As I said, I have heard them for many years and indeed some have valid points,but many are simply based off ignorance
Indeed. And the question is: are there things that could be done to reduce that ignorance? I have made a specific suggestion. You haven’t given any substantive critique–you have just reacted defensively.
I have never said blame is entirely on the lay person…never.
Then it’s entirely unclear to me why you are reacting negatively to what I’m saying. Perhaps you have a specific reason to disagree with my specific hypothesis as to what the Church could do better. Fine–then provide an alternative hypothesis. But so far all I’ve heard from you is that it’s laypeople’s fault. We all agree that people who leave the Church without bothering to inform themselves about the riches to be found there are generally to blame. But since we also both agree that, as you say, the Church could do better, it’s not very helpful to answer a suggestion as to what the clergy and catechists should do by pointing out the obvious fact that ordinary laypeople need to do better as well.
And do all ex-Catholics express the church needs to this or that to make it better? Not necessarily. They do not all leave because ineffective teaching.That is your agenda here,not every ex-Catholic.
No, but the survey indicates that a lack of Scriptural teaching is perceived by them as one of the major reasons why they leave. You and others simply answer this by pointing out how much Scripture is read liturgically in the Mass, which really doesn’t address the problem.
This is pretty subjective and biased on your part. Are you everywhere to confirm substantive preaching in the context of the Liturgy does not happen at any parish across the globe?
Of course not. What I’m mostly concerned about is the claims by you and others that the Mass is not the place for substantive exegesis. If you are not making such a claim, then that’s fine.
A constructive response to what I’m saying would be to suggest that another study be done comparing “retention” among parishes and correlating rates of retention (i.e.,. success in keeping people from leaving the Church) with the depth and quality of preaching found in that parish. It may be that there would be no correlation at all, and of course it would be hard to set up such a study with adequate controls and well-defined parameters. But if you want “facts” on the matter, that would be the way to get some. Until then what I’m saying is, as you note, “just opinion.” That seems like a rather trite observation, since just about everything said by anyone on this forum is opinion. I have given reasons for my opinion. But I don’t expect people to accept my opinions blindly. I’m just trying to get Catholics to consider the possibility that encouraging private and small-group Bible study may not be enough–that a rethinking of the nature and goal of preaching might also be helpful.
And as I said before: You have proof it is NOT being done? You sure seem to give the impression it is not done at all.
That is not my intention. I’m simply suggesting that it may not be done enough. And mostly my concern is with those of you who are saying that it shouldn’t be done at all, because the Mass isn’t the place for it.
Again,what evidence do you have Protestant churches FAR surpass MOST Catholic parishes? That sounds like an opinion…hear-say.not a FACT!
You’re confusing two things: opinion and hearsay. Of course it’s opinion, based on personal experience, hearsay (which is not valueless–this is not a court of law), and the survey mentioned in the OP. All of these things coincide to make me think I’m on to something.
I did not say that all Protestant churches surpassed most Catholic churches. I said that
many did so. I didn’t even say “most” Protestant churches.
It’s a fairly common practice–becoming more common in many nondenominational churches–to preach through entire books or long passages of the Bible. Rob Bell, for instance, the controversial pastor of a very successful megachurch in Michigan, began his career as a pastor by preaching through Leviticus. Now I don’t know the content of those sermons in detail, but you can read Bell’s
report on them here. Note his emphases:
- Scripture is an organic whole, and all of it is relevant for believers.
- Leviticus is all about Jesus–every part of it points to Jesus.
- Leviticus shows us that salvation is concrete and embodied rather than abstract (he doesn’t say “sacramental,” but he could have if that had been in his vocabulary).
Now all of these points are solidly Catholic ones. All of them can be found in the Fathers and in the medieval Church.
But are Catholic priests taught to preach this way in Catholic seminary? You know they aren’t. They aren’t taught to use the fourfold method. They aren’t taught to do typology. They don’t seem to be trained to preach on the OT at all.
I am not an enemy of historical criticism, in its place. But historical criticism has too often functioned as a straight-jacket on Catholic (and mainline) preachers, cutting them (and their congregations) off from the riches of the Tradition.
My point is that a hip megachurch pastor started a very successful church (in which I’d be willing to bet quite a bit that there were a fairly large number of ex-Catholics) by using an approach that could have come straight from the Fathers, but which Catholic priests are not trained to use. This is the kind of thing I think the survey in the OP is talking about. You seem to want to ignore this possibility instead of investigating it. Why? Why are you so dead set to dismiss (and yes, you are dismissing) what I’m saying?