H
Horton
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Why? Does the LDS church require consent of both?Require the consent of both legal guardians (where applicable) before a minor can participate in a sacrament.
Why? Does the LDS church require consent of both?Require the consent of both legal guardians (where applicable) before a minor can participate in a sacrament.
I get this may be an issue in some places. I’ve only belonged to two parishes but in both non-Catholic spouses are welcomed and part of the community. I know one non-Catholic husband is part of the building committee.I’ll probably catch flack, but in today’s age where mixed marriages are becoming more and more common, it would be nice if there was a way for the non-Catholic spouse to be more of a member in the Church/congregation, rather than an outsider.
Communion will never happen, but it would go along way to keeping these mixed marriage families in the Church if something could be figured out to make others feel more part of/welcome to be part of the Church even though they’re not Catholic.
I’m a scholar. I read the scholarship.Where did you hear they were ever ordained??? God Bless, Memaw
Maybe we just didn’t “luck out”. The couple Parrish’s we’ve been to, it’s pretty obvious. We had actually left the current Parrish about 12 years ago due to this, and came back after that Father was gone.I get this may be an issue in some places. I’ve only belonged to two parishes but in both non-Catholic spouses are welcomed and part of the community. I know one non-Catholic husband is part of the building committee.
A vast number of things I would have wanted to see changed are changed as a result of Vatican II. Reception of both the body and blood in the sacrament. The mass in the vernacular. Just to name two.Thread title says it all.
Be nice.
Tell us more, I haven’t the slightest idea what you mean!! God Bless, MemawI’m a scholar. I read the scholarship.
The history of women in the diaconate is really not part of this thread. Perhaps you would like to open a new one on the topic.Tell us more, I haven’t the slightest idea what you mean!! God Bless, Memaw
I understand the confusion that the aforementioned change caused, but the confusion really stems from the old policy, not the current policy.If I could change one thing as a non-Catholic, it would be for the Catholic Church to re-institute a means to formally leave/defect from the Catholic Church.
At what point does the person become an ex-Catholic? What constitutes leaving the Church? These are the indeterminate situations that a formal process could address.If someone was in the Catholic Church and then left it, then he/she is an ex-Catholic
So did I in my non-Catholic secondary school, but that’s not relevant to the suggestion I made.I had a comprehensive world religion class in my catholic high school.
I knew one so welcome that they asked him to be on the parish council. He went to Mass every week with his family, helped out at the parish events when the family did, and the other parishioners never noticed that he never went to communion. They didn’t even realize he wasn’t Catholic.That’s dependent on the specific parish: I believe there are some in which the non-Catholic spouse would be very welcome.
Should we teach our children about all the different countries in the world and then when they turn 15 years old let them decide whether or not to accept their natural citizenship, too? If they renounce citizenship in the US of A, should we force them to become citizens of some other country, or just let them wander as citizens of nowhere?The biggest change I would make: I would get rid of all Catholic faith schools. Children should be taught about religions - all the major religions - and should then make an informed decision around the age of 15 whether or not they wish to join one.
Just out of curiosity…why are you asking this question? Are you expecting some particular answer?Thread title says it all.
Be nice.
Deacon Jeff did a good job of presenting the salient info. Those who want to promote ordination for women, though, like to claim that, in the early church, there were ordained female deacons (pointing to a Latin feminine version of the word ‘deacon’ that referred to women who helped at baptisms) to bolster their case that women should begin to be allowed to be ordained in the Catholic Church.ComplineSanFran:![]()
Tell us more, I haven’t the slightest idea what you mean!! God Bless, MemawI’m a scholar. I read the scholarship.
I think it’s reflective of a difference in perspective, don’t you? From the Catholic perspective, a person who leaves the Church is never an ‘ex-Catholic’; a ‘non-practicing Catholic’, perhaps, but “once a Catholic, always a Catholic.” That’s not a terribly comforting thing to hear, I suppose, for someone who wants to disassociate himself from the Church, but it points to an important fact: anyone who leaves is always welcome to return. There’s no such thing as burning one’s bridges so completely that he cannot return to the Church.If I could change one thing as a non-Catholic, it would be for the Catholic Church to re-institute a means to formally leave/defect from the Catholic Church. Without a means of formal defection the RCC has left congregants quite the rigmarole to go through to leave through alternative means like notorious defection.
I would file this question under either “legalism” or “busibodyism”. Granted I’ve never been much of a scholastic – perhaps someone else here will be interested in it, assuming they have enough time after discussing angels dancing on the head of a pin.At what point does the person become an ex-Catholic?
I guess he must be a lucky one then, at one of the Parrish’s that we went to they noted the non-Catholic spouses in the directory/communication with asterisks, etc… and not really how our current one seems to operate.I knew one so welcome that they asked him to be on the parish council. He went to Mass every week with his family, helped out at the parish events when the family did, and the other parishioners never noticed that he never went to communion. They didn’t even realize he wasn’t Catholic.