J
jack63
Guest
Constructive thoughts and opinions are appreciated. Personally, I believe this is good. I hope these good ideas from the Amazon Synod will be considered.
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Well, perhaps because those in the Amazon do not have regular access to the sacraments!Perhaps rather than ordaining married men they should be addressing why so many in the Amazon are being converted to evangelical protestantism.
In the past many people did not have access to the Eucharist and still came in to the Catholic church, so couldn’t the same happen in the Amazon. People could still be converted to the faith. More people converted, more men for the priesthood, access to the Eucharist.Well, perhaps because those in the Amazon do not have regular access to the sacraments!
I suspect it is more that the evangelicals do not mix the gospel with other cultural religious practices.Makes the competition look rather appealing if you can’t even fulfill the basic obligations of your faith.
We live in the present. Pentecostals are a recent phenomenon. There is more competition, and better means of “marketing” today than a 1000 km slog through the jungle.In the past
That doesn’t mean everything of the present is correct.We live in the present.
It is not about marketing. It is about the salvation of souls.There is more competition, and better means of “marketing” today
Nor were things necessarily always better in the past, nor relevant to today’s reality.That doesn’t mean everything of the present is correct.
I didn’t say they were. What I am saying, one can still be Catholic, in a state of grace and not receive the Eucharist every Sunday, if is not available for some reason. For example when missionaries or immigrants came to America, until they built parishes and spread the faith, they did not have access to the Eucharist. If we evangelize the faith, the number of Catholics grow, priests are born and then we have access to the Eucharist.Nor were things necessarily always better in the past, nor relevant to today’s reality.
Sure, no problemIt is about competition for souls, using modern means of reaching out. And yes those means often borrow techniques from commercial marketing. Slogans, advertising, social media presence. …
Yes, again. spread the faith, get priests, get sacramentsCatholicism is sacramental, where sacraments are considered the most reliable path to salvation.
Agree, but also part of the problem is protestants will not include any paganism in the gospel message, so maybe the paganism isn’t as important as we seem to think.Take that away and there’s not much left to separate us from Pentecostals who may have a (married) pastor in the village ready to save souls in the manner he or she believes is efficacious.
I’ve certainly read that before…in fact I’ve read it several times. I’m simply unable to believe this…that the crisis in the Amazon was manufactured.Many people think the whole “Amazon crisis” was manufactured in order to bring about the two above ‘solutions’ to the Amazon as a “jumping off place” or a ‘trial run’.
Michael Rose…the author of Goodbye! Good Men. I could understand it might be true that a few very orthodox men were turned away from the seminary in a few specific situations. However, it looks like the problem is on a different order of magnitude than this.What if there isn’t a vocation crisis? Michael Rose, for example, argues that we’re short on priests because orthodox Catholic men are being denied entry to or thrown out of seminaries.
When a country like the US, which has the second highest concentration of priests in the world, experiences a decrease in vocations, the world experiences a decrease in vocations.Also, I’ve certainly skimmed through Goodbye Good men. As I understand, it is a very American focused book that is 17 yeas old. I would strongly question its relevance to other countries or regions like the Amazon or Ireland.