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Guest
We already established most Catholics don’t go to Mass, so we can’t argue those folks are professing a belief in the Mass’ truth. We could reasonably conclude other teachings are not professed, if the key prayer is not important to them. So the answer doesn’t change.So what about BELIEF?
Let’s try again: **Most Catholics don’t understand the teachings they profess to believe in. ** HOW’S THAT?
Practicle examples:
“I believe that wafers and wine are actually transformed into flesh and blood of Christ who is God but I can’t understand how.” (it’s a mystery)*
- “I believe in Trinity but I can’t understand it.” (it’s a mystery)
That also covers your second example pertinent to ‘most’ Catholics, though considering your example we could expand the %? Surely folks who attend, believe through faith.
Most would say Faith, in a most simple definition, is believing something we can’t see or prove. As we are called to use faith and reason in conjunction, I don’t see anything wrong with a ‘reasonable Faith’.
In the case of your second example, a quick study of the last supper, using other historical events prior to the last supper, could generate a reasonable faith in the matter.
Every time I get on a plane, I have reasonable faith in the pilot and engineers, mechanics, ground crew, flight staff, God to keep the atmosphere full of air, etc.
Sometimes in faith it’s important to understand that you will not understand, like with the Trinity.
God Bless.