Actually, no, since you actually did so.

I'll put this frankly. You suffer to a certain degree from the dunning kruger effect. I'm sorry to be blunt, but theology and philosophy are very hard disciplines to do well, and you don't get "formed" in them by reading stuff on the internet. I recognize that you see yourself as here to provoke what you see as grumpy old men "trad" Catholics who don't get how the Holy Spirit is moving in Saint I mean Pope Francis. And I'm actually glad you're here. I'm sure you mean well. But when you try to do theology you are in over your head. The fact, for example, that you had no idea what I was talking about when I spoke of mystery is just one obvious example, as is your thought that what I've been saying here smacks of calvinism. Apart from your thinking that the Church teaches something about our Lord's blood type, etc.Ahem, I am not resisting the facts of the theological. I take them as a given but am more focused on their application in real concrete situations in life. For example, I've just been reading the encyclical Caritas in veritate (2009 Pope BenedictXVI) in which he addressed not just to Catholics but 'all people of good will'. In it he calls on those with the means to develop a global authority to serve the common good of all people of the world. This call justified by...
The fact that you think Pope Benedict is somehow a witness against what I've been saying here is just another.
Right, and as I have answered...it is not. Though of course pagans may be able to love.Bear in mind that my basic question was in regards to your claim that charity isn't charity without the infused grace of baptism.