Jehoshua
Catholic
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2009
- Messages
- 7,284
Papal Moralism isn't even moralism, it is just Catholicism. Moralism as it stands is solidly Catholic and thus the two parties work together for the common good. I wouldn't call the Pope a moralist, though.
Ditto, Paul VI maybe could be called a proto-moralist (his efforts resulted in their emergence, which is why I comment on it since I see it as an artifact of papal policy, as do most of you it seems. Ergo its of tangential proximity to my "sphere" in CI) but our current Il Papa is firmly of the old school. His character history furthermore informs his views, or rather how I choose papal policy during his pontificate (along with interest, the logic of gains and so forth). Paul VI was a child of the Franco-Burgundian Confederation, Pius X of the vicious Italian wars. Needless to say their political perceptions differed as a result of circumstance
At any rate, you could say the favour given to moralism as a movement (noting that this is not exclusive, traditionalism and conservatism also receive the papal approval in opposition to prolism and the like.) only because it incorporates much of Catholic social doctrine (ts not a complete congruency there) and serves to support religion against the godless errors of the age (as the Pope sees it). In this sense the fact the Popes gives his favour to moralism is contingent on its complementarity with the omnipresent goal of propagating and defending the faith, and its non-contradiction to Church teaching.
Since this is so at least for now, moralists and the Church work together for the common good and against the common enemy (filthy proles
