Intrigued by Catholicism, but just can't convert for many reasons

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Hello… I’m a Protestant from New Mexico.

Check out my comments under “Most attacked/talked against religion on these Forums?”
Not nearly as informative or specific as yours, but I’d be curious…

thanks
 
to Burdensome1

“Being Catholic has always been unpopular to Americans.”

Yikes! Don’t get caught saying anything like that in Boston or New York.
 
to gratefulfred:

Jesus Christ established the Church. And remember that He uses the word Kingdom far more often the word Church.
 
Calilobo, there are enough questions in your post for several threads. 🙂 I’m glad you are asking questions. In the interests of brevity, I will confine myself to the following.
  • But then again, if the Catholic church were to liberalize politically or tolerate political dissent, what would it then offer that I can’t find in a Protestant church??
You have just answered your own questions here. Catholic belief and practice (including our social teachings, theology, and our liturgy are often called a “seamless garment”. Destroy one of these, and the others become pointless. That is why the Church does not change her dogmas to satisfy cultural whims. There have always been dissenters (even in the days of the Apostles, you will find if you read Scripture), and there probably always will be. The Church knows this. You ask why the church doesn’t tolerate political dissent, and yet you also ask why it doesn’t “excommunicate people left and right anymore”. The thing is, the Church does not excommunicate people lightly, which is why it is possible to feel that the church is both intolerant and yet too tolerant. That is to say, the Church is firm in its teachings, but moderate and merciful in its approach to those who do not follow them, which is why excommunication is reserved for very particular circumstances.

You have a lot of questions about the liturgy, which has undergone some changes in the past few decades, largely to try to make it more understandable. You will also find that the style will vary a bit from one parish to another, and even from one mass to another. (At my parish we have traditional music at some masses, and more “lively” music at others. People pick what works for them.)

Even with these surface differences, the gestures and symbolism of the mass remain very consistent over the decades and centuries, because they have their roots in ancient times and in ancient teachings. You mention people who find Catholic worship empty. People who do not understand the history and symbolism behind Catholic worship are usually the ones who find it so. Not because it is actually empty, but because they don’t understand it. Much the way many of my high school classmates decided Spanish was a “stupid language”. This clearly does not reflect reality, since Spanish is actually a beautiful and interesting language. What it shows is that my classmates back then experienced frustration at the hard work they had to do to understand a new language. Writing it off as “stupid” excused them from doing that work, just as writing the liturgy off as “empty” gives many Catholics an excuse for not learning more about Catholic worship (and by extension, some of the more challenging points of Catholic theology). Many Catholics who leave the church because they think the liturgy is empty return to it when they discover it is not. This is usually after much prayer and study. 😉

What these “re-verts” discover through that prayer and study is what we have that cannot be had in a Protestant church–an unbroken line of aposotlic authority promulgating consistent teachings and ancient worship practices dating back over 2,000 years. The faith is not “dead and boring” as you put it. It is very much alive.

The thing about Catholic worship is that it is not intended to merely entertain or create momentary warm-fuzzies or excitement. It is meant to do honor to God, to recognize His greatness and our frailty. There is no more poignant reminder of that frailty than the effort it takes to worship him with our whole heart, even when we are tired, or don’t feel like it. One’s relationship with God takes effort, much like one’s marriage. (Incidentally, marriage is important to Catholics partly because it is an illustration of Christ’s relationship with his Bride, which is the Church.) Every word, gesture, and object in Catholic liturgy has a meaning. There is too much to explain here. Inquiry and RCIA classes at your local parish are a great place to start learning about this if you are interested. Just check the bulletin.

Speaking of parish bulletins, most parishes that I have ever been to have social events, bible studies, prayer groups, ministries to the sick or the poor, religious education classes for kids, RCIA classes for adults interested in becoming Catholic or just learning about Catholicism, and so on. The parish bulletin is where announcements and contact information for these things can be found. Heck, check bulletins at multiple parishes if you like. Each parish is a little different. My parish even has a ladies’ sewing circle. We do get involved in each other’s lives and in the community in general. If you want to meet people to talk to about the faith, check out those announcements and get involved with something. People will be there.

As for priests and nuns, they are as human as the rest of us, and some relate to people better than others.

