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For any of the board's Southern Catholics:
These are my feelings. I switched to a 3rd shift schedule after I married my wife who does nursing 3rd shift too. Missed mass for the last two years until just recently...I would understand if changing the wording was important or drastically changed the meaning, but it's the exact same thing at it's core. All the responses are nearly identical to the previous responses, but it has a more old fashioned feel to it and a few words were switched to some synonyms. I'm harping a bit. I really don't see the point in the change, and while it's mildly annoying, I find it completely unnecessary.
I would be interested to see the Diocese of New Orleans' stance on eating frog during lent.
I'll take this point further. It makes people uncomfortable, which makes them less likely to come back to church. It also sounds older and moldier than the previous version. I don't care if it is literally more correct, you need to keep things like this at a 5th grade reading level at best because the average person can barely read, let alone understand what consubstantiabalablelielsknst means (or say it correctly twice in fifty tries). Yeah, you need to pander a little closer to the lowest common denominator. Use words like that in your homily every week and you will be talking to half as many people in no time. Pepper your bread and butter prayers with them and folks will mumble through the whole thing and not take the time to understand any of it.
Because EVERYONE loves that guy who uses the biggest words possible for everything, right?
For any of the board's Southern Catholics:
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I knew that 'he' was banned, but didn't know that someone would request to eat "Allgator"
And, here is an example of the Church being way off on scientific matters: Allgator is ALL-TROLL and no part fish. He should definitely be banned during Lenten Season as well.
Also note, that in all these things The Magisterium is disagreeing within itself. Some might say that it is only language, but it is the Mass so it can hardly be considered trivial. And the "old" strict fasting and abstinence?: violations of that used to be considered serious sin. Did GOD change His Mind, or is it just OUR problem?
The Creator gave us brains for a reason. We should really try to use them once in a while [AND seek honest consultation from spiritual advisors while doing so].
Well, that should offend about everyone, so my work here is apparently done.
THIS is our dilemma. How can we best assure honestly selfless choices while encased in a body of powerful self-oriented urges?
To Larson: as you suspect, I was putting up a strawman dichotomy, and as you rightly said: yes, it's OUR problem not GOD's.
All of the moments of our lives are of course OUR responsibility. GOD is sitting in Heaven watching our hearts to judge whether we are making honest attempts at doing the right [read: selfless] thing regardless of what anyone else is telling or commanding us.
THIS is our dilemma. How can we best assure honestly selfless choices while encased in a body of powerful self-oriented urges? This is why The Church exists and is extremely valuable. Just like the Constitution and the huge system/history of public law, the Church exists to continuously keep in our consciousness the baseline concerns of right living. But also like constitutions and law, the wise society and person see these fundamental statements as guidelines and often in need of interpretation --- even when of consummate importance. Example: even in law there are circumstances where killing is allowed without legal consequence. Even in the Church there is the concept of a "Just War".
Both public and Church law exist to keep the society in some degree of orderliness and concern about others than ourselves. Neither set of doctrines deals with the complexity of real life however and that is why, in the judicial system, there must be "judgement" applied. The Church has never figured out how to establish a similar institution [except, by the way, the "secrets" of the Confessional, and the quiet "winking away" by one understanding priest to some Catholic layperson of certain irregularities which we tolerate without admitting so --- think, divorce].
I insist however on greatly respecting the Church and remaining actively within it. It is the greatest organizational facilitating force for Beatitudes-like charity on the planet, it provides the Sacrament of Holy Communion, and it serves to keep my animal nature in line by constantly reminding me what an imperfect jerk I am. And it provides spiritual humans to counsel us when times are tough.
I'll always be Catholic. But I will not automatically respect any individual Catholic [even those wearing fancy tall hats] unless by their actions they show me where their hearts/souls are. I don't even believe in the sobriquet "Father". I told my priest buddy that I thought one of Catholicism's bigger social blunders was calling priests "father" rather than "brother". He laughed, nodded, and said: yes, it's embarrassing sometimes, and not particularly good for the ego. It's in the same class as Mormons labeling 20 year olds "elders".
Well, that should offend about everyone, so my work here is apparently done.
p.s. Latin mass IS a great spiritual experience. It embeds the feeling of The Sacred better than the "modern" mass. BUT it's really not much more than shallow feeling unless one also understands what's going on step by step. Most Americans don't get Latin, so the Church had to make a compromise for most of them.
We learned a bit of latin when I was in high school(It was a capuchin school). It's a shame that they don't teach it anymore. Also, I agree that going from French to Latin is obviously easier than English to Latin. Nevertheless, I find it beautiful. I'm a big gregorian chant fan, which I know is not for everybody.
