C
captainrick
Guest
That’s why I learned Hebrew! Latin would be helpful too!The homeland of our Faith is Jerusalem, not Rome.
That’s why I learned Hebrew! Latin would be helpful too!The homeland of our Faith is Jerusalem, not Rome.
There is a papal encyclical that states otherwise.The homeland of our Faith is Jerusalem, not Rome.
There is a papal encyclical that states otherwise.
Who ever said it was easy. I struggle too.Not everyone is able to learn a language. I know i would have difficulty
I disagree that the encyclical in fact states that. The encyclical in question, written in 1929, notes the successful conclusion of the Lateran Accords establishing the independence of the Vatican and remuneration for seizure of the Papal States. As such, it naturally focuses on the history of the Church’s governance being centered in Rome. That is a far cry from saying the focus of the Faith - as opposed to administration - is Rome. The focus of our Faith is Christ, not the Curia.There is a papal encyclical that states otherwise.
How about Latin which is the universal language of the Church?Italy is Our homeland, and all.![]()
I never said it had any effect on salvation.Italy is not my homeland and knowing Italian won’t contribute one iota to my salvation.
-Tim-
Many parts of Rome are a bit of a tourist trap. In many places, when you walk into a shop or restaurant, the shopkeep will start speaking English or French to you before they try Italian. To see the tourists’ Italy (Rome, Florence, Venice), you can get by with zero Italian.Just got back from Rome and managed quite well as i dont speak Italian
I’ll say. I can barely speak proper English.Not everyone is able to learn a language. I know i would have difficulty
Is there such a thing?I’ll say. I can barely speak proper English.![]()
Grammatically, yes.Is there such a thing?![]()
That may be so, but if you intend to actually live and work in the Vatican, Italian would be the overwhelming choice as it’s the daily working language.How about Latin which is the universal language of the Church?
That would probably depend on the Pope too, though. Polish wasn’t too uncommon when JPII was Pope. But there does seem to be a disproportionate number of Cardinals residing in Italy, or so I hear, so true, and that would be the working language. English might become the language of finance, though, as it is in other parts of the world. The U.S. dollar is still the reserve currency. (And it has Latin on it, btw.That may be so, but if you intend to actually live and work in the Vatican, Italian would be the overwhelming choice as it’s the daily working language.
Actually, the Pope’s seat–his cathedra–is not in Vatican City, but in Rome, at the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran.Technically, the current seat of the leader of our faith is not in Italy. It is in the Vatican City which is a sovereign state, issues its own passports etc.
Nice catch!Your spiritual home in the here and now is your own particular Church that you belong to–(a particular Church is a bishop and his flock located in a territory called diocese). The Bishop of Rome and his particular Church (the diocese of Rome) are certainly the head of all the other bishops and particular Churches, but that does not therefore make us all members of any particular Italian Church.
Actually, the Pope’s seat–his cathedra–is not in Vatican City, but in Rome, at the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran.That’s his episcopal chair and that’s why he’s Bishop of Rome.