B
baliano
Guest
It’s always asking for trouble as the Church in the US is about to learn.This is why I don’t like it when Churches take money from government. It’s really asking for trouble in many cases.
It’s always asking for trouble as the Church in the US is about to learn.This is why I don’t like it when Churches take money from government. It’s really asking for trouble in many cases.
What does that mean?It’s always asking for trouble as the Church in the US is about to learn.
Just wait until the demands start based on the recent SCOTUS ruling.What does that mean?
? It isn’t common at all. Generally we don’t register as members of a specific parish but we aren’t a baptize and never come back culture. Only generally very left wing poles or former communists want nothing to do with the church.And it’s quite common with Polish people that they are baptized, confirmed, and then they don’t want to have anything to do with the Church. So if the police calls them up and asks if they are a member of the Catholic Church in Norway, they will say no.
Part of the problem is that the Polish Church makes formal apostasy prohibitively difficult. It used to be that you could send a letter to the diocese, now you have to go to the office with two witnesses and hand in the declaration yourself. Nobody has got time for that.
okay. now I see what you mean.Just wait until the demands start based on the recent SCOTUS ruling.
No.I guess the question is who is and who is not a Roman Catholic? Are the people in Catholics for Choice - are they Catholics?