The Annulment Machine, the Dialogue Industry, and the Roman Rite Front How the postconciliar system dissolves what it can’t openly deny Chris Jackson Dec 17... ... Fr. Wathen’s blunt diagnosis of post-conciliar annulments in the JPII era is still true today The late Fr. James Wathen’s discussion of the annulment crisis , even in the time of JPII, was deliberately unvarnished: he called diocesan marriage tribunals “annulment committees” and accused them of “conjuring up grounds” for nullity, often disregarding the spouse who insists the marriage was real. https://theradtrad.blogspot.com/2014/07/it-just-wont-go-away.html It Just Won't Go Away Feeneyism. It is a minority opinion. It always has been and, unless it finally dies out, it always will be. Feeneyism, for the uninitiated, is a reading of Extra ecclesiam nulla salus that denies the Roman concepts of Baptism through blood and through desire, and in turn renders a highly legal reading that restricts salvation ...
Villey: ****rights claimed are ultimately based on subjective whim**** Villey is not content to criticize abuses. Rather, he presents the whole modern attempt to base a system of jurisprudence on an affirmation of individual rights as funda mentally misguided. He describes this modern enterprise as Utopian, arbitrary and sterile. It is Utopian because the supposed absolute rights are fictions; they usually do not exist in actual law or in real life. Rights theo ries are arbitrary because the rights claimed are ultimately based on subjective whim; they lead on to a debased understanding of justice as "nothing but a label you attach to your own subjective preferences." And modern rights theories are sterile because they cannot form the basis of a coherent jurisprudence. 33
https://dokumen.pub/idea-of-natural-rights-studies-on-natural-rights-natural-law-and-church-law-1150-1625-0788503553.html#:~:text=of%20medieval%20fe%2C(ts%20collected%20in%20a%20long,in%20the%20writings%20of%20the%20medieval%20glossators. Villey: ****rights claimed are ultimately based on subjective whim**** Villey is not content to criticize abuses. Rather, he presents the whole modern attempt to base a system of jurisprudence on an affirmation of individual rights as funda mentally misguided. He describes this modern enterprise as Utopian, arbitrary and sterile. It is Utopian because the supposed absolute rights are fictions; they usually do not exist in actual law or in real life. Rights theo ries are arbitrary because the rights claimed are ultimately based on subjective whim; they lead on to a debased understanding of justice as "nothing but a label you attach to your own subjective preferences." And modern rights theories are sterile because they cannot form the basi...