It can’t have contradictory meanings, however. Two mutually opposing things cannot both be the truth.
This is very Catholic.
Yes, its logical. We are the body of Christ. We can’t go out and do our own things our way, read the Bible our way just because we feel like it.
This, too, is very Catholic.
However, if we are going to base our ecclesial practices and teachings on the paradigm “it’s logical to do this” then you ought to be praying for the dead and preaching about a place where purgation occurs when we die with a little bit o’ dirt on our souls. Logical!
What’s so bad about a storefront church? Do you think Peter ever preached in a cathedral?
Well, nothing is wrong with the building, of course. Mass has been celebrated in many a ramshackle building, given its 2000 year history of being celebrated around the world.
It’s the concept of following the Bible Alone that fosters and nurtures the mentality that you can leave your fallible pastor and start your own church, with your own “Bible” teachings whenever you think your fallible pastor is in error.
And given the fact that you don’t believe that men could be given the charism of infallibility (except, curiously, you
do believe that men could be given the charism of infallibility, namely, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John et al), you always have that thought in the back of your mind: is my pastor’s preaching in error? And since he is fallible, that means he is going to be in error at some point…
it seems logical that there’s going to be a proliferation of men who read and study their bibles who leave their church and start their own storefront churches.
That’s the recipe for chaos and confusion.
(NB: the “you” in this post refers to a generic I believe in the Bible-Alone “you”, not necessarily a personal ltwin “you”.)