DW_a_mom wrote:
I don't think there is a single tradition known as "Catholic Christianity." The faith has a few definite groups within it, one being decidedly social justice liberal, and the other being decidedly socially conservative. Are you referring to the sacramental traditions and such when you refer to "Catholic Christianity," as v. belief systems?
You do realize that every single option I gave has multiple traditions within it, don't you? I mean, do you really think that conservative Protestantism is homogeneous? They have a large number of denominations, each denomination expressing a different theological view, and views that can go as diverse as theocracy to anarchy, from militarism to pacifism, from a transcendent God who ordains all things, to a more relational God who cannot fully predict the future, etc. The same follows for liberal Christianity, which has had theistic rationalists such as Unitarians and the more traditional liberals, and theistic irrationalists such as the existentialists and postmodernists, and even with groups going so extreme as to deny the existence of God.
I mean, if you want to know why Catholic Christianity was put into it's own single tradition, here's why:
1) I already had enough Christian groups. If I were to get another one, I would have added Eastern Orthodoxy, not broken up Catholicism.
2) Catholic Christianity has a high view of the official Church body compared to other Christian groups and likely other religions and there actually is ONE Catholic church.
3) Catholic Christianity has defined dogmas, things that cannot be rejected without being considered a heretic which is more than many other religious groups I cited can say.
4) Catholic Christianity has a high view of tradition compared to Sola Scripturists, or postmodernists or rationalists, and it has a tradition that is itself distinctive.
5) Catholic Christianity tends to have it's distinct set of heroes, such as Thomas Aquinas or GK Chesterton.
6) Catholicism has theological ideas in common, as the Pope and councils talk about theology and basically create theological doctrines that other Catholics can cite, argue about, and use for building their own ideas. The same with historical Catholic figures, such as Thomas Aquinas, or Luis de Molina, or any of the church fathers, such as Augustine of Hippo.
7) Catholic Christianity is rather easily identified compared to any of it's subdivisions, and y'know, there are a lot of subdivisions that could have been picked based upon what issue I decided to emphasize, which is itself a difficult issue.
I mean, DW_a_mom, perhaps I am being a little touchy here. But out of the entire selection, you are claiming that the most defined and traditional group I provided can be doubted on how unified of a tradition it is. I mean, unless you are going to try to deconstruct the entire question, I have probably committed greater sins to other groups by lumping them together or omitting them completely than I have probably done to Catholicism.