HumbleObedience:
Another con for me is how the Catechism treats our relationship with God as sort of a vending machine. If you do this, this, and this, then you get to Heaven. Now, if you commit a Mortal sin, and know it, then you go to Hell, unless you go to confession. If you are ignorent of it being a sin, then you are given a pass. You have to attend compulsery weekly Mass, otherwise you don’t pass Go and you don’t get $200. If you miss Mass, and meet the 3 criteria, then you go to Hell. Yet, if you murder someone, but go to confession before dying, then you go to Heaven, although you might spend more time in Purgatory.
Humble,
I think you are misunderstanding a lot. The Catechism does not treat our relationship with God as a vending machine. There are consequences to our actions, and if we truely love Him, there are things that we must not do. Sometimes we mess up and forget about God and sin, instead of being damned to Hell, we have a chance to make up for our sins by repenting. We show our love for God this way. As Christ said if you love Him, you will keep his commandments. If you are not reading the footnotes and looking up the references in the footnotes you might misunderstand a lot. The Catechism puts things into perspective that there are things in that you have a choice to do or not to do and some of them can put your soul into grave danger. This is even clear in the Scriptures. The Catechism explains the Scriptures. The very things you accuse the Catechism of, can be found in the Scriptures.
For confession to be effective we must really be sorry for our sins and intend not to commit them again. Confession is not a ticket to sin, confession is a way to get into Gods grace when we are truely sorry for our sins.
Another con of the Church is that the power structure lends itself to abuse, right down to the Church secretary and head of the Liturgical committee. There’s a lot of social climbing that goes on in the organization of the Church I’ve noticed, and once someone gets into a position of authority it seems to go to their heads. They often know just who they need to brownnose to and who they can walk all over behind closed doors. I’ve noticed this attitude permeating my Catholic religion, with no checks and balances.
You are misunderstanding much about the structure of the Church. The Structure of the Church was created by Christ when He made Peter the first Pope. There will always be people in possitions of authority that lose sight and make mistakes, but the Church is much bigger than what your perceive. You are only going to see mostly the mistakes in the news. Most of the people in authority of the Church are good God loving and fearing men.
There is a check and balence and it is God. God built our Church, you are complaining about what God wants. God guides the Church (St. John 14).
The best thing that you can do for the people who you think abuse power in the Church is pray for them.
There is nothing wrong with the Catholic religion. You cannot blame the religion when people do not follow it.
A few quotes from St. Josemaria Escriva, from the Way
www.EscrivaWorks.org
Gossip is a disease that infects and poisons the apostolate. It goes against charity, means a waste of energy, takes away peace and destroys one’s union with God.
447 After seeing how many people waste their lives, their whole lives (tongues wagging, wagging, wagging, and all the inevitable consequences), silence seems preferable to me, and more necessary than ever.
And I well understand, Lord, why we have to give an account of all our idle words.
449 Call it by its name: grumbling, gossiping, back-biting, mischief making, tale-bearing, scandal-mongering, intrigue…, slander…, treachery?
Self-appointed critics sitting in judgment easily end up as ‘gossiping old maids’!
451 Let us be slow to judge. — Each one sees things from his own point of view, as his mind, with all its limitations, tells him, and through eyes that are often dimmed and clouded by passion.
Moreover, as happens with those modernist painters, the outlook of certain people is so unhealthily subjective that they dash off a few random strokes and assure us that they represent our portrait, our conduct.
Of what little worth are the judgments of men! Don’t judge without sifting your judgment in prayer.