Today there is a New York Times article about the Pope's waning popularity and isolation. It doesn't bother me at all, nor does it worry me. The article quotes Fr. James Martin in an apparent reference to the 'Dubia Brothers' request for clarification ...
As I've said before - these people and their friends on social media and in Catholic media generate the confusion, not the Pope.
Catholic doctrine and the means of Eternal Salvation has not changed one iota for me or for anyone else. The Pope has never taught that it has, nor will he ever do so.
It is the enemies of the Church and the misled enemies of the Pope who are generating confusion in the Church.
Pope Francis is indeed a 'voice crying out in the wilderness'. So what do we expect? As Christ asked his followers, "What did you go out to the desert to see? A reed swayed by the wind? Someone dressed in fine clothing? Those who wear fine clothing are in royal palaces. Then what did you go out to see? ... A prophet?"
I'm with the Pope.
Today is the feast of my Confirmation patron saint, St. Peter of Verona, who died writing the Creed in his own blood ... that is why I chose him. I have great devotion to the Creed. (It is one of three essential prayers to gain a plenary indulgence BTW.)
But he (Fr. Martin) said that the cardinals, not Pope Francis, were generating confusion in the church.“The crashing irony is that some of the same people under John Paul II and Benedict XVI said that any disagreement with the pope is tantamount to dissent,” Father Martin said. - NYT
As I've said before - these people and their friends on social media and in Catholic media generate the confusion, not the Pope.
Catholic doctrine and the means of Eternal Salvation has not changed one iota for me or for anyone else. The Pope has never taught that it has, nor will he ever do so.
It is the enemies of the Church and the misled enemies of the Pope who are generating confusion in the Church.
Pope Francis is indeed a 'voice crying out in the wilderness'. So what do we expect? As Christ asked his followers, "What did you go out to the desert to see? A reed swayed by the wind? Someone dressed in fine clothing? Those who wear fine clothing are in royal palaces. Then what did you go out to see? ... A prophet?"
I'm with the Pope.
Today is the feast of my Confirmation patron saint, St. Peter of Verona, who died writing the Creed in his own blood ... that is why I chose him. I have great devotion to the Creed. (It is one of three essential prayers to gain a plenary indulgence BTW.)
S. Peter Martyr, Credo