C
CilladeRoma
Guest
No, not directed at you, but at all those who think that the Holy Father is “bashing” them.
^^This. Completely agree.I read about this last night and it makes me very sad.
I go to daily Mass, but I am a sinner. I go to daily Mass because I am a sinner. I want to grow closer to Christ. I’m not there yet, so I keep going to Mass.
As I remember scripture, Jesus did not admonish hypocrites to stop praying but to pray better.
Again to paraphrase the Pope’s words, the Church is a field hospital for sinners, not a museum for saints.
If you listen too closely to some messages you could become Protestant or just give to some charity. The Church and the sacraments have to make a difference.But I understand the undercurrent of people worried that this Pope, as a Jesuit particularly, is putting social justice ahead of devotion. The Church did exactly that when I was a teen and a twentysomething, and while it wasn’t the cause of all my problems, it also didn’t help me in my faith walk.
It seem who am I to judge only applies to sexual issues like homosexuality or divorce. Otherwise we are free to judge people.This is a strawman attack. Sure, there may be people who go to daily Mass but don’t seem to reflect in their daily actions, but to use the Pope’s words, “who am I to judge” what is in their hearts? Who knows what burdens they bring to the Lord every day?
Understandably. We just had one resign because he married a man. The scandal and damage that causes is unimaginable.The only scandal folks around here make noise about are gays serving at parishes- and who is or is not receiving Communion.
Not even an ounce? That itself seems uncharitable. And aren’t you in pointing this out portraying yourself as in some way holier?There is, and always has been, a subset of Church-goers, who think that they are the holiest of holy, yet who have not an ounce of Christian charity.