T
TheLittleLady
Guest
Not only under 65, but under it by over a decade. I read the Reporter & Register, as well as America Magazine, I read many Catholic publications.
No there hasn’t. I get so tired of people just assuming that most Pope’s in the middle ages thru renaissance were corrupt. In point if fact, you would probably find fewer than a dozen who were notoriously corrupt. IIRC, the book Bad Popes describe 8. I am sure the author would have listed more if they existed.but there has been a lot of crooked ones.
Or just trying to serveI would say they are only pushing their own agenda.
against what the Church has always taughtOr just trying to serve
I don’t think this is true… seems there were women deacons previously… unless you can reference some teaching that says otherwise?against what the Church has always taught
I think it works the other way. Who were these previous women deacons?seems there were women deacons previously… unless you can reference some teaching that says otherwise?
https://catholicherald.co.uk/news/2...plans-for-female-deacons-but-study-continues/I don’t think this is true… seems there were women deacons previously… unless you can reference some teaching that says otherwise?
Except the Reporter has been told not to use the term Catholic by the local diocese…so its not really a Catholic publication.Not only under 65, but under it by over a decade. I read the Reporter & Register, as well as America Magazine, I read many Catholic publications.
You don’t need to see such a statement.I have not seen that in any statement from the synod.
Name them.seems there were women deacons previously… unless you can reference some teaching that says otherwise?
Msgr Pope’s claim of the Syond being stacked is easily debunked: the majority were ex-officio attendee’s - in other words, attending by virtue of the position that they hold: all 113 heads of dioceses & vicariates in the Amazon and 13 heads of Roman Curia offices (for total of 126 of the 185). Besides this it also helps to actually read the final document rather than rely solely on what the blogshere believes (mind you it also helps to have experience of ministry outside of the comfort of suburbia).This is how Msgr. Charles Pope describes the Amazon synod in an article published in National Catholic Register. "Pope Francis is deeply enmeshed in the Amazon Synod and its outcomes. It is clear that the Synod was stacked with liberal — even radical — members and that all the matters that ordinary Catholics feared going into the synod have been realized.