T
Tom_Baum
Guest
There do seem to be Catholics on this site that disagree with you on that.As the Church proclaims, so I proclaim.
If a person is baptized in water using the Trinitarian formula, he is grafted into His Body, the Catholic Church.
Amen!
Thank the CC for telling you this.![]()
You wrote that when âa person is baptized in water using the Trinitarian formula, he is grafted into His Body, the Catholic Churchâ, so shouldnât that person âgrafted into His Body, the Catholic Churchâ be allowed to partake of the Eucharist?
Inviting a person who âis baptized in water using the Trinitarian formulaâ, tho not exactly the CC doing it, to Mass, is kinda like inviting someone over to dinner and telling them that they can âlook at the mealâ all that they want, but in no way, shape or form can they partake of the meal, do you disagree with this since, as you say, that person has been âgrafted into His Body, the Catholic Churchâ?
Or do you think that only âpartsâ of the âBodyâ should be fed?
Seems kind of selfish doesnât it, since it was Jesus Who said, âFeed My lambs, tend My sheep, feed My sheepâ?
It doesnât seem as if Jesus put a bunch of exceptions on who of His lambs and sheep should be fed, only that they be fed and if you noticed, Jesus never said that they were Peterâs or anyone elseâs lambs and sheep but that they remained Jesusâs lambs and sheep?