Christy4Christ said:
What if someone believes like nearly everything the Church teaches but has problems with certain things? Not issues of major importance but just other areas, namely teachings from the Catechism. Would this mean that they are not good Catholics or that they wouldn't be considered Catholic anymore?
I love this type of challenging thought. Christy, I noticed that you took the "Are you in the right denomination" test on another forum. I decided to do the same, except that on questions where I had a 1% doubt, or kept an open mind, I would punch the answer at slight odds with Catholic doctrine. The test told me I would make a wonderful Evangelical Lutheran, a really good 90% Catholic. Frankly, I don't really know how to be a good 90% of anything. It's this problem I have.
I spent years studying theology; lived in Medugorje for a long time trying to get a proper handle on Mariology, wrote an allegorical book on Mary as Mystical Rose, not at the Vatican teaches who she is (e.g., Fr. Rene Laurentine), but as Mary herself taught it to the visionaries in Medugorje.
Pilate also asked a good question: "What is truth?" As soon as we think we know the answer to that question, as soon as we think all truth is objective, I believe we become as a good many posters I have read in the last few days on CF: self-righteous, narrow-minded, hypocritical, smug and most un-Christlike in their thought, although they love Christ. N.B. This is an observation only: I have a
log in my eye; don't fret over a speck in theirs.
Sometimes I wonder why the historical Jesus was just one of many dying-Gods; Mary just one of many virgins who birthed gods. I wonder if the ancients thought they had God figured out as much as we think we do.