Showing posts with label Conscience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conscience. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Ateneo Faculty on Conscience and Faith



Statement of Catholic Theology Teachers on Conscience and Faith
August 28, 2012
The Feast Day of St. Augustine, patron saint of theologians


We, the undersigned, speak only on our own behalf as Catholic theology teachers, and speak in no capacity either for Ateneo de Manila University or for its Theology Department, or for any other members of the Ateneo community.

Conscience allows God’s voice, not one’s own voice, to echo in one’s depths (cf. GS 16; CCC 1776). It subjectively applies transcendent moral norms. This subjectivity means that we apply the transcendent moral law within the given situation whose details, motivations, and ends we must discern truthfully and to the best of our ability (cf. CCC1780). Thus conscience involves the apprehension of transcendent truth, and is never simplya matter of one point of view versus another. For the well-formed Catholic, these transcendent moral truths are transmitted in the Tradition of the Church and are taught by its Magisterium (cf. CCC 2032-2036). Thus a good conscience is truthful and seeks the right, and a well-formed Catholic conscience seeks guidance for doing right in the authoritative teachings of the Church (cf. CCC 1783). But should any figure urge one, as a Catholic, to go against these transcendent norms which one has received and in which one has been well-formed, then it is better to disregard that figure than to disregard one’s Catholic conscience.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

The Primacy of Conscience in Catholic Theology

Salient points in Senator Santiago’s
 “The Primacy of Conscience in Catholic Theology”
By Joaquin Salvador



(Part 1)

Imagine, Senator Miriam Santiago joined the plenary assembly of the Catholic Bishops' Conference in the Philippines (CBCP) and confronted the bishops with their own teachings, arguing the primacy of conscience in Catholic theology. Who among the bishops would stand up to rebut her?
In this article I will be pondering on some salient points in Senator Miriam Santiago’s co-sponsorship speech on RH Bill, part 1: “The primacy of conscience in Catholic theology.”

I.          Defining the field.

Senator Santiago told us about the status of the bill pending before the Senate with a strong opposition from the Catholic church and asked us to consider the following facts: