 00:41:55,201.8510224 Therefore, I recommend that the government enact. 383 00:41:55,216.8520224 --> 00:41:57,366.8520224 a policy of having only paper straws. 384 00:41:57,849.3398983 --> 00:42:05,927.7703064 that is, I know we're being kind of a little bit silly here, but what that is, is now traipsing into prudential judgments. 385 00:42:06,217.7703064 --> 00:42:14,413.2408593 And so that is making proposals or reasoning to conclusions based on the data in a non authoritative way. 386 00:42:14,563.2408593 --> 00:42:15,953.2408593 And that doesn't mean it's wrong. 387 00:42:15,963.2408593 --> 00:42:17,213.2408593 Like maybe the Pope is right. 388 00:42:17,588.2408593 --> 00:42:20,348.2408593 I don't actually know if the Pope has said plastic straw should be banned. 389 00:42:20,348.2408593 --> 00:42:22,468.2408593 I know, I'm being, I'm being intentionally facetious. 390 00:42:22,468.2408593 --> 00:42:24,688.2408593 But if Pope Francis did say that, maybe he's right. 391 00:42:24,938.2408593 --> 00:42:27,488.2398593 I'm not arguing that he, I'm not arguing that he isn't right. 392 00:42:27,738.2408593 --> 00:42:31,478.2408593 But I am arguing that you wouldn't be required to believe that. 393 00:42:31,478.2408593 --> 00:42:34,38.2408593 But as a matter of conscience, I can listen to him. 394 00:42:34,38.2408593 --> 00:42:41,728.2408593 And I do want to say this, because I told you before we started this recorder, I had seen a quote the other day from Aquinas, but I didn't save it. 395 00:42:42,568.2408593 --> 00:42:46,188.2408593 But Aquinas was talking about the respect and obedience that we owe the Pope. 396 00:42:47,168.2408593 --> 00:42:54,939.2408593 And for those of you who say, wow, you know, I don't like Pope Francis, or if the next Pope is super conservative, I don't like, you know, what his opinions mm-hmm. 397 00:42:55,18.2408593 --> 00:42:56,48.2408593 about, you know, this and that. 398 00:42:57,208.2408593 --> 00:43:03,358.2408593 You know, Aquinas says, look, basically it makes a distinction that I think a lot of us can understand the distinction between the office and the man. 399 00:43:03,628.2408593 --> 00:43:03,718.2408593 Mm-hmm. 400 00:43:03,958.2408593 --> 00:43:04,258.2408593 right. 401 00:43:04,608.8081739 --> 00:43:10,180.8481564 it's fair to say Thomas Aquinas says the, the man can be flawed. 402 00:43:10,708.3403114 --> 00:43:16,518.3403114 So we can go back in history and say, Hey, during the Renaissance, the Borgia popes were out of control or whatever. 403 00:43:17,28.3403114 --> 00:43:25,461.1911563 And you can say that there's a difference between the man and the man may make as a man, he may make. 404 00:43:25,961.1921563 --> 00:43:55,366.1921563 judgments and have failures and have foibles and frailties and and he comes out of a context, you know, Pope Francis comes from South America and he has a different perspective than A pope from another country or background or whatever, right? That's the man but we owe respect to the office And that's why I will never, have never, will never criticize in any public way on this podcast, on social media, in anything that I do, the Holy Father. 405 00:43:56,125.3523552 --> 00:43:59,835.3533552 I consider the Holy Father, well, I mean, He is the Holy Father. 406 00:43:59,835.3533552 --> 00:44:03,590.2533552 So, in the same way that I owe respect to my earthly Father. 407 00:44:03,817.1147194 --> 00:44:11,517.1147194 so you have the sons of Noah, and after the flood and all that, Noah gets drunk and he's laying, I don't know, naked in a tent, drunk, which is kind of weird. 408 00:44:11,807.1137194 --> 00:44:15,847.1137194 But anyway, one of his sons kind of laughs at him and goes, look dad, he's drunk and naked, you know. 409 00:44:15,847.1137194 --> 00:44:20,293.417368 And then the other sons come in backwards and like lay a, blanket over him or something like that. 410 00:44:20,513.417368 --> 00:44:23,863.418368 Because they show respect of their father even when he... 411 00:44:24,433.418368 --> 00:44:25,563.418368 Yeah, stumbles. 