E
ethelzguy
Guest
Who said anything about imitating heretics?Uhh, if you want to immitate heretics then go for it:thumbsup:
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What I am reading here, is that anything a protestant does, we shouldnātā¦which is just plain silly.
Who said anything about imitating heretics?Uhh, if you want to immitate heretics then go for it:thumbsup:
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This is the kind of rhetoric that drives many good Catholic CAF-ers away from the TC forum.Uhh, if you want to immitate heretics then go for it:thumbsup:
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Hi Ethelzguy,Who said anything about imitating heretics?
What I am reading here, is that anything a protestant does, we shouldnātā¦which is just plain silly.![]()
Hi again,This is the kind of rhetoric that drives many good Catholic CAF-ers away from the TC forum.
Extremism does nothing to advance the faith, except perhaps in the mind of the extremist.
I think the point is not that we should imitate Protestants, but that because a Protestant Church does something does not mean that Catholics should be barred from doing that thing. For example, if Protestants decide as a majority that translating the Bible from the oldest texts in original languages is a good idea, that does not mean Catholic theologians should avoid doing it, just because Protestants do this.Hi Ethelzguy,
Why should we do anything a Protestant does? We are not Protestants. Its not silly, its just a fact of life.
Thank youI think the point is not that we should imitate Protestants, but that because a Protestant Church does something does not mean that Catholics should be barred from doing that thing. For example, if Protestants decide as a majority that translating the Bible from the oldest texts in original languages is a good idea, that does not mean Catholic theologians should avoid doing it, just because Protestants do this.
If we worry too much about what Protestants do, we will be come more of an anti-Protestant and less of a Catholic.
If the EF mass is so much more catholic then the OF mass then why dont bishops celebrate it more? Most bishops rarely if ever celebrate the EF, and many are not enthusiastic about its use. Doesnāt this tell you something? We should humbly follow the example of our bishops.Does it not?
The priest facing the altar and the Mass in Latin were done for more than a thousand years in all Catholic Churches. These are parts of Catholic culture and identity.
It does not, as I think you meant to say, make them more TRUE. Each Mass is true. The fact that they are not essential doesnāt effect that.
So while having the priest face the altar and pray in Latin in no way makes the Mass more true or authentic, it does make it more Catholic, in that these are actions associated with the Catholic Church for a thousand years in the mind of Catholics and Non-Catholics. Praying in the vernacular and facing the people can be done by Catholics, but itās also been done by protestants (and even non-Christians), so it is not as intrinsically Catholic. As such, I believe an argument could be made that the Tridentine has more Catholic trappings and culture (ie is 'more Catholic) than the Novus Ordo, without casting aspersions on either riteās validity or core identity as a Catholic service.
I do not get the tie between abortion and traditional catholicism.Are the bishops as Catholic as they should be??
The Irish Catholic bishops, in 2002, stated that it was ok for Catholics to vote Yes to abortion.
Are they as Catholic as they should be??
Are the bishops as Catholic as they should be??āWe should humbly follow the example of our bishops.ā
That is not what I was said at all.Because a non-Catholic church does something, we are inherently excluded from doing it?
I donāt see how I could have got more explicit then that. Please read my posts if you want to comment on them.Praying in the vernacular and facing the people can be done by Catholics, but itās also been done by protestants (and even non-Christians), so it is not as intrinsically Catholic.
Holy Cow!! I guess I donāt know what I am then. I thought Traditional and āmodernā Catholics, for lack of a better label, are those who hold the Churchās dogmas and doctrines to be absolute. I didnāt realize the type of Mass one attends is all there is in a description of either. Seems a bit narrow defination for so complex a religion.You werenāt the only one who fails to see the subtlety in this.
As to the original post, the label of ātraditional catholicā is only useful as a broad description. In this forum it is used to describe a preference for a TLM:
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The term is useless as an insult or a stereotype. It is better to stick to the simpler definition in which Traditional Catholics prefer a specific type of Mass and spirituality. Obviously those who are not Traditional Catholics still adhere to Catholic Tradition, or else they would not be Catholic.
