G
guanophore
Guest
I am glad to hear this. I do think you are truly struggling to reconcile your politics with your spirituality.Code:First of all, I am not a troll.
This seems to imply that you don’t know anyone who has been successful…I admire those who choose to remain Catholic and attempt to live Catholic lives.
This is a very telling statement. Love cannot be separated from the Truth, and that is why it is the most loving thing for the CC to tell the Truth. Now this may not result in the hearers feeling warm and fuzzy. More often, like those who heard the Gospel from the Apostles, the hearers will get hurt, angry, or be “cut to the heart” by the Word.But I, along with billions of others, honestly have questions, and we are seeking real answers for them instead of platitudes.** We want to be loved, but don’t feel loved by the CC. **
In such cases, a person may not “feel loved”, especially if what they believe is love is tolerating sin in life.
On the contrary, I think preaching the Gospel distracts from political stubborness. When one receives the Word of Truth in their life, that Word of Truth will manifest itself in absolutely every area of their lives, family, vocational, and political.Actually no. It’s not just about politics. It’s that I believe the CC’s political stubbornness distracts from preaching the Gospel.
For us, there is no separation between the two. The Gospel of Christ is to defend those who are voiceless. There are none in the world today whose voices are more ignored than those who are in what should be the safest place ever for them, their mothers womb. And yet, that safety is violated 4000 times day while these silently screaming innocents are put to death.I see Catholics more passionate about banning abortion than preaching the Gospel.
What good are a large number of converts if they are only converted to falsehoods? The road is narrow and the way steep that leads to life, and few will find it.Protestants, by making politics secondary, are better showing love to people around the world and gaining converts as a result.
You seem to be able to separate your spirituality from your politics, but for Catholics this is not possible. We are to be salt and light to the world, a city set upon a hill. For us the opposition to the culture of death IS about saving souls. We cannot support or tolerate “politics” that are anti-life.Clearly, people are being alienated by church because they see it as anti-abortion and anti-gay. But saving souls is more important than politics. Let people who want abortion and gay unions have them, and let people who oppose them just not participate.
I think you have this backwards. Jesus has called us to bring light and truth to the culture in which we live. It is easy for us, a millenia later, to look back at the Crusades and criticize that those involved did not bring light and truth in them. Certainly it does not appear that way from where we are sitting. The same is true for the Reformation.Code:In short, the CC is least effective when it meddles in politics (think Crusades).
But these are part of the reasons why Catholic clergy are no longer allowed to occupy political offices, so that there will not be a conflation of temporal and spiritual goals. If every Catholic lived their faith in the marketplace and the government, then our society would be much better place.
Catholics feed on the Eucharist, but if you do want good sermons, there are many available on the internet. Catholic priests are commissioned for Sacraments, and many of them are not gifted teachers.But please also read my other posts about the liturgy, traditions, rituals, lack of Gospel preaching, and the moribund state of the CC. A quality Protestant pastor will incorporate the Gospel in every sermon. Do priests do that in Mass? And where is the teaching for adults in the CC? Where are the good, long sermons where I can be fed?
We have a different understanding of what “gospel” is. For us, the Gospel is contained in every Mass in the form of the Eucharist. We become that which we behold.
I do agree with you, though, there is much need of formation.