Domina Nostra
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I think the characterization may be a little unfair of the "new age" type that may be fighting to remake the church. Let's be honest, the "teachings" of the church have changed over time. While some would like to believe current interpretation has been in stone for 2000 years, that's just not true. Marriage in the clergy was once accepted. The death penalty stance just changed.
The thing is Jesus, Paul, Peter, etc. didn't address everything explicitly. Some of those things were just non-debatable and unthinkable within the tradition, like bestiality (to use the most extreme example). Other things were not addressed directly because they had no historical antecedent, but the eventual rule flowed naturally and inevitably from consistently held principals: like the modern prohibition on porn flows from teachings on lust, chastity, sex outside of marriage prostitution, etc.
Other teachings are a bit more difficult. Slavery for example, is not a narrow, easily defined topic. You have purely evil forms like Louisiana chattel slavery, or Bablylonain slave mines. Then you have "softer" forms, like a Roman owning a Greek doctor who got into a financial predicament until the doctor can buy back his freedom. The Church never condoned the idea that some people, i.e., masters, were actually born superior to their slaves, and saw the slaves as potential spiritual equals. Further, they did not condone the idea that masters were exempt from certain moral prohibitions (stealing, abusing, adultery), just because they were a slave owner. Nor dis they agree that slaves have no claim on justice-- they are children of God like everyone else, and they were preached to accordingly. So chattel slavery was always out.
But the supposedly "softer" arrangement where somebody "owned" the right to fruit of someone else's labor, was just seen as kind of a background fact--one that made sense in a historical era when you had to rely on rich people around you--not a "government" safety net which didn't exist--when things went wrong. And just like its a fact that you have to answer to the government regarding taxes, educating your children, disposing wastes, etc.--you aren't "free" in those regards--its not morally unthinkable that there are some occasions where another is allowed to claim the fruits of your work in return for paying off your debts and keeping you fed and sheltered.
The fact that Catholics get sloppy and talk too narrowly or too broadly at times about slavery doesn't change that. It was just how things were. The Church opposes it wholesale now, but really more as a matter of intellectual convenience and rhetorical savvy. You predictably lose any moral authority you may bring to a situation if you give an inch on that topic. It is extremely easy to say, "You heard it with your own ears, ladies and gentlemen! my opponent supports slavery!" Making the intellectual distinction is a losing cause. And there is no need for the "softer" form these days (thank God!), so why fight for something that is irrelevant anyway? Nevertheless, one can imagine a situation where you were evangelizing some obscure tribe and found out that the matriarch of the town "owned" some of her kin for some purposes within their tribe. Depending on the arrangement, you can imagine it wouldn't be seen as an insurmountable impediment to her conversion. It would be seen as something that needed to get worked out in due time.
Celibacy has also never been taught as absolutely required. However, it is taught as superior by both Jesus and Paul. It also a huge sign of contradiction to the world, and getting rid of it is going to have all kinds of affects, both anticipated and unanticipated. Spiritual as well as temporal. It's not something that you just impose or don't impose depending on organizational needs--especially those articulated by a class who may be guilt of creating the conditions that have created the need . Christianity is a religion, and these decisions have spiritual overtones. But no one credible is arguing that it is required by God.
The death penalty issue is just a case where the Pope is trying to impose his personal view on the rest of the Church, in line with the trend in modern theology (JPII and BXVI may agree?). Whether the majority of Catholics and theologians agree with him or not can't withstand the fact that the Church has taught THE EXACT OPPOSITE in the past. So either he is wrong, or the Church was wrong. But if it is the latter is true, it opens the door on the Church being wrong about the Pope'a authority as well. Long story short, the Pope logically can't logically appeal to Church authority to undermine a Church teaching. He either undermines himself, or both. The only alternative is that he is a living oracle that brings us new teachings. But that is terrifying and definitely NOT Catholicism.
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