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Socrates92
Guest
The legality question is also completely irrelevant.
I’d have been talking to the bishop the day that they required me to buy impractical clothes for a sacrament. We cannot hold a sacrament hostage over something that is an expense to the family.but the policy was: girls in white dresses, boys in suits.
Agreed. In my example, I wasn’t affirming a sin, but rather, a person. Important distinction. And therefore, it’s not sharing in grave matter or in grave sin, let alone mortal sin. QED.If you were affirming me in a grave sin (or at least in grave matter), then yes, of course it would be grave matter for you.
It’s simple. You stand up and proclaim, “I’m a sinner!”, and I stand up and say “Socrates is a great guy whom I respect and love!”. That’s not sharing in grave sin… or sin of any kind.I’m nit sure what you mean by “affirm you, personally”.
I am sure in the case of clothing either being physically difficult for a person to wear, or an expense to a poor family, there are ways that the school would help. This wasn’t one of those cases.I’d have been talking to the bishop the day that they required me to buy impractical clothes for a sacrament. We cannot hold a sacrament hostage over something that is an expense to the family.
That’s the point. They would never have accepted a ‘private ceremony’, because it wasn’t about the ‘special outfit’ – it was about the issue that was being attempted to be imposed on the parish. Having being offered both First Holy Communion and the suit, but not the public platform, they said “no thanks.”Still pitiful that folks cannot submit to the Church, but instead out of pride need private ceremonies so they can wear a special outfit.
I draw the line here. There is absolutely nothing wrong with wanting a private First Communion ceremony for whatever reason. I have known a number of families who requested them for reasons having nothing to do with outfit. Sometimes it’s a matter of when other family members can attend, and sometimes they just feel that this is a family occasion and they would like it to focus more on their family and less on a whole bunch of kids marching up in line. The school class First Communion Masses are often rather hectic events, with limitations on how many seats for each family, when photos can be taken, and teachers herding the kids here and there. I can totally see how a particular family might not find that the kind of prayerful experience they want for their child, or how certain children, including but not limited to special needs children, wouldn’t do very well with it.Still pitiful that folks cannot submit to the Church, but instead out of pride need private ceremonies so they can wear a special outfit.
Except that I did give a counter-example, which you have been unable to dodge.I’m going to call your bluff. The fact that you bothered to claim that you could have 100 hypotheticals, but are unwilling to mention one, makes me think that this statement of yours is just air. Which gives the impression that you’re trying to dodge my point.
Well, yippee! That and a quarter will get ya… umm… well… a quarter and a warm happy feeling in the pit of your stomach?Which implies that I won that argument.