Well that's fair enough but I actually don't see the Catholic church as united on this topic as it was in times past. Chrys is hardly the only catholic to question the doctrine to be fair. Is it your opinion that a catholic should only identify as such if they accept everything as per the original church's teachings?
That there is a lot of confusion and discord around The Catholic Church today is very much granted. However, the disunity, specially in matters like these, does not comes from The Church herself. That is, it is not something that flows from her teaching. Even the most recent Catechism professes the Church's traditional belief in the reality of eternal punishment. There is really only one defined Catholic position on this issue: the punishment of Hell is eternal. The problem comes from dissenting bishops, priest and laity who not being content with what The Church teaches, go about to impart and seek to diffuse their own individual views (even ones which have been condemned before) under the guise of "Catholic" teaching.
There are areas in which The Church allows differing views and you'll see various labels (such as Thomist, Molinists, for example) which Catholics apply to themselves. But this doesn't happen when it comes to defined doctrines. It is only on some areas where The Church has not defined one way or the other.
I know chrys is not the only one and my act of questioning him is done wholly in a benevolent spirit. But he is rejecting a clear teaching of The Church and he knows it, he is not doing it simply out of ignorance (something many of the laity do). It is not my opinion, but The Church's, that a Catholic's obstinate denial of a truth which must be believed with divine and Catholic faith constitutes heresy. The eternal punishment of the damned is one such truth.
A Catholic is one who is in faithful submission to the Roman Pontiff and accepts the entire doctrinal corpus defined and proposed for belief by The Church throughout the centuries in councils, bulls and other ecclesial documents.
Of course, this doesn't means that before you can be a Catholic you have to know
everything there is to know about Catholicism. In fact, a lot of Catholics are quite faithful while not knowing a lot of things about their faith (flawed as I am, I include myself among those).
What is important is that the person has the right disposition and the virtue of faith. Faith in this context means to believe something on the authority of him who reveals. For the Catholic, he who reveals is God, working instrumentally through The Catholic Church, which Catholics believe he established on earth for the purpose of saving souls and preserving and faithfully expounding the deposit of faith till the end of time. A Catholic understands and accepts this arrangement and in so far as he is a Catholic, he faithfully accepts that which God, through his Church, proposes for belief.
Evo