Briefly scanning your reply I can see that it is a massive heap of nonsense and gobbledygook so I won't read it in detail nor will I engage in petty bickering.
An appeal to the stone does not a good argument make.
Bottom line: Saying that the pope discarded what God says in favor of his own personal beliefs is a total lie.
Again, when the pope claims
that Christianity has never recognized as "absolute and untouchable the right to private property, and has always emphasized the social function of all its forms," and that "The right of ownership is a secondary natural right deriving from the right that everyone has, born from the universal destination of the created goods," that is, BY DEFINITION, a rejection of God's word, which says "thou shall not steal," which implies that a person has a right to own, and not have taken away by force, his own property.
And the Pope is not a Communist either.
Then he should stop acting like one.
That was definitely a lie. I suppose you will be thread banning me for that, but that is precisely what it is.
You should stop bearing false witness.
As to the content of what the pope said we turn to this:
How about, instead of turning to what the pope said for a standard on how to interpret the Bible, we use the Bible as the standard, to see if the pope is on the right track? A novel idea, no?
PART THREE
LIFE IN CHRIST
SECTION TWO
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
CHAPTER TWO
"YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF"
ARTICLE 7
"You Shall Not Steal"
I. THE UNIVERSAL DESTINATION AND THE PRIVATE OWNERSHIP OF GOODS
2402 In the beginning God entrusted the earth and its resources to the common stewardship of mankind to take care of them, master them by labor, and enjoy their fruits (Gen 1:26-29). The goods of creation are destined for the whole human race.
No argument here.
And yet...
However, the earth is divided up among men to assure the security of their lives, endangered by poverty and threatened by violence. The appropriation of property is legitimate for guaranteeing the freedom and dignity of persons and for helping each of them to meet his basic needs and the needs of those in his charge. It should allow for a natural solidarity to develop between men.
God gave men the right to own property. That means that if a man owns something, then no individual has the right to take away that property.
2403 The right to private property, acquired or received in a just way, does not do away with the original gift of the earth to the whole of mankind.
No one said it did.
The point is that no one person can own the whole earth. (It belongs to God.)
However, the fruits of one's labor USING the things God has provided for man don't belong to anyone but the one who produced them. That's what it means to own something.
So that, if I build a house of clay and mud, and live in it, my neighbor does not have the right to live there too, unless I let him, and I have every right to kick him out should I decide to.
So that, if I work hard, and save up some money, and buy a high end graphics card for the computer I'm building, you don't have the right to come take it out of my computer and put it in yours and call it yours. That's theft.
So that, if you buy a car, and put gas in it, I do not have the right to take either your car or the gasoline you put in it.
That's the right to private property.
And God even goes further, after the 10 commandments, (for Israel specifically, but as a general rule for others) that specifies that if someone's property is damaged, stolen, destroyed, sold (after stolen), or returned, that those are, in fact, crimes, and the perpetrator should be punished.
The universal destination of goods remains primordial, even if the promotion of the common good requires respect for the right to private property and its exercise.
Again, this ignores the fact that if I make something, or I buy something that someone else makes, it inherently becomes my property, simply because I earned it. Someone who did NOT earn it, has no right to it.
2404 "In his use of things man should regard the external goods he legitimately owns not merely as exclusive to himself but common to others also,
If a man has the legitimate right to something, then no one has the right to take it by force, nor is he obligated to share it with anyone, nor is he obligated to give it away. Should he choose to, that is up to him, and no one else.
in the sense that they can benefit others as well as himself."
The problem here is that the pope is asserting that therefore it SHOULD be given away or lent out or shared. This is false. Again, no one but me has the right to my property. This is affirmed by God: "Thou shall not steal."
The ownership of any property makes its holder a steward of Providence, with the task of making it fruitful and communicating its benefits to others, first of all his family.
Yes, but not necessarily to anyone else.
But what he's saying in the video is that the right to own property can be superseded by someone else's need, which would then, logically speaking, obligate the person to give that away, but there is NO SUCH OBLIGATION given anywhere in the Bible.
This is why I say the pope is communist:
He claims that if someone is in need, then you and I are obligated to give up our possessions to, or share them with, that person. Francis also writes, "Yet we need to think of ourselves more and more as a single family dwelling in a common home."
