R
RC_Sojourner
Guest
Ok, so by doing a number of Google Searches of CAF, there have been quite a number of threads on CAF about Papal States, Catholic States, Theocracy, and Catholic Monarchy and the like.
And, I know there are a lot of detractors. But, the point is, that in all that I’ve read online about it (which isn’t too much, as there is no organization or movement on this at all, 100% on forums, blogs, and youtube)… I’d estimate there is considerable interest in this amongst the Catholic community as a whole.
I think opponents of anything of this sort understand this. The Catholic Church has 1.2 billion Baptized members. If 1% of them wanted to live in a Catholic theocracy, then that would be 12 million people. You can count how many nations have more or less than 12 million here, if you like:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_by_country
So, the point is, there are a lot of Catholics, and the Catholic Church could get it done. Clearly the Papal States only ceased to exist in 1870, which is why I’m posting this in Traditional Catholicism.
I’m not interested in arguing the pros and cons of such a state. I’m asking a question:
Did the Catholic Church ever pronounce that Catholics shouldn’t demand to live in a Catholic State? Did the Church ever teach that there should be no more theocracies after the fall of the Papal States?
Because, if the answer is no, then why aren’t there any organizations out there who focus on this?
There are a lot of people trying to get new nations formed. And, the point is, the Catholic Church could probably get it done fairly easily. Its more likely than Kurdistan becoming a nation in my lifetime, for instance.
I’m saying the will is there. The demand is there. I read through a very long thread on this, and it was asking people if they would consider living in such a place. I counted every response, and it was around 40-50% of the Catholic posters said yes.
How representative of the whole worldwide body of Catholics is CAF?
Because, I’m willing to bet, by the interest I’ve seen, that more than 1% of Catholics would seriously consider this. More than 12 million people. What if it were 10%? IE: 120 million.
Does the Church teach against it? Or, does Church teaching allow for it, at the present time?
And, I know there are a lot of detractors. But, the point is, that in all that I’ve read online about it (which isn’t too much, as there is no organization or movement on this at all, 100% on forums, blogs, and youtube)… I’d estimate there is considerable interest in this amongst the Catholic community as a whole.
I think opponents of anything of this sort understand this. The Catholic Church has 1.2 billion Baptized members. If 1% of them wanted to live in a Catholic theocracy, then that would be 12 million people. You can count how many nations have more or less than 12 million here, if you like:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_by_country
So, the point is, there are a lot of Catholics, and the Catholic Church could get it done. Clearly the Papal States only ceased to exist in 1870, which is why I’m posting this in Traditional Catholicism.
I’m not interested in arguing the pros and cons of such a state. I’m asking a question:
Did the Catholic Church ever pronounce that Catholics shouldn’t demand to live in a Catholic State? Did the Church ever teach that there should be no more theocracies after the fall of the Papal States?
Because, if the answer is no, then why aren’t there any organizations out there who focus on this?
There are a lot of people trying to get new nations formed. And, the point is, the Catholic Church could probably get it done fairly easily. Its more likely than Kurdistan becoming a nation in my lifetime, for instance.
I’m saying the will is there. The demand is there. I read through a very long thread on this, and it was asking people if they would consider living in such a place. I counted every response, and it was around 40-50% of the Catholic posters said yes.
How representative of the whole worldwide body of Catholics is CAF?
Because, I’m willing to bet, by the interest I’ve seen, that more than 1% of Catholics would seriously consider this. More than 12 million people. What if it were 10%? IE: 120 million.
Does the Church teach against it? Or, does Church teaching allow for it, at the present time?