Still makes no sense and I have no access to or need of books so rely totally on prayer and the bible etc.
A sick child is an emergency. Going to mass is not. And you seem to be basing your ideas on judging others also. None of our business what others do , we answer only for our own actions… Keeping our eyes on our own page …
Blessings this day and over and OUT from me. Although…
A sick child may or may not be an emergency. A sick child may be slowly dying of cancer. Yo miss the point, and please don’t give me that sop about judging others. I provide something for reflection; and I do not suggest that we judge anyone but rather that they have the information sufficient to effectively judge themselves.
One of the things people suffer from is a lack of perspective. We all get caught up in our daily routine, and we all have a tendency to take on values which may or may not be the ones Christ guides us to. And coupled with that is getting so involved, because of those value we have taken on, that we don’t step back and deeply reflect on where we are going, and why we are going that specific direction.
I have been around a long time, and I have seen plenty of people, and heard plenty of people speak about Mass. Sadly, I have met far, far too many who see Mass as an obligation, and going to Mass because they love Christ is not part of their thought patterns, attitudes, and values.
i can’t make people change; but I can say something that has, on more than one occasion, challenged someone to change. You might say I was not minding my own business. But the last time I heard it said, evangelizing is my business - and every other Catholic’s.
The OP has a tough row to hoe. Having a spouse who apparently does not put any priority on going to Mass makes for a difficult home life. In a way, there is a similarity to having someone - spouse, child, parent, sibling, who is part of the family out of obligation, not choice. If we have not experienced it personally, then we have had the opportunity to see it in others. And it is a bit of a stretch of credulity to think that what is reflected between those in such a situation is not fairly indicative of their relationship with Christ.
Yes, there is an obligation to go to Mass, and yes, there are times when we cannot attend, for valid reasons. But if we reduce going to Mass to an obligation, then I say it is time to step back, and take a look at our relationship with Christ. Is that an obligation? Or is it something deeper - a relationship of love?
I may love my wife deeply, but there are times where I need to be somewhere else; there may be times I need to miss something with her. I can speak of my obligation to her; but if that is the main focus of what I do with and to her, that marriage relationship is going to look like a contract, not a covenant relationship. So it is with Christ.