P
PeterClatworthy
Guest
John,Hey Peter C.
I believe the last line of the above quote is a very poor excuse… you simply have no idea what you are saying, you’re just stuck. What do you really know of the RCC, and why have you left it?
I’m sure it wasn’t because the women in the U.S. stopped wearing Veils!
That’s would be a sin… the worst excuse is…because you do this one thing I will no longer attend the Church Jesus Christ established? which is guided by the Holy Spirit til His return!!
Let’s see
Jesus did the most to liberate women from being under male totalitarian rules of society The reason and teaching of the time writes would not be the same as today.
- you have denied the history of the Bible as fable, myth, folklore where do you draw the line?
have answered #2 and # 3 read previous posts, #4 No, I have no experience with it!, do you actually mean they are absolutely required to wear veils??
#5 Not saints Maelruain; or Finnian, though I’ve heard of Finnians rainbow, the Canons of St Peter of York… never heard of 'em!!! Sue me, judge me as ignorant, send me directly to hell!!!
Now con’t from last post:
forty fifty yrs ago women always wore hats, big Ester bonnets, heck there’s something over here called the ‘Red Hat Society’ these ole’ gals get together and go out to lunch twenty-twenty five at clip and hold socials at restaurants and whatever all wearing some form of a red and purple hat. But outside of that in american society, women stopped wearing hats, bonnets veils… does it make them sinful? NOT AT ALL!
Jesus knows our hearts… the Sacraments, Divine Liturgy, the Gospels are not hurt a persons salvation through Christ and His Church… maybe even more women show up to Church because it isn’t enforced…
isn’t there more than ONE Celtic religion?Code:Heck there are more women at church on the regular than men, they run prayer grps, raise money for the Church, and make sure their children are brought up with sound catchesis... you want to hang them and the RCC for not being veiled? Give it up already!
Now who why and when did some resurrect an ascetic Religion which was 450 yrs dissolved… Are you a Druid? Bard? Ovate? are not some nature based?
Isn’t Celtic religion polytheistic? I’ve been asking you? but like a protestant you don’t explain what you beleive or why you choose to join ‘Celi De’ over the RCC. Being of Irish Catholic descent going back to my great Grandfather I can vouch we were always RC.
have a nice day
John
I cannot deal with the issues if you cherry pick.
Please take the trouble to find out about the entire list of saints, including Maelruain and Finnian. Add Saint Óengus of Tallaght to the list as well. I will believe that you are a true Irishman when you do.
I will also believe that you are a true Irishman when you find out for yourself, rather than uncritically listen to others, that St Patrick converted the Druids to Christianity at a time when the Church at Rome had not arrived in Ireland. He was himself a convert from Druidism, and converted the “Y Maen” (The Stone Religion, or the Stone Kingdom), to Johannine Celtic Christianity. That is a matter of Irish history. My family’s connections (Clatworthy/O’Brien) with the Abbey at Armagh are well documented too.
To suggest that the Synod of Whitby was a “dissolution” of the Celtic Christian Church is laughable. Convenient for Rome I grant you, but propaganda is never history. It does not even qualify as a myth.
I suggest that you concentate on researching the Canons Regular and what actually happened at Armagh, Iona, Glastonbury and elsewhere, particularly York, which is my concern.
Culdee Canons Regular continued in faith, and in secret, attached to churches taken over by Rome long after the Synod of Whitby. I still worship God in the York Minster, alongside my Fellows, but we are not Anglicans. Out of general interest, the property that is the York Minster is owned by the Roman Catholic Church, but it is held under the jurisdiction of the Anglican Archbishop of York by Royal Charter. We conduct our own services including the ordination of priests.
The Canon’s Regular at York were in possession of a similar Royal Charter from the King of England. This extant Charter has been ratified in Parliament on two occasions, the latest being by King Henry IV in 1442.
The Order of Harodim is still conferred, as it has been, uninterrupted since time immemorial.
The decision to comment on the Holy Order in the public arena, where necessary, was taken at a General Assembly of the Harodim, at York, on the 24th June 2009.
I cannot add any more.
