We also know that it is possible to misuse the gift of freedom by appropriating for ourselves the prerogative to decide what is right and wrong apart from right reason and God's will. This is Original Sin which shrinks our worldview, narrows our faith, and limits our gratitude precisely because it leads us away from communion with God and others. This selfish and non-sacrificial use of freedom makes sense: if I decide what is right and wrong for myself, then very few people, if any, can participate in how I choose to live my life. We see this isolation on clear display in our culture. People living their own truth forms pockets and ideologies that cannot be integrated into an acceptable worldview that can be shared with others.
We need to be thoroughly "catholic" in our exercise of freedom to achieve the unity that Jesus prays for in His Church, "that all may be one" in a communion of praise and right worship. Some may protest that we cannot expect everyone to think, believe, and act the way we do as Catholic Christians. Fair enough, but not a single person living on earth is exempt from rightly ordering his or her life according to truth. We may debate about the truth and what is good for the human person, but the choice to determine this good for ourselves will logically lead to division and isolation, whereas the choice to live in the truth will lead to communion and love. That's where we stand as a Catholic Church as we continue to proclaim this truth to the world.I am yours in Christ,
Fr. Scott Goodfellow