F
FK04US
Guest
What I understand is that speaking English is not a requirement to be a Roman Catholic. They can worship, pray, and receive the Sacraments in Spanish and be totally fine with Church teachings. Actually, the Spanish translation of the Holy Mass is a lot more faithful to the original Latin version than the English one. Show me where in the CCC or USCCB documents it says that Latinos in the USA should speak English in order to be good Catholics.What you fail to reconise is Latinos are growing the fastest in nearly all Christian denominations, while still not learning English. Theres a Latino family nextdoor to me that moved in 9 years ago, and they still don’t know a word of English. I offered to teach a few of them so they can assimilate and they refused. Are you saying this experience is a figment of my imagination? I remember back in the mid 1970s when Saigon fell many Vietnamese moved to my community as reugees, there was a parish set up especially for them. But they have assimilated and very few know Vietnamese anymore and that is as it should be. Most of them go to non Viet. namese pariishes now.In the spring of 1975 as Vietnamese family that had just escaped Vietnem were taken in my the nun’s who lived at a nun retirement home across the street from my family. One of the nuns had my dad meet the parents, asking the favor if they could come and borrow our swimming pool during the summer because the weather had been heating up already. When we first met them they knew no English at all. By the end of August they were able to carry on conversations with any of my family just fine.Thats assimilating! The family nextdoor to me now hasn’t.
On the social and economical front, I agree that English will be helpful and many times required as long as they live in the USA, BUT NOT in our, their Church. And I repeat, THEIR Church.