C
commenter
Guest
May you be a blessing there! (But hope you stay in touch).For me, at least, it was just a paradigm mismatch. I knew I didn’t belong but luckily I found my true home in the Episcopal Church.
May you be a blessing there! (But hope you stay in touch).For me, at least, it was just a paradigm mismatch. I knew I didn’t belong but luckily I found my true home in the Episcopal Church.
I don’t think that as a general rule seminarians are allowed to marry and be ordained as Roman Catholic priests. Has this discipline changed as a general rule, or is it allowed only with special exceptions such as married Anglican or Orthodox clergymen converting to Catholic?The Catholic Church has married clergy.
This does seem to be the case on certain issues, but perhaps not overall.I believe that the church has changed teaching over time.
People in AND out of the church let us down all the time. The only reliable people I ever had in my life were my husband and my parents and they’re all dead. Husband wasn’t even a Catholic.Jesus has never let me down, just people.
I would expect you to say this. But, and this might come as a bit of a surprise to you, Jesus is present in the Anglican church as well. And my worship community is “the church.” The church is not confined to the officialdom of Rome.Come back to the Church despite the people. Come back for Jesus.
You have got to be kidding. NO, I most certainly did NOT go to a Presbyterian worship service, except for my father-in-law’s little service at the funeral home when he passed.As a spouse of a Protestant who has said nice things about him on these forums, I’m sure you probably went to a few Presbyterian worship services during your marriage.