S
St_Francis
Guest
So defending your beliefs and bringing people into the fold are mutually exclusive? I hardly think that’s true.
What I see is someone who is reacting to a specific situation: parents sent their children to Catholic schools, and when the Catholic authority said that the educators in the schools needed to teach and act according to the teaching of the Catholic school, some parents *rebelled. *jtauke;12796590:
Exactly it is this attitude which left most people adrift ,and it is time that the catholic teachers did their job. To do that they need to be better educated and better at inspiring .So defending your beliefs and bringing people into the fold are mutually exclusive? I hardly think that’s true.
Now, bringing people into the fold requires a certain amount of cooperation. If they cooperate, then one is not “defending” one’s beliefs. The Catholic Church is supposed to teach or proclaim certain truths. This does involve an effort to explain how the teachings are reasonable.
However, if the truths are in need of defending, then they are being attacked, no? And this means that the people doing the attacking are *not *cooperating.
So what is the Church to do? Some people say, Oh, the Church should not require annulments of previous marriages; the Church should simply accept current marriage. Other people say, I could join the Church if it weren’t for the fact the Church teaches pre- or extramarital activity is wrong–I think if they really loooooove each other, it’s ok. Some people object to the fact that the Church teaches that Christ is divine, that He is God and not just a really really really good man, or a special prophet. Other people say, I like the Church, but I hate that they require one to believe in God; I am an atheist, but I don’t want to stick out in church by not receiving the Eucharist.
So what do you suggest?