412 00:44:26,183.418368 --> 00:44:57,154.214378 And so again, Thomas Aquinas says we owe respect to the Holy Father and and I should listen, you know, to the pious opinion of the Holy Father, but there's a huge Difference between that and saying the things I am dogmatically required to believe as a Catholic, let me throw out an example for a different Pope earlier in history, just to kind of leave behind some of the baggage of current events that illustrates the fact that there's the Pope isn't always speaking on the same level of authority. 413 00:44:57,894.214378 --> 00:44:58,809.114378 And so, um. 414 00:44:58,809.314378 --> 00:45:01,851.7079594 Pius XII, Pope in the middle of the century. 415 00:45:01,851.7079594 --> 00:45:03,341.7079594 He was Pope during World War II. 416 00:45:03,371.7079594 --> 00:45:05,281.7079594 He survived into the 50s. 417 00:45:05,818.4835872 --> 00:45:22,689.1858507 there are a lot of people who have very strenuous disagreements with the prudential judgments that Pius XII made during the Second World War about what he did and didn't do to try and, negotiate or not negotiate with the Nazis or what he did or didn't do, to protect the Jews in Italy. 418 00:45:22,729.1858507 --> 00:45:23,499.1858507 Like, there's, there's... 419 00:45:23,509.1858507 --> 00:45:26,189.1858507 Or whether or not he cooperated. 420 00:45:26,389.1858507 --> 00:45:31,294.4175612 With the von Stauffenberg plot to assassinate Hitler with, the Dietrich Bonhoeffer. 421 00:45:31,564.4175612 --> 00:45:33,94.431847 So there were, like, just to acknowledge... 422 00:45:33,94.431847 --> 00:45:35,734.4175612 And if you think just war theory is bunk, then that would be bad. 423 00:45:35,734.4175612 --> 00:45:36,14.4175612 Right. 424 00:45:36,14.4175612 --> 00:45:42,531.912569 But what I'm just saying is, it was a very complicated situation and, you know, there were Nazi panzer tanks in St. 425 00:45:42,531.912569 --> 00:45:43,301.912569 Peter's Square. 426 00:45:43,591.912569 --> 00:45:47,621.912569 And the Pope had to make a lot of prudential judgments and he made a lot of calls. 427 00:45:47,881.912569 --> 00:45:50,311.912569 And some of his calls may have been right and some of his calls may have been wrong. 428 00:45:50,311.912569 --> 00:45:50,341.912569 Right. 429 00:45:50,521.912569 --> 00:45:52,351.912569 And so those are prudential judgments. 430 00:45:52,351.912569 --> 00:46:02,397.4854267 That's kind of at the lowest level of the, the Pope speaking with authority in 1950 Pope Pius the 12th defined the dogma of the assumption of our lady into heaven. 431 00:46:02,967.4854267 --> 00:46:06,967.4844267 That is the absolute highest level of authority that a Pope can speak with. 432 00:46:07,187.4844267 --> 00:46:15,317.4854267 It's what we call an ex cathedra statement, which simply means he's speaking as the Bishop from his chair, the cathedra, the Bishop of Rome, who has. 433 00:46:15,622.4854267 --> 00:46:21,172.4854267 The authority to dogmatically define something saying that this is divinely revealed. 434 00:46:21,192.4854267 --> 00:46:31,933.9042173 So you're saying that the same Pope who may have made prudential, judgments, which calls that may have been right, may have been wrong in a very complex, fluid, hysterical situation. 435 00:46:31,963.9032173 --> 00:46:32,203.9032173 Right. 436 00:46:32,263.9042173 --> 00:46:33,133.9042173 Also... 437 00:46:33,498.9042173 --> 00:46:55,8.9042173 Was able to define dogmatic things and by the way for those who are listening who go man The Pope can just make stuff up ex cathedra How many times in 2, 000 years has the spoke Pope spoken ex cathedra and defined something infallibly twice twice? And that doesn't mean that's the only time that has has exercised infallibility No, but but times in history The Pope has just sat in the chair of st. 438 00:46:55,8.9042173 --> 00:47:12,684.3519484 Peter and said I just declared this so for those People who are concerned man, you know, if you become catholic, you have to believe the pope is just going to mix stuff up all the time doesn't happen all the time, because Even in that ex cathedra way of speaking, the Pope's role is to defend the dogma that has been given to the church. 439 00:47:12,954.3519484 --> 00:47:25,40.3001861 I think we're going to have to have another episode where we talk about the role of the papacy in this because, I personally am of the opinion that the Pope's infallible teaching magisterial role is largely defensive. 