Likewise āModern Catholicā is useless as an insult and stereotype, do to the vagueness of the term. I want to laugh at the irony of āmodernā being used as an insult on a computer and over the internet.
Youre funny. If I was in that last room Iād says I was in hell.One more blindfolding. This time there are no pews but only chairs. No kneelers. People are singing and clapping. A man in a polo shirt is standing at what youād call an ambo, leading everyone. There are large screens behind him projected with the lyrics to the song. A full band with backup singers and dancers are on stage.
Tell me-where you are in each room? What is each room?
I donāt know why Catholics of a certain ilk deny that Christ is in all of us to a lesser or greater degree. There are many fine Protestants out there, who although they donāt have the āfull truthā of the Catholic Chruch are certainly not heretics. In fact Protestants are no longer called heretics.Who said anything about imitating heretics?
What I am reading here, is that anything a protestant does, we shouldnātā¦which is just plain silly.![]()
Awww, that gives me such a nice warm fuzzy feeling.I donāt know why Catholics of a certain ilk deny that Christ is in all of us to a lesser or greater degree. There are many fine Protestants out there, who although they donāt have the āfull truthā of the Catholic Chruch are certainly not heretics. In fact Protestants are no longer called heretics.
Yes ā the origin of the term is āhanded downā, in Latin.Youāre lost reggieM. Do you know what a tradition is?
SFD
Iām always glad to play the traditionalist game. Iām just glad to see you admit what it really is.Wellā¦thanks anyway for playing, reggie. Better luck next time.
Good! We are supposed to post anonymously. I guess you are just doing a really good job of it!Holy Cow!! I guess I donāt know what I am then.
Iām leaving the Church?? When did I decide that? Boy, things happen behind my back all the time and I always thought it was āothersā doing those things.Awww, that gives me such a nice warm fuzzy feeling.
Listen, I have much beloved friends who are in the Anglican religion. I love them. But Iād be a liar if I didnāt tell them that they should come on over to the Catholic church and stop being such a silly willy.Henry VIII needs to get over himself and so do you!
Its immature to leave the Catholic Church because YOU think YOU know better. That is silliness in the highest. Donāt you agree?
Maybe there was a Pope or two who you donāt agree with. So What? Are you smarter than a Pope? Why didnāt God make you the Pope? If you are so smart?
The diff is simple. In the 1960ās Pope John XIII āopened the windows of the Church to the modern worldā and let the incense out of the Church and let the stink of unwashed hippies of the 1960ās in. Being a Traditional Catholic means that you believe what the Church has always taught before a few liberals in the Vatican thought that Gods church wasnāt good enough and needed to be updated. To be traditional means to follow the faith and receive the sacraments as your ancestors and thousands of Saints did for 1800 years or so before the Vatican II council thought it needed an updating, which as it has turned out has been one giant catastrophe.Iāve been thinking lately about Traditionalist Catholicism.
Being a true Catholic means being faithful to all of Scripture and Sacred Tradition. The teachings of the Catholic Church remain the same through all time, and are continually taught by the infallible magisterium of the Church. The bishops and Holy Father have the authority to teach infallibly what has been true in every generation, and which has its source in the Apostles.
So how is being a Traditionalist Catholic any different from being a Catholic? It seems to me that being a Traditionalist Catholic means that you believe that true tradition has been abandoned and is only maintained by a small faithful remnant, while the rest of the Church has lost its way.
Isnāt this calling into question the teaching authority of the Church in an unfair and imprudent manner? Isnāt this also based on severe misunderstandings of the pre and post conciliar teachings of the Church on issues such as liturgy and religious liberty?
More and more I am starting to see Traditionalist Catholicism as a disobedient and unhealthy movement in the Church that has wrought a lot of bad fruit, such as schismatic groups, cult like groups, and confusion of the faithful.