is placed on bad client list.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7952829.stm
What do you think?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7952829.stm
What do you think?
La Femme said:Lire une pareille nouvelle me donne sérieusement envie d'avoir recours à l'apostasie.
(Sorry for the French post in an English thread but I don't know how you say "apostasie" in English)
Regular Guy said:Almost the same: apostate - to forsake one's own religion.
La Femme said:Lire une pareille nouvelle me donne sérieusement envie d'avoir recours à l'apostasie.
(Sorry for the French post in an English thread but I don't know how you say "apostasie" in English)
Regular Guy said:Almost the same: apostate - to forsake one's own religion.
sybaritic said:is placed on bad client list.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7952829.stm
What do you think?
Two cardinals in Europe this week separately spoke of a hypothetical situation in which use of a condom might be justified: when a woman must have sex with someone who is infected with HIV and therefore must protect herself.
And in Mexico City, a bishop said at a news conference Friday that condom use could be a "lesser evil" if employed to prevent AIDS. "If someone is incapable of controlling their instincts . . . then they should do whatever is necessary in order not to infect others," said Felipe Arizmendi, bishop of San Cristobal de las Casas, in far southern Mexico.
The comments followed months of ferment in the church over how to approach AIDS prevention. Last year, the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD) published a paper urging a range of methods to fight AIDS.
"For many in Africa and Asia, sex is often the only commodity people have to exchange for food, school fees, exam results, employment or survival itself in situations of violence," the paper said. "Any strategy that enables a person to move from a higher-risk towards the lower end of the continuum, CAFOD believes, is a valid risk reduction strategy."
"But if we are dealing with someone or a situation in which clearly persons are going to act in harmful ways, say, a prostitute who is going to continue her activities, then one might say, 'Stop. But if you are not going to, at least do this,' " said Luno, who is an adviser to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a Vatican department charged with safeguarding orthodoxy.
One possible avenue for a new condom policy would be a "lesser-of-two-evils" approach. In this regard, condoms could be approved as a means of reducing the instance of danger or sin in cases where someone is bent on having extramarital sex or sex with a spouse while infected with HIV.
Rodriguez Luno -- without endorsing a new policy -- placed the issue in the context of the Ten Commandments. Sex outside of marriage already breaks the Sixth Commandment, which forbids adultery, he said. "Infecting someone with AIDS would also mean sinning against the Fifth Commandment -- you shall not kill," he said. "Condoms would diminish that danger."
The church says it cannot decide to save the fetus over the pregnant woman any more that it can decide to save the pregnant woman over the fetus. However futile or preordained the outcome might be, one must follow a course of action that tries to save both.
While this has a certain philosophical elegance, it is a death sentence for the woman.
Fisichella understands and seems to accept this position. He reaffirms that abortion is an “intrinsically wicked act” but suggests that under certain circumstances it might be the lesser of two evils. He accepts that the girl's life was in danger and asks the important ethical question: how are we to act in such a case? It is, he says, “an arduous decision for the physician and for the moral law.” He goes on: “The conscience of the physician finds itself alone when forced to decide the best thing to do.” Is he suggesting that in spite of the church’s position that objectively abortion is always wrong, the individual has some latitude in deciding when it might be the lesser of two evils and a physician might subjectively in good conscience decide that abortion was morally justified in extreme cases? And, what I ask is an extreme case.
While in the Archbishop’s mind abortion rarely presents a life against life dilemma, the fact that he acknowledges any moral discretion for physicians is extremely important. In a Latin American context, where abortion is increasingly being decriminalized (Mexico City, Colombia in the last two years) physicians are carefully considering their options. In much of the developing world the situation faced by the young Brazilian child is not so rare. More than a half million women a year die in childbirth; some from botched abortions, but many because they could not get an abortion in high risk pregnancies. If doctors had some sense that some, high in the hierarchy, recognized that these situations are moral dilemmas in which conscience must decide what is right or wrong, they might decide that they can provide abortion services. And of course this is what Cardinal Cardoso Sobrinho (of Brazil) wants to prevent.
Corleone said:It's sad to see all these politically correct (and mentally deficient) "journalists" so shamefully distorting the Holy Father's words. He never declared that using a condom gives AIDS, as I heard on CKOI and Energy.
What do they expect from Benedictus XVI to recommend to millions of people who don't have access to clean water and eat once every two days to do? When they feel the need to bang the wife of their neighbour, go to the nearest Jean Coutu to buy a dozen of Trojans, register to Merb, and not forget posting a review with as many details as possible?
For God's sake, he's the Pope! not the organizer of a Gay pride or a Love parade!
It makes me seriously wonder who is the most inconcious and criminal in this story? The Catholics or the left-wing political lobbies?
There's none so deaf as those who don't want to hear.
Corleone said:It makes me seriously wonder who is the most inconcious and criminal in this story? The Catholics or the left-wing political lobbies?
johnhenrygalt said:Jesus Christ, why should anyone give a shit what the pope says.
If you aren't Catholic, his words are irrelevant to you. If you are Catholic, nothing the Pope said is new. This has been the Catholic Church's position for decades. It reflects Catholic doctrine. If you don't like it - why do you stay in a church you oppose. You can leave the church - you won't be burned at the stake and you won't go to hell, purgatory or any other make believe place invented by the chuch.
If people simply stopped listening to the Pope, the Bishops and the priests, stopped going to church and most importantly, stopped donating money to the church, the pope and the church would disappear all on their own.
Poker King said:The truth of the matter is that the greatest abuse of children in the US is done by teachers and not clergy.
PK
Merlot said:Hello JohnHenry,
In spite of the brutal history behind so many popes, bishops, priests and all of the rest of so much of the Catholic Church, which I am extremely well aware of haven take a number of very high level college classes on the subject, the Church has been just as positive too. So everyone needs to stop acting like Catholicism equals evil itself. I may be a lapsed Catholic, but that doesn't mean I or any else should just play totally ignorant. There are over 1.1 billion Catholics in the world, the largest of the Christian religions by far, and though so much about the religion may be disagreeable it does a tremendous good in the world. And, as for all the Protestant religions, their attempt at reform is a total failure. Their churches eventually adopted all the flaws of the Catholic Church with few improvements...if much worth note. Or haven't you noticed all the money-grubbing, sexually perverse, homosexuals, child-abusing, and adulterous leaders in their ranks. Not to mention endless executions like witch burnings, beheadings for heresy and many other so-called "crimes", and the attempted slaughter of whole races. At least I have never known the Catholic clergy to fake miraculous cures on television for money. Moral perfection doesn't exist, and the closest examples like the Quakers get few followers. Such is the "pure Christian nature" of people.
really,
Merlot