P
Psychae
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According to a little research I did Catholic families have been shrinking. So that would definitely mean fewer Catholics 
I disagree. The Internet has exposed all people (not just young ones) to different ideas. When I grew up, it was be a Catholic or a Protestant.Widespread information such as from the Internet is killing religion.
Now, young people are exposed to unlimited ideas. Certainly some choose alternate paths because of this.
I think in 500 years historians will point to this moment in time as the decline of religion in the world, and the cause will be the spread of information via the Internet - comparable to the Reformation and other changes due to the printing press.
The best ideas are the ones that can be shown to be true in the marketplace of ideas. Back when people were given limited choices as to religious ideas, and when societal pressure made it difficult to even consider new ideas, that surely increased the rolls of followers but it surely meant some of those people would not have believed if given the choice and the information. Do you want Catholicism to appear that it needs to be shielded from scrutiny and made to appear weak, or do you want Catholicism to go toe-to-toe with other faiths and live on based on its merits?I disagree. The Internet has exposed all people (not just young ones) to different ideas. When I grew up, it was be a Catholic or a Protestant.
Now, young people are exposed to unlimited ideas. Certainly some choose alternate paths because of this.
I agree that the internet has made it impossible to live in a religious bubble, but like the printing press I would say thatās a good thing. Let believers be true and strong believers based on what is known, and letās not try to wrangle doubters into the ranks by hiding what is known.I think in 500 years historians will point to this moment in time as the decline of religion in the world, and the cause will be the spread of information via the Internet - comparable to the Reformation and other changes due to the printing press.
Indeed. In fact if you attended a High Church Anglican service today, it would resemble our old Tridentine Mass more than it resembles or new Mass, apart from the language, including ad orientem Eucharistic Prayer. At a Low Church service, all bets are off as to what it would look like.I donāt agree that the āNew Massā looked and sounded like a Protestant service.
I know that, OraLabora. But in the U.S., in most small cities and towns, there are no āHigh Church Angiicanā churches. The vast majority of our churches in 2019 are Evangelical Protestant and Non-denominational churches/fellowships, along with a plentiful distribution of āindependentā churches. These church services in no way resemble a Catholic Mass. In fact, if someone in these churches mentioned that something in the worship service ālooks Catholic,ā thereās a good chance that the church Board would investigate and eliminate the āCatholicā thing from their worship service.Indeed. In fact if you attended a High Church Anglican service today, it would resemble our old Tridentine Mass more than it resembles or new Mass, apart from the language, including ad orientem Eucharistic Prayer. At a Low Church service, all bets are off as to what it would look like.
This is an interesting point that Iāve not considered.The point is that MORE information is not good for the Church.
Yes these are growing here too.I know that, OraLabora. But in the U.S., in most small cities and towns, there are no āHigh Church Angiicanā churches. The vast majority of our churches in 2019 are Evangelical Protestant and Non-denominational churches/fellowships, along with a plentiful distribution of āindependentā churches.
My wifeās Anglican parish resembles this. The Anglicans of course still have their more ātraditionalā services, from the Book of Common Prayer, but in the early 60s in Canada the Book of Alternative Services came out giving the Anglicans their own little āVatican IIā moment. The problem is that those using that book have, IMHO, seen their service become more and more āalternativeā. My wifeās former pastor was quite High Church (he would even sing the EP on very Catholic tones on high occasions), but the current one is quite evangelical. So while even when the former pastor did the service from the BAS, it still looked and sounded Catholic in structure, and I could easily follow along. But the new pastor has become more āalternativeā and his service noticeably less Catholic in structure and appearance, to the point where I can get lost in whatās supposed to be going on even at a āCommunion Serviceā (one with Eucharist).I know that back when Vatican II was going on, there were still plenty of Mainline Protestant churches in which the worship service did resemble the Catholic mass. But even as early as the mid-60s, these churches were ārelaxingā their liturgy to make their worship services more āevangelicalā so that they could try to hang onto their members who were leaving in droves to head to the lively Evangelical Protestant churches in their area! (And so were the Catholicsāone Evangelical Church that I attended for several years claimed that half of their members, (total membership of 500) were former Catholics).
This is the case at my wifeās parish. Traditional (sans music) at 8 am, and Evangelical (with praise band) at 10 am. The two groups never speak to each other, and the same pastor tries to minister to both even though he himself is evangelical. We have a saying in French: ālĆ où il y a lāhomme, il y a lāhommerieā (roughly translated: wherever you find man, you find manās foibles). Protestant⦠Catholic, we all fall into the same traps of the Devil.Many of the Mainlines have two services, a ātraditionalā and a ācontemporaryā.
Back in the early 2000s, my husband subscribed to a Praise and Worship magazine, mainly to try to get a handle on what was happening to our Evangelical Protestant churches (we had not even dreamed of attending a Catholic church until 2002, after a horrible event at our Evangelical Free church).I occasionally go with my wife (usually when Iāve been to a Saturday evening Mass). I havenāt been back to often since the previous pastor left. To be honest I feel quite lost and uncomfortable in the rah-rah praise-band style of service. I need silence, contemplation and sacred music to get myself together to worship God.
It sort of makes sense, in a distorted evangelical sort of way. Since thereās nobody to actually worship in an evangelical Protestant church, as opposed to Jesus Himself in a Catholic one, I would imagine that any ritual in that context would be devoid of any real focus. Whereas in Catholic (and Orthodox) liturgy, the liturgy serves to build us up to worshipping God actually made present among us. So probably yeah, in his context heās right. But in our context, lack of proper reverential liturgy can certainly drive at least me away.He bragged about this! He said that liturgy was a sure-fire way to kill worship!
Not even good enough to make apple sauce!How do you like them apples?!
When my mother-in-law passed away 8 years ago, we attended her memorial service in the Pentecostal church she had been attending. There was not a shred of liturgy. It struck me as so barren. Even my evangelical Anglican wife, no liturgy geek herself, felt that the lack of ritual was discomfiting.We were horrified, in case youāre wondering.
Why would information kill religion? The printing press didnāt kill religion, so why should information off the Internet? I donāt think the Internet can turn a person away from their religion, unless they are already on the road away from their religion.decline of religion in the world, and the cause will be the spread of information via the Internet - comparable to the Reformation and other changes due to the printing press.