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Lisa4Catholics
Guest
To the thread starter:ehh: What say you about Mother Teresa of Calcutta and Pope John Paul 2?
You raise some good points. I agree with you that the music and sermons in Protestant churches is often better than the music and preaching in Catholic churches. I think the reason for that is because all that most Protestant churches have is preaching and music. They don’t have the sacraments so they can *never *be as good as a Catholic Mass with bad music and bad preaching. Our fruit is the Eucharist, Jesus Himself: body, blood, soul and divinity.How can the protestants and mormons do so much with just part of the truth and Catholics do so little with the whole truth. How can this be?
jeffjuls,The praise and worhip music at the neighborhood church has everyone singing and often on their feet while at mass it often sounds like the choir of the living dead. How many catholic music radio stations have you heard?
You’ve SAID it!!I want to specifically address the issue of good sermons. The first time I attended a Catholic Mass when I was still a Protestant, I was bored out of my wits. I wanted energetic preaching, to be fired up and to feel inspired.
When I became Catholic, it all changed for me. Actually it changed for me even before I became Catholic, as I LEARNED TO SEPARATE THE PREACHING FROM BEING AT REST AND SIMPLY HEARING THE WORD OF GOD. I can still appreciate a good preaching show, but hearing the Word of God and being fed by the Eucharist cannot be topped. No amount of energetic preaching, I am convinced now, can replace this.
I guess I am easily satisfied and contented. I am not the type of person that needs to hear something new. I can read or listen to the Words of Scripture over and over and be inspired beyond words by that alone, without the benefit of fist pounding and voice raising. I know people who NEED to be inspired by new fangled twists on Scripture exegesis. I remember how awestruck some of the members of my congregation were when the pastor managed to innovate some fantastically clever acronym for them to live by. For myself, I find that silly and unnecessary now, though I fully understand that others are on a different level and require that sort of evangelical hoopla. Nothing wrong with that. But when one feels so discontented to the point of wanting to leave the Church because one is not feeling excited or pumped up, then I must say the buck stops there – one is no longer focused on being satisfied spiritually, but being satisfied emotionally.
In the same way, people who leave the Church or fall into schism because of the STYLE of the Liturgy are really missing the point about Mass or Divine Liturgy. It is not about feeling good, or feeling inspired; it is all about an OBJECTIVE union with God that goes beyond emotions, and should and cannot ever be replaced by emotional satisfaction, whether it be from attraction to traditional smells and bells or the beauty of a church edifice, or the attraction of an exciting “spirit-filled” sermon.
I am not saying do not convert if you feel called to it. What I am saying is do not convert for superficial reasons like wanting to FEEL excited, or wanting to be inspired, whether by good sermons, or by the physical environment of a church edifice. As I’ve always maintained, God will lead people to where they can be watered best, but it is my firm conviction that those who sincerely seek the truth will be led into or back into the Catholic Church.
God bless
I have found the homilies I have heard so far to be very interesting and scripturally based. What I found at the Protestant church was that the pastor seemed to go on and on and say the same thing three different ways, as if we were too dumb to get it the first go-round. Also, it was as if the church felt "the longer the better’ as far as the length of the sermon went. I can sit and listen to long sermons fairly attentively, but even I was getting antsy. My husband and kids were going nuts. Why does a long, drawn-out, “fired-up” sermon necessarily mean “better”? I prefer a short, packed-with-inspiration homily to a long droning, it-must-be-holy-because-it’s-taking-so-long sermon any day!The homilies at mass tend to be vague and general and not challenging but the local protestant pastor is fired up and wants to challenge and convert you.
Can you not see any beauty in a solemn hymn to God? I love the mysterious sound of a Gregorian Chant. At the Protestant church, there was a band. There were songs (from the Christian radio station often) that our music director foisted on the congregation. Songs that were meant to be sung freely by a soloist. You should have heard the poor congregation trying to stumble through the difficult jumps in notes and odd rhythms. There were some familiar popular songs as well. I never enjoyed the hand-raising, as if one can’t worship God with just the song. No, there had to be that added to “for show” (Look how Christian I am!). And the worst was the few times I made the mistake of sitting in back of this one woman, who was dancing and shaking her big booty to the music. Yuck, did I need to see that?The praise and worship music at the neighborhood church has everyone singing and often on their feet while at mass it often sounds like the choir of the living dead. How many catholic music radio stations have you heard?
I think you are making a big generalization here.The vacation bible school’s at the protestant church are packed and dynamic but the local parish can barely scrape together a few volunteers to run the catholic vacation bible school.
