N
Nanotwerp
Guest
I searched up Saint Peter’s Basilica, which is a famous site in the Vatican, and noticed something. ALL of the statues and paintings were of Italian origin. Is the catholic church universal ethnicity wise, too? 
Until relatively recently in Church history, it wasn’t really feasible to import large statues from halfway across the world.I searched up Saint Peter’s Basilica, which is a famous site in the Vatican, and noticed something. ALL of the statues and paintings were of Italian origin. Is the catholic church universal ethnicity wise, too?![]()
You are forgetting the Irish, and the Germanic, Baltic, and Slavic Catholic cultures (Austrians, Bavarians, Croatians, Czechs, Poles, Lithuanians, Latvians, etc.)I have had a problem with this for a few years. The mindset increasingly irritates me: the idea that someone cannot be fully Catholic without visiting Rome, or making a pilgrimage to its basilicas. A local Franciscan community has made it a point of honour to send all its simply-professed brothers to Rome immediately after their novitiate. We are not the Catholic (Universal) Church, but the Italian Church - or perhaps the Romance Church. Culturally-speaking, it’s all about Spanish, French, and Italian.
We can’t really get too frustrated with this, since the Germanic, Scandinavian, and English cultures went Protestant. The Slavic cultures are Orthodox. The French and Spanish were in a mess for hundreds of years during the Islamic invasions. The only strong Catholic cultures that survived for a thousand years were on the Italian peninsula. What do you expect? I’m just a little sick of people thinking that Catholic = Italian.![]()
One should also mention Rhinelanders, who are mostly Catholic, and who have built some of the most beautiful Catholic cathedrals and have made some of the most impressive Catholic art anywhere.You are forgetting the Irish, and the Germanic, Baltic, and Slavic Catholic cultures (Austrians, Bavarians, Croatians, Czechs, Poles, Lithuanians, Latvians, etc.)
Ultimately though Romance language cultures are going to be important in the Latin Rite Church, and this is fine. There is a better kind of universality in real local cultures than in a bland, artificial multi-culturalism.
I disagree.I think that historically the Church universal has been overly influenced by Italian thinking, culture and ways of being… Fortunately, we have moved more towards a truly universal, less homogeneous Church.
Don’t forget the Eastern Churches all over the world - the Indian Catholic Churches founded by St. Thomas the Apostles - Syro-Malabar and Syro-Malankara are Catholic and have their own unique culture. The Latin Church in their part of South India is very small.I have had a problem with this for a few years. The mindset increasingly irritates me: the idea that someone cannot be fully Catholic without visiting Rome, or making a pilgrimage to its basilicas. A local Franciscan community has made it a point of honour to send all its simply-professed brothers to Rome immediately after their novitiate. We are not the Catholic (Universal) Church, but the Italian Church - or perhaps the Romance Church. Culturally-speaking, it’s all about Spanish, French, and Italian.
We can’t really get too frustrated with this, since the Germanic, Scandinavian, and English cultures went Protestant. The Slavic cultures are Orthodox. The French and Spanish were in a mess for hundreds of years during the Islamic invasions. The only strong Catholic cultures that survived for a thousand years were on the Italian peninsula. What do you expect? I’m just a little sick of people thinking that Catholic = Italian.![]()
No=Nanotwerp;12110435]I searched up Saint Peter’s Basilica, which is a famous site in the Vatican, and noticed something. ALL of the statues and paintings were of Italian origin. Is the catholic church universal ethnicity wise, too?![]()
NoIn fact the term 'Catholic" means UNIVERSAL. While the Italians have had GREAT influence, as one would expect with ROME being IN Italy, the last three Popes have NOT been Italian, and I see no reason for this recent trend to change. Unless OF COURSE God Chooses a new Italian Pontiff?
God Bless you,
Patrick
Not exactly, the Pope being primarily the Bishop of Rome, Primate of Italy, may have something to do with it. Why shouldn’t the Bishop of Rome be Roman?Italians were Popes because they would call a conclave and elect a Pope before half the cardinals in the world even knew that there was a conclave. Messages had to be relayed on horseback and the cardinals had to travel to Rome on a sailing ship.
That started to change with the advent of phones, jet planes and now email and CNN.
-Tim-
Well, the Church does have a global presence.I searched up Saint Peter’s Basilica, which is a famous site in the Vatican, and noticed something. ALL of the statues and paintings were of Italian origin. Is the catholic church universal ethnicity wise, too?![]()
I’m serious, who thinks that?I have had a problem with this for a few years. The mindset increasingly irritates me: the idea that someone cannot be fully Catholic without visiting Rome, or making a pilgrimage to its basilicas. A local Franciscan community has made it a point of honour to send all its simply-professed brothers to Rome immediately after their novitiate. We are not the Catholic (Universal) Church, but the Italian Church - or perhaps the Romance Church. Culturally-speaking, it’s all about Spanish, French, and Italian.
We can’t really get too frustrated with this, since the Germanic, Scandinavian, and English cultures went Protestant. The Slavic cultures are Orthodox. The French and Spanish were in a mess for hundreds of years during the Islamic invasions. The only strong Catholic cultures that survived for a thousand years were on the Italian peninsula. What do you expect? I’m just a little sick of people thinking that Catholic = Italian.![]()