Quote:
Originally Posted by inkaneer
And it never occurred to you to ask why it was compulsory? Do you always do things without knowing why you do them? Listen, I got a bridge I can sell you real cheap…
Yes it never occurred to me to ask why it was compulsory (surprised? satisfied? eh?).
When I arrived boarding school at the age of 9, I was given a book with rules and regulations which I had to read and follow. Would you have started asking why the compulsory stuff in the book were compulsory? Should I have started asking why we had to do chores, manual labour on Mondays (and not Tuesdays), why the first and second years had to attend mass everyday etc? Do you always ask why?
Yes, I sometimes do things without knowing why I do them (satisfied?). Before Christmas, we used to cut down a cypress tree, decorate it and call it a Christmas tree. I got used to this tradition and never asked why. In my culture, we don’t have Easter eggs. Well, knowing the history of Easter eggs is not yet on my “To-Know-List”. However, I accept the tradition and take part in it without knowing why. So are you satisfied?
Have you ever asked why your cell phone does what it does or why your computer does what it does or would you have asked why an apple falls down from a tree?
I am interested in growing more in faith and I do have a “To-Know-List” but unfortunately I can’t ask all my questions at once and I can’t get all my questions answered at once.
E.g After reading a passage in the bible, I discovered that the sabbath was on Saturday and not Sunday. I searched for the topic on this forum and the answer from the apologist was a reference to a lengthy online article. Well, I simply bookmarked the page (increasing my “To-Visit-Pages” to 40) since I didn’t have time to read the article. So currently, I don’t why the sabbath was moved to Sunday and I believe it’s not a priority for me to know and I must not also know why. But I accept it like accepting a Gospel truth.
Well, I will leave it here. If you choose to be catholic (open-minded), then you would understand that people are different and that people are brought up differently.
Peace
I still don’t buy it. First you say you went to Catholic school for eight years now you say you went to a boarding school at the age of 9. So what school did you go to at age 6? By the way, catholic does not mean open minded. It means universal. The name comes from the scriptures, Acts 9:31 to be exact:
“So the church throughout all Judea and Galilee and Sama’ria had peace and was built up; and walking in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Spirit it was multiplied.”
The words translated in English as, “the church throughout…” is, in the Greek,
ecclesia kata holis
As for the Sunday versus Sabbath thingy, the early christians worshipped on the “Lord’s Day” otherwise known as the “eighth day” or Sunday, the day of the Resurrection. They reasoned that just as the New Covenant did away with the Mosaic Law and the Old Covenant which were precursors of that which was to come, meaning the New Covenant, then so too things associated with the Old Covenant such as the dietary laws, the rite of circumcision and keeping the Old Testament Sabbath were done away with. There is an early christian writing dating to around about 225 AD called the
Didascalia which claims that Sunday worship was taught by the Apostles:
“The apostles further appointed: On the first day of the week let there be service, and the reading of the holy scriptures, and the oblation [sacrifice of the Mass], because on the first day of the week * our Lord rose from the place of the dead, and on the first day of the week he arose upon the world, and on the first day of the week he ascended up to heaven, and on the first day of the week he will appear at last with the angels of heaven” (Didascalia 2 [A.D. 225]).
St. Athanasius probably summed it up best when he wrote:
“The Sabbath was the end of the first creation, the Lord’s day was the beginning of the second, in which he renewed and restored the old in the same way as he prescribed that they should formerly observe the Sabbath as a memorial of the end of the first things, so we honor the Lord’s day as being the memorial of the new creation” (On Sabbath and Circumcision 3 [A.D. 345]).*