Tis_Bearself
Patron
Today is the feast of St. Boniface, the missionary to the Germans. St. Boniface, please pray for Germany. Amen.
As I said, it’s not that Catholics should not be concerned about their own numbers, but neither should they be knocking themselves out to placate some schismatic group that is shrinking of its own accord.We’ll die off long after you because of numerical advantages is dangerous thinking. The PERCENTAGE of loss is about the same. Rates and total numbers are way different animals.
Inter-communion with Lutheran spouses has ALWAYS been accepted…Excellency indirectly gives the best arguments I’ve ever heard regarding why inter-communion with Protestants is not allowed,
I’ll try this one more time. Both mainline Protestants and Catholics are in about the same rate of decline. If you are a large ship (Catholics) or a small boat (mainline Protestants) and are each flooding at 5% per minute; you both will sink 20 minutes. My point is not to attack Catholicism, it’s a call against assuming nothing needs to be done.As I said, it’s not that Catholics should not be concerned about their own numbers
No you would not.flooding at 5% per minute; you both will sink 20 minutes. My
The bishops of Britain, when they said this might be allowed on special occasions, gave some examples:I’m baffled as to why a non-Catholic spouse would even want to receive Catholic communion.
This is 100% EXCELLENT!Great article here from Archbishop Chaput regarding the German debate about inter-communion for Lutheran spouses.
His Excellency indirectly gives the best arguments I’ve ever heard regarding why inter-communion with Protestants is not allowed, while inter-communion with the Orthodox is.
God Bless
But even this makes little sense. If a DEVOUT Catholic marries a non-Catholic, one would assume that the non-Catholic spouse knows he/she cannot receive Communion. Esp if it’s the non-Catholic wife of a man being ordained! And I’m sure the non-Catholic mother of a man being ordained has had several years to learn from her son why she can’t receive communion.Tis_Bearself:![]()
The bishops of Britain, when they said this might be allowed on special occasions, gave some examples:I’m baffled as to why a non-Catholic spouse would even want to receive Catholic communion.
- What might be meant by other unique occasions for joy or sorrow in the life of a family or an individual?
These are situations in which there may be an objectively grave and pressing spiritual need for a person to receive Holy Communion. We give examples of such circumstances, without in any way intending to suggest categories of situations in which admission to the sacrament would be generally granted. The admission of a particular individual on one such unique occasion does not mean that another individual would necessarily be admitted in a similar situation. Requests to be admitted to Holy Communion may come from the parent of a child to be baptised during Mass, or receiving First Holy Communion or Confirmation; the parent or wife of someone being ordained; the intimate family of the deceased at a Funeral Mass.…
A woman brings up her son to believe in Christ and give his life for Him. For whatever reason, that faith leads him to seek ordination as a Roman Catholic. And you think his first act as a priest should be to repudiate the mother who taught him?I’m sure the non-Catholic mother of a man being ordained has had several years to learn from her son why she can’t receive communion.
I’m sorry, but that is not what I said, nor what I meant.A woman brings up her son to believe in Christ and give his life for Him. For whatever reason, that faith leads him to seek ordination as a Roman Catholic. And you think his first act as a priest should be to repudiate the mother who taught him?
And you think that is what Catholicism is about? That this is reasonable?
If the non-Catholic spouse believed in the actual presences in the RC Eucharist, I’d be more baffled by one not wanting to receive with the spouse . . .I’m baffled as to why a non-Catholic spouse would even want to receive Catholic communion
As my Protestant Theology professor used to note, the differences between the US denominations and their mother groups in Europe are generally much larger than between that US denomination and other US denominations. (yes, among my claims to fail is that I have significantly more formal Protestant Theology than most non-minister Protestants . . .)These are European Lutherans. Different ballgame.
Yes, but the ELCA was formed by a merger of the three largest Lutheran groups, and dwarfs the rest of US Lutherans put together . . .According to Wikipedia (yes I know it’s Wikipedia), the only Lutheran group universally considered part of the “mainline Protestantism” is the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The rest of the Lutherans in American are not considered “mainline”