S
Sy_Noe
Guest
Under the teaching of OCAC how would one cease to be Catholic? And what do you mean by “claim to still be”. Isn’t it the Catholic Church that claims them to be?
- The Church teaches that not just Catholic Baptism, but any valid Baptism, leaves an indelible mark on the soul. We recognize your Lutheran Christian Baptism as indelible, regardless of what happens afterwards.
- Ex Catholics can, and often do, come in and seek some kind of ministry from the Church, for themselves or family members. Sometimes their background is relevant, without minimizing their current beliefs or disbeliefs. (Do you think the average cradle-Atheist spends as much time on CAF as those who say they converted to Atheisim?)
- There really is no way to accurately measure when someone ceases to be Catholic. When they miss Mass 14 times? If they go to a Humanist service 2 or more times? If they change their FB profile to “agnostic”? I know people who shop around to various non denominational churches many times, but drop in at their RC parish some times, too. There is no clear boundary line - (“ok, she is out, subtract one”) but some people pass various boundaries, in both directions, many times, towards greater, or lesser, participation as Catholics.
- Most Protestant movements define membership as belonging to a congregation. Catholicism is a different kind of thing. So it’s going to have different kinds of statistics.
But we also have statistics that are more meaningful for you. Use them instead of the Yearbook.- A better understanding would focus on “Practicing Catholics”. This would omit those who switch to other, or no religions, as well as those who claim to still be Catholic but don’t practice it. For some purposes, this figure would provide better numbers you are looking for. But parishes are still responsible for all those others in their boundaries. So that statistic is relevant too.