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Bennie_P
Guest
That is beautiful, I really love GK⌠The Church âisâ large and the body has many members, and some parts are not as strong and clear headed as other parts. When in doubt pray for guidence from the Holy Spirit and look toward Rome. I have to remember that Christ has freed us from the Law yet without the law we wouldnât know that we are free. Because without Chirst we are unable to live up to the law. When I started my conversion process (TOWARD FULL COMMUNION) I thought I would have to give up my protestant friends, I have found that my relationships with many of them have grown, and I have become an attraction to some and a distraction to others within my parish among my Catholic brothers and sisters. We do have to be selective in how much and with who we participate as it comes with our separated brethern, but if IT wasnât for the love of Christ which is truly evident in my former protestant pastor (he told it was Ok to be Catholic for they {now we} are Christians too), I MAY NOT have followed the Holy Spirit as He (HS) nudged me (really he pushed me inI can some up where I am with my conversion process. HAve you ever read GK Chesterton view of the Catholic convert? He ralates it to 3 stages.His words spring so true to where I was,am,and going. I am in Stage 3 now.Trust me. i am going through this. I have no reservations in me. It may appear that I am on the fence. To sum up where I am with the Church: I will die a Catholic.
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Ecclesia de Eucharistia fills in the necessary background to the statement of the U.S. conference of bishops that is to be found in the Mass guides or bulletins of Catholic parishes:
We welcome our fellow Christians to this celebration of the Eucharist as our brothers and sisters. We pray that our common baptism and the action of the Holy Spirit in this Eucharist will draw us closer to one another and begin to dispel the sad divisions which separate us. We pray these will lessen and finally disappear, in keeping with Christâs prayer for us âthat they may all be one.â Because Catholics believe that the celebration of the Eucharist is a sign of the reality of the oneness of faith, life, and worship, members of those churches with whom we are not yet fully united are ordinarily not admitted to Holy Communion. Eucharistic sharing in exceptional circumstances by other Christians requires permission according to the directives of the diocesan bishop and the provisions of canon law. Members of the Orthodox Churches, the Assyrian Church of the East, and the Polish National Catholic Church are urged to respect the discipline of their own Churches. According to Roman Catholic discipline, the Code of Canon Law does not object to the reception of Communion by Christians of these Churches. More
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