R
Roy5
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MARY, PAUL AND FR. CORAPI
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Probably you've heard enough from Roy. Obviously most of you (not all) don't pursue independent thinking. You are convinced that the Church is right always and everywhere, so there is little use in additional discussion. You follow along because you accept the authority of the Church. Period.
They say that 30,000,000 Americans are ex-Catholics. Why do you think this is true? I believe that millions of these former Catholics smply can't leave their thinking mechanism at the church door and salute - and that's it! Years ago, when people were less educated, that was possible. I recall when the priest's word was law in my hometown parish. That is no longer true.
The problem with Fr. Corapi, in my humble opinion, is that he is too much like priests used to be. "You had better listen to me and believe what I tell you or you are going to b e in serious trouble." Frankly, that sort of attitude turns me off completely. Discuss with me. Prove your point. But don't tell me what I HAVE to believe. I find this offensive and demeaning. God provided me with a brain and I don't think I offend him when I use it, and perhaps come up with some questions and even some doubts.
Back to Mary, for a moment. St. Paul wrote many letters to early Christians focusing on doctrines. He was the great missionary. Yet, never once does he mention Mary! And yet, the Church has elevated her to near-goddess status. Sorrym but it brings to mind all the Virgin goddesses of the ancient world who were label Queen of the Universe, etc.
Can one be a good Catholic and question all the adulation directed at Mary? Can one be a good Catholic and have doubts about some of the miracles attributed to her - Fatima, Lourdes, etc.? Can one be a good Catholic and raise questions about transubstantiation? Probably not. So, it appears that I may not belong in the Catholic Church (despite an ancestral uncle who was a distinguished Bishop back in the 19th century!).
I guess I go along with the idea that God is too big to be encompassed in any one religion. We live in a magnificent and mysterious creation and it increasingly seems petty to me that any one Church claims to be the only faith with the truth. I find truth in many faiths. Truly ecumenical Catholicism appeals to me. Catholicism which puts down other faiths (as in these threads and often on EWTN and by Fr. Corapi) troubles me greatly.