Q
QwertyGirl
Guest
If my biology education serves me correctly, we all have fungus of some type. It only becomes a problem when it is overgrowth.
Not if you do have a fungus
I think the OP handled it the right way. It is lying to wilfully mislead someone. Whenever we put ourselves in the position of the person being lied to, we all know whether something we are saying is misleading or not. It would have been misleading to give foot fungus as a reason to decline the footwashing. That was not the reason.If my biology education serves me correctly, we all have fungus of some type. It only becomes a problem when it is overgrowth.
Sorry. When you responded with the high school biology rebuttal, I thought you were serious.Didn’t anybody here understand my initial remark about the fungus was said with levity? So serious!
My brother thinks that having all of the faithful drink from the same cup instead of just the priest drinking out of the chalice is revolting. He won’t drink from the same cup anyone else has, no way, under any circumstances, period.I think the foot-washing ritual is revolting
We had been using a different towel for each person for years. This year the priest insisted on a long piece of fabric, folded just so and tucked into his cincture. I wasn’t close enough to see if he used a different part of the cloth for each person. I think it’s a cultural thing for him.Really, the footwashings I’ve seen are pouring some water out of a pitcher over the toes of one outstretched foot and drying it off with a clean towel. There isn’t even any skin-to-skin contact (since the priest isn’t about to go cradling the bare foot of a parishioner in his bare palm, I guess, and I don’t blame him for that).
Understood. But in our Catholic church, we took a more global meaning from the story and went with it. Not saying it was right or wrong, just that in the 70s our parish did that as did most of the ones around us.Well no. It’s about Jesus washing the feet of his apostles. None of his apostles were women. In fact, before Vatican II, if was CLERICS (most of them in minor orders) who had their feet washed by the priest.
Time machine for three! What year would be best, I wonder…I would like to return to those times actually.
While I would agree in principle, the culture of this parish is such that it is not reasonable to ask people to do this. The individual in charge does not respond positively to what they perceive as infringements on their control over matters, and “volunteering” would be seen as one such infringement.If you were berated for not participating and yet heard someone else complaining that they never get asked, I’d tell them to ask if they can volunteer. The person who has to round up the people willing to do it might be happy to have someone who won’t turn it down.
Direct communication…so hard in some parishes.