Oh, by the way, the whole “catholic guilt” thing is an invention of people who don’t understand how wonderful God’s mercy in sacramental confession is. I always tell people it’s like going to the dentist for regular cleanings. It can be uncomfortable, but you’ll love that good clean feeling you have afterwards. 🙂 Besides, if you’re willing to be uncomfortable to keep from losing your teeth, you should be even more willing to be momentarily uncomfortable to keep from losing your soul. Some people stay away from the confessional (and even the dentist) out of fear or pride. I can’t speak for every dental experience, but I can say there is nothing to fear in the confessional. Believe me, unless he was just ordained yesterday, that priest has heard everything!

Sorry for the long response. Hope it helps!
 
Hey moderators don’t close this thread yet; I’ll reply after work today.
 
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razanir:
I can assure you that far more Catholics agree with the Magisterium than don’t
Actually they don’t. Polls show most Catholics use contraception, and most Catholics voted for Obama. And I read Catholics on this forum admitting that most Catholics are poorly catechized.
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R_C:
But 1.2 billion Christians strong, unlike the “vibrant” protestant “community” of approx. 800 million people spread around 20,000 denominations, each following their own doctrine, and “more or less” doing what Christ told us to do in matters of faith and morals.
A common argument by Catholics, but how can Catholics claim 1.2 billion members when most of them don’t go to Mass, go to confession, have basic biblical knowledge, put too much devotion to Mary and the saints, or follow the teachings of the Vatican?

Speaking of Magisterium, isn’t the only reason why the Vatican politically opposes gay marriage rights, contraception, and abortion because of the Magisterium–simply because the pope and bishops say so? I mean, there’s nothing about politics in the Bible–Jesus personally said he didn’t come to bring peace but a sword, but was also referred to as Prince of Peace. Which means he didn’t come to bring sociopolitical peace, but rather peace of the soul. And there’s nothing about holy tradition that can clue us in as to how to vote politically.

So many books today by Protestants, like “Unchristian” by David Kinnaman, write about how young people are turned off by the Church’s meddling with politics, its anti-gay and anti-woman image, its behind-the-times image, and its judgmental image. These authors say that its imperative that the church rethink how it engages socially, politically, and ministerially, for it to win back the younger generation, who is turned off by organized religion in general.

Isn’t the answer of the Catholic Church simple–just to change the Magisterium with respect to social issues to win back the younger generation, who want religion that can connect with their era and their culture?

Isn’t Gospel preaching more important than politics??

How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How would a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How would a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??
 
How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How would a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How would a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??
Some may be poorly Catechized, but you aren’t at all. We have one woman who had an abortion who is up for Beatification, right now. The Church is the place you go if you are a sinner. Gay people aren’t rejected or scorned in the Church, try reading the Catechism if you want to know what the Church says about homosexuality. The last gay woman I knew in the Church was the head of Catholic Education for the Archdiocese and the last gay man the highest paid music director.

The point about them was that they accepted Catholic teaching about chastity and sacramental marriage.

You want politically correct human organizations that run churches to fit your political views, I’m sure you can find a plethora of them in the yellow pages. You want the Truth, you want to get close to God? You want to learn a bit of humility and have wonder and miracles and healing? You come Home for that.

You don’t seem to be looking for the True God, you seem to be looking for what are, in your own opinion, perfect people. Good luck with that.
 
How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How would a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How would a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??
How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? Or How SHOULD a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How SHOULD a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How SHOULD a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??

Hopefully the woman who had an abortion regrets it and has asked for forgiveness.Who would give her this forgiveness? What better place to receive her forgiveness from Him but through the Church that began with Christ, who told us to Love; with love comes forgiveness. Hopefully, the “naturally” gay person, who genuinely loves another, not those who sin just to sin, would be welcomed also. The catechism suggests that we hate the act, not the person; that the persons are to be treated with the utmost respect as we should with all others.
Luke 6:37 Judge not: and you shall not be judged. Condemn not: and you shall not be condemned. Forgive: and you shall be forgiven. He did not condemn the woman at the well, the adulteress about to be stoned; and how many times are we to forgive? As often as it takes…
 
How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? Or How SHOULD a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How SHOULD a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How SHOULD a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??

Hopefully the woman who had an abortion regrets it and has asked for forgiveness.Who would give her this forgiveness? What better place to receive her forgiveness from Him but through the Church that began with Christ, who told us to Love; with love comes forgiveness. Hopefully, the “naturally” gay person, who genuinely loves another, not those who sin just to sin, would be welcomed also. The catechism suggests that we hate the act, not the person; that the persons are to be treated with the utmost respect as we should with all others.
Luke 6:37 Judge not: and you shall not be judged. Condemn not: and you shall not be condemned. Forgive: and you shall be forgiven. He did not condemn the woman at the well, the adulteress about to be stoned; and how many times are we to forgive? As often as it takes…
This. 👍 You said what I was going to say so succinctly.