This is, by definition, communism. "Our home," "our dwelling," "our family," "our possessions," These are the things said by the Communist Russians, not Capitalistic America, and certainly not what God wants to hear from His people.
The pope is quite loose with his language
That doesn't excuse him from promoting that which is wicked.
so I am not too worked up. And he also gets taken out of context a lot.
He's the pope, he should be far more careful with his words.
A sloppy pope results in sloppy catholicism.
Unless he comes out and specifically says he is changing Church teaching, which he has not, I would not get too worked up[.]
And you think a communist would come right out and say he's changing church teaching?
Naiive.
The doctrine stated above is correct and he did not change it.
The doctrine you quoted above has very little to do with what he said in
this video and what was reported in
this article.
If anyone thinks that the doctrine stated above is not correct then they are in error.
Because you say so?
The importance of the word “absolute” in his statement as quoted by the OP article cannot be ignored.
Yes or no, TG, does man have a God-given absolute right to private property?
The Pope is speaking very precisely here, and needs to be heard precisely.
So which is it, is the pope loose with his language? Or is he speaking very precisely? Because it cannot be both.
Overlooking that word and its impact leads to a misinterpretation of the pope’s message.
Does man have the absolute God-given right to own property? Yes or no.
Of course property rights are important. And of course they are not absolute, as he correctly stated.
You disagree with the Bible:
God said: "Thou shall not steal."
Therefore, we know that A) man has the right to own property, and B) that taking that property unjustly for any reason is called theft.
Jesus said:
Is it not lawful for me to do what I wish with my own things? Or is your eye evil because I am good?’ - Matthew 20:15
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew20:15&version=NKJV
Who are you to disagree?
Who is the pope to disagree with Jesus?
The author of the OP article states further down, "Sorry, but property rights are not secondary. As an attorney who defended property owners from government takings liked to say, “Property rights are human rights.” You can’t have one without the other."
She speaks of laws of men, not God.
Supra.
Maybe they are not secondary according to the laws of her land, but man's law is not God's law.
God's laws supersede man's laws.
God's laws supersede what the pope says.
God's law says, "Thou shall not steal."
The pope says that the "in need" have the right to the property of others, because we should "give them back what is theirs."
Your OP article places man's law above God's law,
In what way?
and in your attack against the pope, you confused man's law with God's law.
"Thou shall not steal" is man's law? I would love that if it were true, because it would be fully in line with God's law.
Communism violates that law.
The pope promotes communism.
Ergo, he's a communist, and so he is in the wrong.
In the end, despite any translation oddities, the article's quote of the pope is a reasonable summary
So you're retracting what you said near the beginning of this thread, that it's a mistranslation of what he said?
of the Church’s teaching on private property rights, which falls under the commandments, and that teaching is infallible, ratified by God the Holy Spirit.
Yes, indeed, "thou shall not steal" is infallible, and ratified by God.
Yet the pope contradicts that by saying "Yet we need to think of ourselves more and more as a single family dwelling in a common home."
By the way, did you notice in the video that the pope's surroundings at the Vatican are very luxurious?
Property rights are important, but they are secondary and limited rights,
"Thou shall not steal," is absolute. It is not secondary, nor is it limited.
subject to the common good
So you think that communism is a good thing?
"Common good"
"Communism"
Note that, while this is how many believers lived in the first year after Christ's ascension (see Acts 4:32-35), they quickly ran out of money, and Paul, throughout his writings, (1 Cor 16:1–4; 2 Cor 8:1–9:15; Rom 15:14–32) is seen taking up offerings for them, because they lived communally, and had "all things in common."
By the way, in case you've forgotten, the passage in Acts is where Karl Marx got his idea for communism. Wrongly, of course, since
If someone is in need, no one has the right to force me to give money, belongings, or property to them.
The only way is PURELY in the form of "from my hand to yours" giving.
Thus sayeth the Lord: "Thou shall not steal."
Thus sayeth the pope: "Yet we need to think of ourselves more and more as a single family dwelling in a common home."
:think:
You should know me better than that by now.
Well we certainly know that you don't like to keep your word when it comes to your statements of leaving threads...