F
Fidelis
Guest
I think that’s all well and good, and in a perfect world this should be enough.I think most Catholics do know the Bible, but they know it in spirit not necessarily in book, chapter and verse form. Most Catholics gain the essence of the Bible through their upbringing and education.
The Bible tells of the action of the Holy Spirit in history. By reading the Bible those actions are re-enacted in our lives and we are changed by it accordingly. This is what makes the Bible the living word of God. It’s more than just a record of past events.
The Bible isn’t meant so much to be learnt as to be prayed.
However, what I think the OP and others mean about most Catholics not “knowing” their Bible comes down to those Catholics that don’t know it in the sense that when some anti-Catholic fundamentalist or Jehovah’s Witness comes up to them, fires off 6 or 7 out of context verses that seem to place doubt on Catholic teaching, and, consequently that Catholic ends up becoming an ex-Catholic.
Similarly, it also applies to those Catholics that hear the Scriptures week in and week out (sometimes day in and day out), but never feel like they “know” the Scriptures until one of the aforementioned sects invites them to one of their Bible studies and – viola! - all of a sudden they are ex-Catholic Bible “experts” who left the Church “because no one ever taught me the Bible.”
The solution, of course, is to have Catholic Bible studies in Catholic parishes for Catholics to give them a working knowledge of the Bible as a whole, and that shows them how Church teaching is biblical. And this can be done without losing sight of the fact that “The Bible isn’t meant so much to be learnt as to be prayed.”