440 00:47:26,55.3001861 --> 00:47:28,885.2001861 And I think we have talked about that a bit I want to explore that a little bit. 441 00:47:28,885.3001861 --> 00:47:30,305.3001861 Because I think it's largely defensive. 442 00:47:30,305.3001861 --> 00:47:34,285.3001861 In other words, I don't think that the role of the Pope is to make things up. 443 00:47:34,485.3001861 --> 00:47:36,115.3001861 I think it's to defend the Apostle. 444 00:47:36,115.3001861 --> 00:47:37,825.3001861 Well, that's not even just what you think. 445 00:47:37,825.3001861 --> 00:47:38,565.3001861 I'm pretty sure that's... 446 00:47:38,565.4001861 --> 00:47:39,465.3001861 That's Vatican I. 447 00:47:39,465.3001861 --> 00:47:39,885.3001861 That's just true. 448 00:47:39,885.4001861 --> 00:47:42,515.3011861 But I think we should explore that. 449 00:47:42,515.3011861 --> 00:47:44,275.3001861 Because I think people think, well, the Pope... 450 00:47:45,15.3001861 --> 00:47:46,125.3001861 Can just make things up. 451 00:47:46,135.3001861 --> 00:47:56,835.3001861 And I think there are, frankly, I think there are progressive Catholics who hope that Pope Francis will just declare some stuff contrary, like, you know, to the last 2, 000 years. 452 00:47:57,5.3001861 --> 00:47:57,575.2991861 Can't do it. 453 00:47:57,825.2991861 --> 00:48:00,495.3001861 It's largely preserving and defending. 454 00:48:01,200.3001861 --> 00:48:01,820.3001861 Uh, the faith. 455 00:48:01,910.3001861 --> 00:48:02,330.3001861 Yeah, right. 456 00:48:02,360.3001861 --> 00:48:02,670.3001861 Absolutely. 457 00:48:02,710.3001861 --> 00:48:02,990.3001861 Wow. 458 00:48:02,990.3001861 --> 00:48:14,200.3001861 This well, this was this is super fascinating I'm sure that there are people who are out there that like we've only scratched the surface and maybe only prompted further questions But the episode is getting a little bit long So, um, we're gonna stop here. 459 00:48:14,530.3001861 --> 00:48:23,303.1386151 Please write us love your emails and we a lot, you know often just choose the topics of episodes based on your emails. 460 00:48:23,513.1386151 --> 00:48:28,853.1386151 So if there's questions you have, things you 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things. 468 00:49:01,584.0754419 --> 00:49:12,747.6338294 So, please, uh, you can go to, uh, Our website, you can look in the, podcast description, whether you're on Spotify or Apple podcast or whatever, and just click there and it'll take you to a support page. 469 00:49:12,747.6338294 --> 00:49:14,27.6338294 So thank you very much. 470 00:49:14,57.6328294 --> 00:49:15,87.6338294 And thank you, Corey. 471 00:49:15,526.9115968 --> 00:49:17,146.9105968 it is now dark out here. 472 00:49:17,505.8311006 --> 00:49:18,765.8311006 It's pretty much pitch black. 473 00:49:18,795.8311006 --> 00:49:18,885.8311006 Yeah. 474 00:49:19,275.8311006 --> 00:49:21,973.2009816 I'm pretty sure that, I want to believe. 475 00:49:22,493.2009816 --> 00:49:29,63.2009816 I want to that Sasquatch is out here, but I just can't quite convince myself. 476 00:49:29,93.2009816 --> 00:49:30,863.1999816 And the church does not require you to believe that. 477 00:49:31,183.1999816 --> 00:49:31,443.1999816 That's right. 478 00:49:31,543.1999816 --> 00:49:31,763.1999816 Okay. 479 00:49:32,33.1999816 --> 00:49:34,953.2009816 Even if the Pope were to say that he thought Sasquatch was out there. 480 00:49:35,323.2009816 --> 00:49:35,773.2009816 That's right. 481 00:49:36,103.2009816 --> 00:49:36,313.2009816 All right. 482 00:49:36,313.2009816 --> 00:49:36,733.2009816 Thanks a lot Cory. 483 00:49:36,983.2009816 --> 00:49:37,443.2009816 Thank you. 484 00:49:39,469.2669 --> 00:49:40,549.2669 Thank you for listening. 485 00:49:41,119.2669 --> 00:49:52,169.2669 My name is Greg Smith, and if you've enjoyed this podcast, would you please hit the like and subscribe buttons wherever you get your podcasts, and please share it with others. 486 00:49:52,929.2669 --> 00:50:03,269.2669 And if you're curious about the Catholic worldview and faith, the church and its saints, or Catholic history, culture, and art, then visit consideringcatholicism. 487 00:50:03,299.2669 --> 00:50:06,329.2669 com and email me to let me know what you think. 488 00:50:06,919.2659 --> 00:50:09,309.2669 Greg at consideringcatholicism.