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Notes -
Professing a belief in the Catholic Church (that you believe in their teachings) where the Pope has Papal Primacy and the legitimacy of the Church is based on a direct lineage from Peter isn’t the same as an oath to the pope?
Words have meaning.
In a religious context, an oath is a statement about one's future intentions coupled with a prayer requesting divine punishment on yourself if you don't follow through. In the modern Christian context, the prayer and penalty are abbreviated as "so help me God". (The Oath of Office for the US President prescribed in the Constitution omits this, but this is exceptional and most Christian presidents added "so help me God" voluntarily. This was probably a drafting error because all the other oaths of office prescribed by the 1st Congress did include it). But in classical antiquity, or in dubiously Christian contexts like Masonic oaths, the penalties can get quite specific.
As usual, Brett Devereaux provides more detail.
But critically to this thread, the clerics who wrote the creeds (and, more importantly, the professions of faith and such like which form part of the Confirmation ritual, which is where you would have put an oath if you wanted one, and do in fact look more oath-like) could have made them oaths by adding "I swear" and "so help me God", and chose not to. So they are not oaths.
The creeds are pure statements of current belief, made in solemn form to encourage taking them seriously. There is (at least in mainstream Christianity) no suggestion that someone changes their mind and ceases to believe in the creed calls any special divine wrath on themselves beyond the general damnation of unbelievers.
There is no practical difference here in what you are trying to say which I think is “it’s just a believe the Church is really special” and “ I pledge an oath to the Church”. The former in many ways is much stronger because it’s believing in something versus an oath you just sign and get punished or something if you violate it.
There is a practical difference if gods are real and that the prayer for self-imposed punishment forming part of an oath is likely to be granted.
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Yes. History is littered with Catholics who did something against the interests of the Pope. If they rationalized it, if they continued to attend Mass and believe and so on, I think it’s appropriate to keep calling them Catholics.
“Interests is vague”. It’s really with respect to the Church interests that matters. And certainly things you can’t contradict.
So I disagree. Those are not practicing Catholics.
Whether you want to get in semantics I guess you can call them Catholics but they are not practicing Catholics. Which is why they can get elected to US office at high levels.
I feel like you are making trademark law style arguments. If the Catholic Church doesn’t excommunicate everyone tightly then they lose the right to ever have standards and therefore Catholic becomes a meaningless descriptor.
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