AGC said:
In all charity, Catholic teaching is convoluted in a way that other sacramental denominations (or faiths if you take them for their word) aren't. The orthodox don't have to navigate any of these issues, nor do anglicans. Rome has become an insulated institution that is more reminiscent of government bureaucracy than the church Christ instituted. When people sort through it and read that they need to get the windows update for the current regime's take on three documents throughout time and how they work together, is it really their fault, rather than that of the church that creates such confusion?
I can't reply to both AGC and AgLiving06 - but they are right to point out an obvious apparent change in doctrine (more than just this example, BTW). This is not something as a Catholic to be ashamed or reason to abandon the ship. I would say exactly the opposite- more the reason to hold firm to mother church. Remember the words of Peter, "
Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life." -Jn 6:68
Let me explain.
Renewal is rooted in scripture, "
And no one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise, the wine will burst the skins, and the wine is lost, and so are the skins; but one puts new wine into fresh wineskins." -Mk 2:22
Even Jesus understood that his preaching to the people of Israel was a challenge to their long held beliefs. However, he pressed on and commanded his apostles to do the same. I don't know anything about the Orthodox or Anglican church- so I will not even consider their doctrine of salvation outside of (their) churches. That is for them to discern. I DO know what my faith has taught, has discerned, and now teaches.
"
Aggiornamento" is the Italian word that is used to describe the updating Vatican II took upon its aim to address the questions of this time based on sacred doctrine. In many cases this effort led to a refresh of an older understanding, such as the salvation of souls outside the church. Where in the past it was an "either or" answer, the Church now understood it as "both and" response.
Before, for salvation it was EITHER the Church OR hell. There was no further explanation.
Now, the RCC is saying that there may be some people who have never heard of Jesus. That through no fault of their own (CCC
847), living a good life- "those too may achieve eternal salvation." So it was expanded to include BOTH the Church AND those who had not received the good news of Jesus through the mission.
What happened is that the RCC realized that the initial teaching was incomplete. It did not account for persons in remote parts of the world who had never heard the gospel or persons who had grown up their whole lives in a culture centered on Islam or Hindu. Same for persons who never encountered the word of God in their lives through no fault of their own.
The "updating" accounted for this and would lead to interreligious dialogue, not to proselytize, but to lead to a better understanding of our differences and mutual respect.
“Falsehood flies and the truth comes limping after it” -Jonathan Swift, 1710