I agree. But I do feel that they should praise God in a regular church, not a “Christian entertainment complex”.
I now agree with this statement.
These people have dressed up their own churches to practically turn their “worship services” into youth rock concerts.
I am not in opposition to that, But I am in opposition to this kind of thing “Replacing” solemn worship of god through prayer, communion and scripture readings.
I would like these kind of events if they complemented the Catholic Mass, by being a kind of “Friday night youth group rock concert” thing than a replacement of the submissive, pennant-full respectful Sunday mass services.
I also believe no one should apply the bible to their own agenda(Like some pastors do, they tell you how it supposedly tells you how to live, at least from their point of view), they should comment on what it says and it’s actual clear teachings only(which is what catholic priests do during the sermon).
Plus it needs to be read as a separate “A Reading from the gospel accori…”, rather than as part of the sermon itself. This is so the layperson can sit for a moment and meditate on the clear message expressed in whatever passage was read.
To me, in turning the mass into a “rock concert”, limiting communion to “once a month” or “once a fortnight”(some churches do this practice.) and trying to apply their own agenda to the bible, they are committing the mortal sin Luther once charged the catholic church with doing, putting themselves ahead of God’s purest teachings.
I personally think these churches are in danger of become the book of revelation’s “False Prophet” in that they apply their own meanings to the bible in their services by going “it means this… and you must apply to your life through this…”.
The catholic church service allows one to contemplate the meaning of the bible for one self, but with the correct mindset that it is only the beginning, that the new testament should be literally read and understood(Not interpreted by someone else who does not take it entirely literally), and that we need to be familiar with traditional catholic teaching on it.