I was about to bring this up. I had the opportunity to go to a church camp when I was in high school at a seminary in Indiana (St. Meinrad for those familiar). While there, we would wake up super early every day to go listen and watch the priests chant their morning rituals. It was a surreal and awesome (literally) experience. Highly recommended if anyone has the opportunity.
After graduating from ND four of us went on a shoestring tour of Europe, crammed in an old VW bug. My job was to produce an itinerary which would make the great circle and get us back to the boat in 50 days. Coming from the Austrian Alps down towards Rome, I marked in a stop at Assisi. REALLY GLAD. Attending the mass there with the Franciscan Friars chanting Gregorian Chant was literally the definition of Awesome.
Does Timothy Dolan have a realistic chance at pope?
In spite of early warnings, I think this has been an interesting thread.
I likely disagree to some extent with the idea that Church teachings can be interpreted as allowing people to reject what, in self-honesty, we know the Church intends to teach, esp. to the extent, in self-honesty, doing so would have the effect of letting ourselves off the hook to do whatever we can, or would like to, rationalize that we, or those we love, should be allowed to do or have done.
Absolutely. Would like to see it continue.
As I mentioned earlier, while morality may be objective, sin is subjective. Every man is judged against his own conscience. If one has made a good faith effort to properly form his conscience on an issue (in other words, no willful blindness), and he still believes the Church is wrong on that issue, then he does not sin in acting upon his beliefs.
But the key phrase there is "good faith effort"; you seem primarily concerned that Catholics will rationalize away inconvenient teachings out of self-interest. If that's the real motivation behind the rejection of a Church teaching, then it's still a sin.
Put plainly, as long as the will remains unconverted, and unwilling to consider conversion, reason is mostly powerless to change things, except insofar as the claims of reason are consonant with their metaphysical dream — that intuitive feeling about the immanent nature of reality. In our time and place, this metaphysical dream is no longer truly Christian, though it is obviously informed by Christian ideals and sentiments. This will fade, and is fading. This is the problem religious and social conservatives face, or, as it were, fail to face.
Much as we might regret such inevitable effects of individualism as Rod cogently points to, there are several points worth raising, and some political consequences:
- Individualism seems to be the price we pay for “liberalism,” in the positive sense of a movement for human freedom from coercion, grounded in human dignity.
- The alternatives to liberalism proposed in the past 300 years have all proved far worse (nationalism, reactionary traditionalism, socialism, communism, racialism, theocracy)
- Given this, we as Christians must recognize that liberalism is today what Aristotelianism was in the 1200s–the water in which we swim. We cannot repeal it, especially when our own institutions have proved so corrupt (sex abuse) and coercive (Magdalene laundries) when given power, especially coercive power or police collusion.
- The only alternative on offer today to absolute individualism (libertarian politics) is a massive “national community” which imposes on all of us its crushing financial demands and coercive mandates, grounded in Utilitarian Hedonism (Fr. Dwight Longenecker’s phrase).
- Therefore, we ought to support libertarianism–especially on the national level, while fighting hard for freedom of association and contract. Christians should stop bothering with marriage licenses, and craft “covenant marriage” agreements according to their denominations, which should enforce them on those who wish to be associated with the group, on pain of exclusion. Hence, Catholic bishops should insist that priests only marry people willing to sign such a covenant. It would not be legally enforceable, but then neither is marriage.
For a more extended argument, see my old piece here.
The bottom line is: We have to give up trying to baptize Leviathan, and concentrate on trying to stay out of its jaws.
I have very little to add here. At bottom, the reality of existence already is individualism --- the only reason for The Creation is to provide a stage for the relationship between each Soul and God. That is a one-to-one affair. God understands that the stage changes. Some of the "actors" have more opposing their good choices than others. God does care about this, but not in the way we think. God simply wants to see what each individual does with the circumstances that they have.
Whereas it would be "nice" if big obstacles were not placed in the way of our weak animal natures, that circumstance is still only one circumstance within which we at that moment must choose the good and "prove" something about ourselves. In a way, the easier path merits less than the harder. This does not mean that we humans should stop trying to make life's conditions better for all, but it DOES mean that whether we actually SUCCEED in doing so is not the point in God's evaluation. WHATEVER we face is the stage against which God justly considers our effort.
For these reasons, I do not spend much time wringing my hands about the seeming trajectory of things. Each moment is the moment of truth, not the speculative future. If I do a good job at this moment that I have right now, I have pleased God and done well. If the stage of the next moment happens to be more difficult, well, that is now my new moment to choose the good. There is in the end nothing else.
In theory, if we were all succeeding in our moments, God's Kingdom WOULD emerge on the planet. Obviously we have never been anywhere near that state in the past. Will we ever? I know nothing about that either. All I know that if I do well in this moment now, I push things a little closer to the state of a generally just world.