So start one!I can’t find a catholic bible study group but have several protestant bible study options all over the place.
Again, very big generalizations.The voting record of the average catholic is no different than the non-christian while the average evangelical voter is much more likely to vote along the lines of catholic moral teaching.
Where’s the catholic youth groups? There are several successful protestant youth programs - some of them huge.
Aunt Martha YOU ROCK!I have some thoughts to share on this.
First, some background to understand my perspective: I was raised in the Catholic Church, fell away from it and started attending Protestant churches, went through a couple of years of not believing anything, then became a believer in 2002 and started attending a Protestant church again. There were issues with that church that were bothering me, which I believe was God’s way of beginning to bring me back to Catholicism. Then, about a month or so ago, I had this incredible urge to pray the Rosary. I found myself drawing back to the Catholic Church more and more, and went back about a month ago. I’ve attended three masses so far and will be there this Sunday morning.
Now, about your concerns:
I have found the homilies I have heard so far to be very interesting and scripturally based. What I found at the Protestant church was that the pastor seemed to go on and on and say the same thing three different ways, as if we were too dumb to get it the first go-round. Also, it was as if the church felt "the longer the better’ as far as the length of the sermon went. I can sit and listen to long sermons fairly attentively, but even I was getting antsy. My husband and kids were going nuts. Why does a long, drawn-out, “fired-up” sermon necessarily mean “better”? I prefer a short, packed-with-inspiration homily to a long droning, it-must-be-holy-because-it’s-taking-so-long sermon any day!
Can you not see any beauty in a solemn hymn to God? I love the mysterious sound of a Gregorian Chant. At the Protestant church, there was a band. There were songs (from the Christian radio station often) that our music director foisted on the congregation. Songs that were meant to be sung freely by a soloist. You should have heard the poor congregation trying to stumble through the difficult jumps in notes and odd rhythms. There were some familiar popular songs as well. I never enjoyed the hand-raising, as if one can’t worship God with just the song. No, there had to be that added to “for show” (Look how Christian I am!). And the worst was the few times I made the mistake of sitting in back of this one woman, who was dancing and shaking her big booty to the music. Yuck, did I need to see that?
When I returned to Catholic Mass, I was so inspired by the music I heard. It was so beautiful. Without being a “show-off”. Last Sunday when we were going to communion, we were singing “O Sons and Daughters” (Tune: O Filii Et Filiae), which has a chorus of Alleluias in a minor key. It was so much more spiritually moving to sing that chorus of alleluias and to see solemn, devout people processing to the alter for communion singing this song, than any hand waving or booty-shaking I saw at the Protestant church.
I have listened to Christian radio stations. I know I’m probably not supposed to say anything critical, since these songs are “Praise and Worship” songs to God, but some of the songs are just so sappy and just plain bad. I found myself snapping off the radio in disgust.
I think you are making a big generalization here.
So start one!
Again, very big generalizations.
I would say you should go to Mass again with an open mind. If one can’t praise and worship God without making a big noisy fuss, there’s something wrong there.
Aunt Martha
Is the only way to act on one’s faith and become holy by evangelization? Nothing else counts?How can the overwhelming majority of my fellow American Catholics receive Christ Himself each week in the Eucharist and then fail to ACT on their faith and the grace of Christ? If we are receiving Christ worthily, then we should becoming more holy each week and the Holy Spirit should be knocking down the doors of everyone’s heart to fulfill Christ’s and Our Holy Father’s call to evangelization – in all of its many forms.
And this doesn’t happen to Protestant parents and kids either? Think again.Any Catholic parent of young kids will tell you that they usually have to drag their kids protesting to go to mass because, according to them, it is soooooo boring.
Begin with yourself then. Stop pining over at the green, green grass at the Protestant church next door and trying to change the Catholic Church into an imitation of what you see there. Kids are perceptive - if they can sense that you are not “on fire” for your own faith, they won’t be either. If they can tell you are bored every Sunday at Mass, they will be too. If they don’t hear you praising the beauty of a worshipping God in a Catholic Mass, they won’t find it beautiful either.I’m looking for feedback on the few key things needed to light a fire under a parish to fan the flames of their hearts so I can give my kids an exposure to a contagious Catholic faith.
Well…as someone coming from a protestant background-my mom’s Baptist, as was her mom and her mom…I can assure you that this is a problem in Protestant churches as well. Teenagers don’t want to get out of bed on a Sunday morning and spend an hour sitting in an uncomfortable pew. It doesn’t matter what denomination that they are in.Any Catholic parent of young kids will tell you that they usually have to drag their kids protesting to go to mass because, according to them, it is soooooo boring.