S
St_Francis
Guest
No, the binder thing is only what I imagine you are envisioning. Actually everyone’s binder is exactly the same. It’s just that not everyone has their own copy, so we need to share.I did and was choosing not to respond because of time, but since you are asking I will.
Forgive me if I don’t quote everything you said, but here are my responses to your comments.
I understand why the Catholic “binder” is bigger. I am only discussing 2 lines in that binder.
It is not a matter of Christian opinion–it is Church teaching. You can’t pick and choose…Regarding “inheriting a fortune,” I’m not complaining about it, I only think that as Christians we have all inherited the fortune and it is our responsibility to not squander it. It is a matter of Christian opinion whether or not attending a service that is not Catholic is squandering that fortune.
It’s not a question of one thing being, in someone’s opinion, better than another. I like chocolate; Sally prefers vanilla–no big deal. The issue of attending Mass is not like that–tye Catholic Mass is objectively better than non-Catholic services, like eating vegetables is objectively more healthy than eating only candy.I am not complaining about going to church on Sunday. I am only saying that I believe that there is more than one way to fulfill that obligation. I should not matter if one is “better” than another.
If you want to attend a Protestant service from time to time for the sake of family unity, that is fine *as long as you also attend Mass. *(And I am assuming you are not receiving anything there.) So, go to church with your in-laws from time to time on Sunday, *just go to a Catholic Mass also. *I do not believe that attending the Lutheran church shows disrespect for God. The only thing I think it does is strengthen our relationship with my husbands family.
Well, apparently you don’t as you seem mighty willing to let it slip through your fingers.Your rather long posts were very well written, and had I been from another faith I may want to now join. However, we are discussing 2 issues I have and you were trying to convince me why it is so wonderful to be a Catholic. I already know.
I was trying to illustrate through the most clear example the difference between invincible ignorance and culpable ignorance.In response to the people in the Amazon, you are suggesting that only those who are completely without knowledge that the Catholic church exists are the only ones God excuses from following all of the Catholic beliefs. That simply is not true.
God does not excuse anyone from not fully following Him. He *might *grant mercy to *some *who were ignorant *through no fault of their own. *
What knowledge do we now have that would change the teaching of the Church regarding the obligation to attend Mass?This knowledge that technology has given to use has not been around for 2000 years. I’m suggesting that the current, alive, scholars that understand this new knowledge are not expanding on it to update things.
As for your other issue, the Church has always taught that what your husband is doing is wrong. It is a denial of his full self to you or a rejection of his full self by you. You may not notice any result of that, just as a child does not notice that he can’t see well, because you don’t have the experience of its not being that way.
Truth does not become outdated. Do you think that any of this is new to God?And I am not suggesting that things are not more easily dealt with now that we have more conveniences of live, just that in the context of what we are talking about is outdated.
When we thought the earth was flat, was it? No. What *we *“knew” was wrong.Truth and Reality DO change.
But the truth remained the same, didn’t it?The world use to be flat and the the sun use to revolve around the Earth. We use technology to come closer to the actual truth.
I don’t know if you read this post, since it wasn’t addressed to you, but it might explain better what is at stake and why this is so important.