On a further note, to the OP question of “How would a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??”:

We all sin. No one is perfect. The Catholic Church understands that. So what would a parish do if these people approached them? They would treat them with kindness, love, and forgiveness. The quote cheezey posted above expresses that the best.

The parish would treat these people as they treat any sinners - hate the sin, love the sinner. We don’t hate the person for who they are (as you can’t change that - you can’t change that the woman had an abortion, you can’t change someone who is homosexual into a heterosexual), we hate the action they have committed (the murder of their child through abortion or the homosexual act). It’s the same as saying, you don’t hate your brother who stole your candy, you hate the action he has committed - stealing your candy.

The Catholic church also believes that no matter how great our sin, we can always be forgiven. So how would the parish, the church, the Vatican welcome those who have sinned, but wish for forgiveness? With loving, opening arms.
 
to Burdensome1

“Being Catholic has always been unpopular to Americans.”

Yikes! Don’t get caught saying anything like that in Boston or New York.
Good point, being Catholic has traditionally been unpopular in the red states with the exception of Louisiana, but has traditionally flourished in the blue states. For reference look at the KKK and its strongholds. Support for the KKK was not only given for its racist policies, but for being anti-Catholic and anti-semantic and nativist.
 
A common argument by Catholics, but how can Catholics claim 1.2 billion members when most of them don’t go to Mass, go to confession, have basic biblical knowledge, put too much devotion to Mary and the saints, or follow the teachings of the Vatican?

To begin with, “most of them” is rather vague. Surely we are still more “vibrant” than any protestant community. Every Parrish you visit, certainly a percentage of faithful won’t be “practicing”, but that does not make the Catholic community less proactive in doing works of mercy and in spreading the good news. As for “too much devotion”, that’s absurd: the greater we grow in closeness to Christ, the more we ask His mother and His best friends to help us in our efforts - you know, a 2000-years old concept known as the Communion of Saints, that links us, the Church Militant, to them, the Church Triumphant, something that was common Christian doctrine until some heretic thought he’d just take that teaching off the table because he didn’t like it.

Speaking of Magisterium, isn’t the only reason why the Vatican politically opposes gay marriage rights, contraception, and abortion because of the Magisterium–simply because the pope and bishops say so?

The Magisterium is not just the pope and bishops. The Magisterium is the teaching authority that our Lord gave to His apostles. To them he said: “those who hear you hear me, those who reject you reject me”.

Eventually we’ve had heretics and schismatics who have decided - for very selfish reasons, by the way - to move away from the Church and reject the sacred tradition, coming up with their own interpretations and teachings, and forgetting that the very act of denying the sacred tradition established by virtue of apostolic succession was to reject the very Christ, who is head of the Church.

We can open new threads to discuss our opposition to homosexual unions (if you are Christian and have read the Scriptures, you’d know that there’s no such thing as a same-sex marriage right, and if you knew a bit about Church history you’d know that Holy Church, while condemning homosexual sex as immoral, has been commanding his faithful to love and respect homosexuals and avoid all discrimination towards them, all the while the secular world would persecute them to the extent of killing or chemically castrating homosexuals), contraception (again…in the scriptures) and abortion (that is, the murder of unborn children) to understnad the solid biblical foundation of our teachings, which the pope and bishops uphold…that’s all they do: with Paul, they tell us: “the tradition we have received is what we are passing to you…follow the tradition that is being passed in words and in writing”.

Sure, the secular world penetrated the Church and brought forth to some small number of faithful separating from it, and as a result we have so-called “Christian” communities who allow the removal of the unitive and procreavite purpose from the Sacrament of Matrimony, thus desecrating it and turning it into an act of sheer lust, and degradating the spouses from their dignity and turning them into each other’s pleasure tool…we have so-called “Christian” communities who allow the monstrosity of murdering unborn infants, which contributes to over 1.5 million abortions only in the US, of which only 1% are a result of sexual violence or rape…the rest being simply poor women - often unmarried for which maybe contraception went wrong and now can’t deal with the child…do you realize how many souls are 1.5 million per year? Do you think that this is Christ’s will, that Jesus is ok with that?

