Just because people leave the Catholic Church does NOT necessarily mean they leave God. That is totally wrong. If that was true then no Protestants are with God…and surely you don’t mean that…
Again I’ll respond, though it’s not addressed to me, only because this addresses Country Singer’s post indirectly. No, a Catholic leaving the Church does not “leave God” entirely. But he or she does leave the fullness of grace, and there is no replacement for the sacraments. That’s obviously why so many people convert from Protestantism to Catholicism - - as they begin to sense more fully that their faith tradition is insufficient. This is clearly laid out in all the Journey Home episodes on EWTN.
Again, sacraments, for the baptized Catholic, are the source of healing, and one of the sources of healing for those previously damaged in some way within the institution of the Roman Church. If the sacraments are perceived to be “a source of pain” on a regular basis, then the pain is not within the sacraments but within the person receiving them.
If someone administering those sacraments literally engages in this behavior:
this woman screamed during Communion “don’t give it to that w****!”
…if this “woman” was a Eucharistic minister, I’m curious as to why/how this did not create a scene since this supposedly occurred in public. That would have been quite an event (the “screaming” during distribution of communion). The priest couldn’t have helped but notice if a Eucharistic minister was that audible, and regardless of his sanctity or lack of it, would normally never have countenanced such behavior in the future. She would have been dismissed as an EMHC.
Country Singer…I would encourage you that if there is a parish nearby that has a Catholics Can Come Home Program that you would do so…
Already addressed. I brought that up in my previous post. Many parishes have these programs. However, what she may need more, as a first step, is the outreach to those abused by priests which many dioceses have…so that she may become disposed to a Home-Coming program…so that she may be able to approach the sacraments again. There are local networks, some of which are connected to national networks (but they don’t have to be), and all offer support groups, counseling referrals, etc.
Finally, the notion that one could only approach one parish church has never been true in the Roman Church. That’s one of the key elements of our Catholicity. I have parish-shopped for years, and particularly did so during a period of time when I also was tentatively coming back. A parish which is headed by an insensitive or emotionally detached pastor, and/or includes lots of rude Mass attendees/lay ministers, is not a parish I would ever visit repeatedly, perhaps not even a second time. There are lots of parishes out there, most of which are not dominated by people on power-trips.
As for this comment:
It is to easy to sugar coat when you’ve never been in that situation.
The poster assumes that she is speaking to people unacquainted with her situation, first of all, and that (second of all), anyone who had been abused (or traumatized in some other serious way) is also not able to return.
where you are right now is not healed…
Definitely. That’s the important point here. And it’s particularly clear from these comments:
5 women (including me) are connected by the actions of one evil priest. He is thankfully dead now. But the pain will be there…And I will always associate the Catholic Church with that pain.
Because you’re giving him the power to continue to hurt you, even after death. :bighanky: That’s the kind of thing that only professional counseling can address – the kind designed for this particular syndrome.
I could put myself through horrible emotional pain and be Catholic, or I could move on.
…except that you have not moved on. :console: