Yes, I believe that is the main problem for many girls nowadays.
You aren’t wrong, but is it not almost impossible to accept something when you don’t believe? I can tell you a banana is actually purple, but you can’t truly accept it as truth because it is so clear to you that it is yellow.
Thank you. With all respect, I don’t think that will help since it is focusing on mothers, not women in general. I mentioned in the previous thread that she doesn’t like how Catholics only talk about motherhood when it comes to women. Nice article though
I guess that’s true. We do live in an evil world.
She is 15, turning 16. We do guide, I suppose. We do encourage our kids to go for events or groups. If they say no, we don’t force them. We do ‘force’ them to go for Mass, sins are a no-no, obviously.
I don’t think that’s the problem she has. Not a good analogy but here goes: I can say a janitor is important because he keeps the place clean. But at the end of the day, the manager is viewed as ‘more important’ than him. Even though both lives are seen as equal by any decent person, it is clear that one has more respect. Now she didn’t say it like that, I am just guessing from the conversation we had.