In an interview... Bishop Vincenzo Paglia claimed a decisive role in the dissolution of the John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family and its replacement by a new academic entity, as well as in the radical transformation of the Pontifical Academy for Life. He also made clear that these interventions were intended to bring about a profound paradigm shift, which—for the first time—he explicitly acknowledged as affecting not only the pastoral sphere but the doctrinal one as well.According to Paglia, this “very profound” reform entailed, above all, a rethinking of the very concept of natural law. Paglia accused the John Paul II Institute of advancing a conception of natural law understood as a set of immutable principles from which moral norms are deduced. He proposed, instead, that natural law must be grounded in an ongoing historical discernment of subjective and cultural experience. In this perspective, a “theology within history and within people’s lives” must replace what he characterized as the late Institute’s “armchair theology.”
The short quote should suffice to show that this is not a debate limited to the Catholic Church. It is the cultural debate of the last several generations in the West.
+Paglia may as well argue that rain should fall UP. Of course, then he would look like the fool he really is; so instead, he goes with the flow, as does Trump.
ReplyDeleteThe important question: will Pp Leo speak loudly AND carry a big stick?
natural law must be grounded in an ongoing historical discernment of subjective and cultural experience.
ReplyDeleteIn other words, like the Left's view of ethics and morality, natural law is whatever is convenient to the moment.
Eric Hines
The word "grounded" is ironic in this context, because that is the last thing it is. Though that may be an intentional comforting term placed careful to lull the faithful.
ReplyDelete