Counterfeit Catholicism: Difference between revisions

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They set aside the recent actions of the [[Magisterium]]--especially [[Vatican II]]--based on their interpretation of less-authoritative actions of Roman institutions (e.g., the guidelines issued by the Pontifical Biblical Commission in 1903).
They set aside the recent actions of the [[Magisterium]]--especially [[Vatican II]]--based on their interpretation of less-authoritative actions of Roman institutions (e.g., the guidelines issued by the Pontifical Biblical Commission in 1903).


Bouyer calls this "integrism"--a type of conservatism that wants to preserve every jot and tittle of the tradition.
Bouyer calls this [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrism "integrism"]--a type of conservatism that wants to preserve every jot and tittle of the tradition.


[[Category:Catholicism]]
[[Category:Catholicism]]
[[Category:Disputed Questions]]
[[Category:Disputed Questions]]

Revision as of 19:51, 28 June 2015

There are two different ways of going wrong, not just one.

Protestants subtract from the Tradition and add new principles of interpretation.

Ultra-dogmatic Catholics treat as dogma what is not dogma. They are hyper-Catholic, hyper-dogmatic, or ultra-dogmatic.

More Catholic Than the Pope: An Inside Look at Extreme Traditionalism by Patrick Madrid.

They take private revelations as dogma, and seek to impose their peculiar interpretations of the Tradition on other Catholics.

They set aside the recent actions of the Magisterium--especially Vatican II--based on their interpretation of less-authoritative actions of Roman institutions (e.g., the guidelines issued by the Pontifical Biblical Commission in 1903).

Bouyer calls this "integrism"--a type of conservatism that wants to preserve every jot and tittle of the tradition.