I am Catholic, and the pope is Catholic, but he's a modernist Jesuit. He says a lot of things that are at the very least painfully ambiguous, and he makes a lot of decisions that are questionable.
However, the cope is only infallible on matters of faith and morals and only when he is speaking ex cathedra which this Pope has not done. So all his decisions even the important ones or ones that could be viewed as a radical are simply the choices of the bishop of Rome acting a merely as a bishop and not as the head of The Universal Church.
True enough. So this pope has decided never to invoke infallibility and to simply promulgate as much ambiguity as possible to undermine confidence in Christian morality.
I am Catholic, and the pope is Catholic, but he's a modernist Jesuit. He says a lot of things that are at the very least painfully ambiguous, and he makes a lot of decisions that are questionable.
However, the cope is only infallible on matters of faith and morals and only when he is speaking ex cathedra which this Pope has not done. So all his decisions even the important ones or ones that could be viewed as a radical are simply the choices of the bishop of Rome acting a merely as a bishop and not as the head of The Universal Church.
True enough. So this pope has decided never to invoke infallibility and to simply promulgate as much ambiguity as possible to undermine confidence in Christian morality.