metis
aged ecumenical anthropologist
There definitely is.It would not surprise me if there was a conservative element within the Church in agreement with him.
Yes, and that even extends further back. When Pope John XXIII lead the II Ecumenical Counsel that "opened the windows of the church", one of my Catholic neighbors was fit to be tied as she felt the mass should still be said in Latin.When John Paul II made all his public apologies for past sins of the Church wasn't there a conservative element within the Church groaning because he was admitting the Church was capable of error?
BTW, I dated a young women who was Catholic back during my undergrad years, and I went with her to mass several times, which were in Latin, and I have to admit that it was beautiful. It was the first time I ever set foot into a Catholic church (I came from a very anti-Catholic family), and she and that church made an impression on me that's lasted 50 years. Even though it's a three hour drive from where I live, two months ago I went and visited that same church for old times sake. Lots of changes there, and in more ways than one. Still brings back lots of memories, and both the church and her changed my life profoundly (long story). Fortunately, I married another Italian Catholic woman that was just as loving and compassionate as she was, and we celebrated our 50th wedding anniversary in March.
But public opinion actually can more likely be even more off-base than the church, such as we've seen with the election of Trump.I think public opinion has been leading all the traditional Western faiths to make moral progress. That's embarrassing for them because, if their claims of divine inspiration were true, it should be the other way around.