Okay. Let me be the bad guy. I have trouble feeling at home in the Catholic Church.
Why? Over the years I have done a lot of reading and thinking, and increasingly I have needed the freedom to question, to explore, to be less dogmatic than Catholicism requires. Take transubstantiation. Maybe, but sometimes it can seem superstitious to me, especially Eucharistic Adoration, appearing to worship the body and blood of Jesus, not sure I accept it as such.
You might have sensibilities more inclined to an Eastern Catholic understanding?
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Or, Mary. Obviously an esteemed woman. But the teachings that she never committed a sin (was she human or not?),
Of course! Otherwise, Jesus would not be fully human, as He took His flesh from hers.
Human beings were not created in sin, or for sin. The reason Mary is held in such high esteem is because she is our model of the new Eve - what humanity is created to be. We are to walk in communion with our Creator without sin.
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that she was the only person ever born without original sin (a concept that troubles me, like inherited sin?), that she was translated body and soul into heaven (do bodies exist in heaven?) - etc.
Actually, it is also taught that John the Baptist was filled with the Holy Spirit when He met Jesus (still in the womb), and thus, was born without original sin. But, you might also be inclined to a more Eastern concept of original sin.
We an see from the Gospels that Jesus had a physical body after his resurrection, and that He took this flesh (transfigured) into heaven. If there was something inherintly wrong with human flesh, He would not have glorified His, and taken it with Him into heaven. So, obviously, bodies do exist in heaven, but they are transformed bodies.
1 Cor 15:51-55
51 Lo! I tell you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, 52 in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed. 53 For this perishable nature must put on the imperishable, and this mortal nature must put on immortality. 54 When the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written:
“Death is swallowed up in victory.”
55 “O death, where is thy victory?
O death, where is thy sting?”
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In other words, I have become uncomfortable attending Mass when it seems to require that I accept all the doctrines that go along with it.
Have you ever attended a Divine Liturgy at an Eastern Catholic Church?
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And the practices, too, like the forbidding of unapproved birth control, which seems to me to be simply another step in medical progress, and certainly not to be compared for a split second to abortion. That and approved birth control have the same objective anyway - family planning, which can be a reasonable goal.
Most artificial birth control is abortifacient, which is why it is forbidden. Since we believe that life begins at conception, the taking of that life is considered murder.
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God bless people of every creed, color, culture and country. We all 'see through a glass darkly" and I don't have a problem waiting until we get to know the truth in the world to come. My guess is that we all are far removed from the truth since our finite minds aren't able to comprehend it. I have trouble understanding what may be a million solar systems out there somewhere, so I've given up on the idea that theologians can understand all that either. My faith is in God, and not in creeds.
I hear this frequently from people who reject one or more doctrines of the faith. They don’t want to accept that God has revealed to His Church all that we need to know in this life. It is easier to pretend that “we won’t know till we get there” than it is to obey what has been revealed.