tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-44918019052750220.post7576683076422364720..comments2024-01-16T19:31:28.762-05:00Comments on Good Jesuit, Bad Jesuit: Fr. Hermann Busembaum, S.J. And His "Medulla Theologiæ Moralis Facili Ac Perspicua Methodo Resolvens Causa Conscientiæ Ex Variis Probatisque Auctoribus Concinnata"Joseph Frommhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16759274486679530625noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-44918019052750220.post-16718585243688946152011-03-24T15:08:30.036-04:002011-03-24T15:08:30.036-04:00As the linked book mentions, the Divine Right of K...As the linked book mentions, the Divine Right of Kings is obsolete. That doesn’t mean that it wasn’t real. And that doesn’t mean that it isn’t real. Vestiges of that implementation exist, but it has evolved into something quite different.<br /> <br />Instead, consider the Swedish King’s Nobel Prize. It holds up men who could, as a group, make important decisions for our society and for the world. Divinely Guided people now play a support role to suggest correct decisions, as they allow society to accept or ignore their advice. So the role of those who are divinely guided has changed. <br /> <br />So there are those who try to give the Pope and the Church good options. It is up to the Church if, like so many societies, it chooses a leader and a structure that doesn’t recognize, encourage, or acknowledge good advice.<br /><br />Allowing such choices enables the correct lessons to be devised, and the correct judgments to be rendered.TonyDhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10383259752181717440noreply@blogger.com