We can see, rather clearly after some study, Antichrist’s plan to destroy family in steps - namely, by introducing contraception, abortion, divorce, and euthanasia, and by ultimately undoing God’s established complementarity between man and woman by justifying all sorts of sexual behaviors, thus nullifying the divine design. We also find out throughout modern history how these intrinsic evils were promoted in the world by people and groups who had nothing to do with God - some of which, in fact, are dedicated to evil worship. It’s all there, and the only community that has upheld the ancient teachings and not faultered before the growth of evil has been the Catholic Church.

And there’s nothing about holy tradition that can clue us in as to how to vote politically.

I totally agree. Holy Church never told anyone: vote for X. What we do is we explain the matters of faith and morals, and explain that while no doubt any party will promote some intrinsic evil (I mean, they are not societies of apostolic life) some intrinsic evils are so grave that they bring upon the breakdown and destruction of society in the long run. People then make their choice. However, there is a lot in holy tradition about how to behave in our choices and towards authority. Just see how Peter and Paul behaved before the Sinhedrin. Paul treated a teacher very harshly, but greatly apologized when he found he was the high priest at the time. Peter, when commanded not to preach Christ, simply replied that he would not obey, because they obeyed to God and not to men. The Church thus educates us so that when we make our choices, especially voting, we are doing God’s will, and not promoting the works of Antichrist.
 
So many books today by Protestants, like “Unchristian” by David Kinnaman, write about how young people are turned off by the Church’s meddling with politics, its anti-gay and anti-woman image, its behind-the-times image, and its judgmental image.

**In my experience, young people are turned off by the modernism in the Church. They long for the traditional, for the reverence and devotion, for stricter and bolder preaching.

They long for shepherds who stand up and lead the way and are turned off by politically correct leaders who are afraid of scandalizing the world.

The Church, the great defender fo women, is accused to be “anti-women” by a world that has desecrated the woman and turned her into some sort of “I can be a man too” being who at the same time better look good enough and appear naked all over the place, be it adds, tv, cinema, for the pleasure of men who make lust a mark of true adulthood. Sorry, that’s not the way women want to look. Women have a greater dignity, and the Church is the only** institution that still keeps it. Just look how we revere the Blessed Virgin, who worked very hard and suffered a lot, and yet did not faulter in her pristine chastity, in her extraordinary charity, and in her motherly care.

As for “anti-gay”, I mentioned earlier on just how ahead of the game we’ve been, educating the secular world to respect and love anyone who has homosexual attractions, and teaching that such attraction is not evil or immoral in itself, all the while we’ve had and we still have states where you’ll be bullied in school if you’re gay and as an adult you may be persecuted, stoned, or hanged. We have many brothers and sisters who are homosexual and live wonderful lives in the Church, and they feel liberated from the oppression of lust and find themselves truly free to live life as God meant it to be lived: in true joy, filled with true love, which is agape love that is not geared or rooted in sexual pleasure. I admire them very much.

How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How would a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How would a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??

We have wonderful groups in every Parrish that support women and men as well as couples who have undergone abortions. We treat them with great love and they need the Church to be on their side, just like God is on their side, because they realize the great mistake they made and they are most sorrowful. We help them to heal, and to move forward in life. We provide comfort. The world only knows how to pat them in the back and say: hey, it was a choice, you made the choice, it’s cool, don’t worry about it, take it easy. And the parents are left with that inner grief never goes away.

We also have wonderful pregnancy aid groups, and I’ve known of groups who have been contacted by poor families that were literally terrified of the idea of having a child and that, by living community life and talking to parents and receiving support, have brought to life wonderful children and now are so joyful, that I tell you: meeting with even one of them would make you give up all these arguments and understand the Church for what it is.

Like I said, there are groups for those who experience homosexual attractions, that provide them with support and understanding. Most homosexuals feel a heavy weight: the weight of being regarded as “different”. The world only knows one answer: yes, you are different. The Chuch of Christ, instead, embraces them as brothers and sisters in Christ, and tells them, nay, you are not different. You are a child of the Most High, like all of us, made in God’s image and likeness. Come, let us talk about chastity and about love, and try to understand together what you are experiencing. And great things happen. Because ultimately we all share the same cross, whether we are homosexual or heterosexual, and we all strive for chastity. Surely the “protestant” communities that don’t even know what the Holy Orders are could never understand why so many heterosexual and homosexual men enter religious or priestly consecrated life and chose never to marry and yet have wonderful lives. Surely the world cannot understand an individual who does not engage in extra-marital or pre-marital sexual relations with many partners. Surely the world discriminates these people as “not normal”. Holy Church doesn’t. We don’t discriminate anyone, because that is the will of Christ.
 
