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StTommyMore
Guest
The Church decides who may take communion, and many other things that people seek in their relationship with God. Does one really need “the church” to have a relationship with almighty God? Does Jesus Christ not speak to the individual as well? Does he not comfort and support and did he die for the sins of all people?
I do not understand the insular aspect that people want to assign religion. Christians should not embrace the idea that their faith is “personal” and has no place in community. This was a bad idea that grew out of the foundation of all bad ideas of the modern world, that is, the debacle of human history known as the Enlightenment. Jesus did not found a Church so that we could ignore it and only practice our faith in the privacy of our own homes. We are to assemble together and worship in concert, but only in the way in which has been revealed, and the vehicle for Divine Revelation has always been the Church.There has to be a church in the Christian understanding of faith and of human existence. Christianity is not the idealogical creation of religious enthusiasm, nor of the religious experience of an individual. It comes to the individual rather by the same route from which he receives the rest of his life, including his intellectual and spiritual life. It comes from history. No one develops and unfolds from out of the purely formal and antecedent structure of his essence. Rather he receives the concreteness of his life from a community of persons, from intercommunication, from an objective spirit, from a history, from a people and from a family and he develops it only within this community, and this includes what is most personal and proper to himself. This is also true for salvation and for the Christian religion, and for the Christianity of an individual.
–Karl Rahner, SJ in Foundations of Christian Faith