I'm not about to search for it now, but the Roman Catholic Church is going thru
real (but slow) changes since John 23rd.
From what I've seen the old "outside the church there is no salvation" has been
moderated.
The RE Church is also divvied up. Some places tend to be very inclusive and
others are mired in the past.
I think this reading is interesting but there are better sources:
http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articl ... urch-meansThe church is kinda keeping the 'rights' to Jesus but extends the franchise quit a bit. Seems that the high water mark now is that salvation, understood as being through
Jesus only, is OK. The church keeps the copyright to Jesus but lets non catholics slide in if they have an acceptable view of Jesus.
Very well known catholic theologian Karl Rahner had a eyes wide open feeling about salvation and was nearly Protestant. (Well ... maybe not near, but ...)
Rahner has a beautiful suggestion that there are some (many?) Christians/Believers who are known only to god. I rather like that.
One problem I have is the relationship of Christians and Policitians. And the relationship is growing leaps and bounds. The most troubling to me is how married the evangelical church has become to
Republicans. The Republicans will regret that. Parts of the church already do.
Some don't get the implication. It is very appropriate for Francis to make aggressive statements about issues that have a political frame. It's fine for Francis (according to most of the RE Church) to 'pontificate' about hunger, poverty, abortion and so forth. It would be unacceptable for the pope to, say, come out in favor of a particular candidate. Catholics come in all stripes, though, so there's a lot of room for disagreement.
But all of this comes from a guy who has little positive regard for the church(es).