It’s funny - I felt the same way about many of the items you speak of for years. It was not until I felt the same desires you do to explore the Church that I changed my mind.

To outsiders, the liturgy can look like “empty rituals” and I can see where some of the Vatican’s viewpoints can be hard to understand. It’s not until I researched, and had many conversations about the meaning behind the sacraments and the Church’s teachings that I started enjoying and appreciating them.

Yeah, previous protestant churches I’ve been a part of may have more vibrant music, but the reason I’m joining the Catholic Church is to be closer to Jesus Christ, which is the most important thing.

I will pray for you while you figure out your path.
 
all of your comments about not being able to convert have substance.

for me, whenever these factors in the Church arise, i always guided back to the Gospel of John, Chapter 6 (i am going from memory here) where Jesus preaches the Doctrine of the Eucharist and many who have been listening to Him object and turn from Him and leave.

Jesus turns to the Twelve when He sees so many who were formerly following Him but found the Doctrine of the Eucharist a stumbling block and asks the Twelve (and i am paraphrasing here) if they too are going to leave, and i believe it is Peter who responds, to whom would we go.

that is the essence of the Holy Catholic Church. where else in this world can we turn. to whom else in this world can we turn.

only Jesus suffered and died for my sins. moses did not. marx did not. martin luther did not. no one else loved me that much.

for that reason, where do i go if i leave the Church Jesus gave to me, a lost sheep, as my shepherd?

if, as protestants seem to believe, the Church Jesus founded lost the Grace given the world by the Father through the Life, Death and Resurrection of His Only Son, in what is there left to believe.

there are riches beyond our finite intellects to comprehend in the teachings, the practices and the history of the Catholic Church and yet these are only tools that allow us to enter ever more fully in to the Divine mysteries that our Loving Creator has made known to us through His Divine Son and other interventions in to human history.

so, that is what i always turn to when doubts enter in to my mind, where would I go?
 
Unfortunately, this does not mean that there aren’t some errant priests/minsters out there who would impose their misguided and, for lack of a better word, secular beliefs / judgments on some of those who need to be forgiven and/or advised. In fact, one told me (the man had NEVER met me), that I am certainly going to hell for marrying outside my faith. Nice guy, huh? I hadn’t even mentioned my specific Christian faith, though he could have assumed since I called him. He should have advised me of the concerns that this may bring. It seemed that once I said “Jewish” he was bent on damning me and hanging up loudly when I reminded him that Jesus was Jewish. I in fact learned a lot about Jesus’ faith through my husband. And each faith was respected, honored, and quite educational. And now I am more familiar with the Messianic Jewish faith!! (Jews for Jesus, a.k.a, Christians who still follow their Jewish heritage. At least, as I understand it…
 
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R_C:
To begin with, “most of them” is rather vague. Surely we are still more “vibrant” than any protestant community. Every Parrish you visit, certainly a percentage of faithful won’t be “practicing”, but that does not make the Catholic community less proactive in doing works of mercy and in spreading the good news.
No it’s not vague. Statistics show that more people leave Catholicism in the US than enter it. Statistics show most Catholics contracept (a very alive topic on this forum). Statistics show Protestants are more likely than Catholics to vote against abortion and gay marriage rights (and ironically, Protestant churches tolerate political difference whereas the Vatican doesn’t!) Catholics concede that Protestant converts have a lot of Biblical knowledge, and some accuse Protestants of hijacking the Catholic Church (all topics discussed in this forum)!

With that kind of weak manifestation of their faith, can we be honest and concede there are NOT 1.2 billion Catholics, as many keep saying? Protestant churches are much more honest and will deny that people who show that kind of weakness are true believers. To us the situation is more dire… statistics show only 4% of people under 30 attend church regularly. The situation is even more dire in Europe, from the testimonies of missionaries to England, France, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, and Lithuania that I have met. In all of these countries, the Anglican, Catholic, and Orthodox churches are MORIBUND.

Where is the desire among lay Catholics for REVIVAL?
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cheezey:
Luke 6:37 Judge not: and you shall not be judged. Condemn not: and you shall not be condemned. Forgive: and you shall be forgiven.
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findingmyself08:
The Catholic church also believes that no matter how great our sin, we can always be forgiven. So how would the parish, the church, the Vatican welcome those who have sinned, but wish for forgiveness? With loving, opening arms.
Exactly. So how does meddling into politics and opposing people’s secular civil rights fit in with not condemning them? How is this open arms, to say they don’t have the same civil rights as men to choose what to do with their own bodies, or that they don’t have the same rights as straight people to form committed, loving relationships?? Is this open arms? No, more like a message of hate.

What’s so immoral or moral about meddling into secular politics? What does this have to do with Gospel preaching?? Or even love?? Why does politics even matter?? Why don’t we see the Catholic Church advocating bringing back laws against divorce? Why don’t we see the Catholic Church advocating bans on porn? Has the abortion and gay rights issue hijacked the Catholic Church? How do we know that the Catholic Church isn’t hijacked by the USCCB? Isn’t there an honest debate between the conservative and liberal Catholics going on here? I don’t see the much-touted unity of the Catholic Church.

Yes, some gays and some who have had abortion will still enter the Church. But let’s be honest, most will feel angry, condemned and judged.
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cheezey:
“Being Catholic has always been unpopular to Americans.”

Yikes! Don’t get caught saying anything like that in Boston or New York.
Exactly. Boston and New York, taken over by secular progressives because the Catholic Church is moribund there.
 
Where is the desire among lay Catholics for REVIVAL?

Exactly. Boston and New York, taken over by secular progressives because the Catholic Church is moribund there.
Regarding my statement that you quoted, I was actually referring to the very strong Irish Catholic influence in Boston and NY, especially Boston. But now that I think of it, maybe it isn’t as strong as I remember for NY…
 
“Where is the desire among lay Catholics for REVIVAL?”

If the Catholic Church would, I don’t know, make itself known in a new way, would there be an influx of renewed interest? I am oversimplifying, no doubt. But that is a curious thought.
 
Isn’t the answer of the Catholic Church simple–just to change the Magisterium with respect to social issues to win back the younger generation, who want religion that can connect with their era and their culture?

Isn’t Gospel preaching more important than politics??

How would a Catholic parish welcome a woman who has had an abortion? How would a Catholic parish welcome someone who honestly believes he was born naturally gay?? How would a parish honestly be welcoming to these people if the Vatican politically opposes what they did in life??
Jesus did not change truth just to “win” anybody. Truth is truth. Politics is tied in with Gospel preaching, because to teach truth is to preach the Gospel.

We welcome everybody. To be gay is not an issue; to act on it is the issue. But yes, we do welcome sinners. Thank goodness we do; I wouldn’t be welcome (nor would my priest, or Bishop, or even our Pope!) if we didn’t. If the issue was murder (which it is, with abortion), or pedophilia, or basically any sin that you agreed is a sin, would you be suggesting Church teachings change? Would you be asking us not to teach against them? Should we be silent, not help people see they are wrong, just to fill seats?

We can’t change the truth, so we can’t change our teachings just to “win” people. And win them to what? Is it right to encourage people to sin in order to get them into a church? If not to live a holy life, what would be the purpose in that? Religion is not about what people want; it’s about preaching the Gospel and teaching us to grow closer to God.

The reason to be Catholic is for fullness of truth. How can a God of truth expect us to follow truth if we don’t know what truth is? It can’t just be to love God; scripture says if we love Him, we keep His commands. Jesus said to follow Him. If it was as simple as just loving God, we wouldn’t need the rest of scripture.

So how do you find truth? It can’t be just through individual guidance by the Holy Spirit; if that was how to find it, any two people who pray and love God would be in agreement. But we can’t even seem to agree on issues vital to salvation.

To me it makes sense that there is a deposit of truth somewhere. It makes sense to me that it is in either the Catholic or Orthodox churches, because they are the ones who have been around since the time of Christ. Obviously for me, it makes the most sense that it is in the Catholic church.

But that’s what you really need to figure out. If God is a God of truth, if Jesus meant what He said when He talked about sending the Advocate to lead us to truth, then truth is important. So…how do you find it?
 
Isn’t the answer of the Catholic Church simple–just to change the Magisterium with respect to social issues to win back the younger generation, who want religion that can connect with their era and their culture?
Because being progressive and “hip” is working for the liberal Protestants. :rolleyes: Just ask the crumbling Episcopalian Church.
 
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