Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Some require mandatory weekly mass.
Maybe at a seminary. I went to Catholic U (so pretty Catholic on the scale) 30 years ago and no mass was required then. I doubt it’s been added.
Catholic U is by far the most Catholic, since it is run by the Vatican. If they don't require Mass, no one does.
That is funny. Catholic U is not the most "Catholic". I went to CUA at the same time my sister went to Notre Dame. Mass is available at both but neither required. At CUA we were not even allowed to put up signs in the dorms that said Merry Christmas because it might offend the non Christian students!
It is still run by the Vatican. No other U.S. catholic school is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Some require mandatory weekly mass.
Maybe at a seminary. I went to Catholic U (so pretty Catholic on the scale) 30 years ago and no mass was required then. I doubt it’s been added.
Catholic U is by far the most Catholic, since it is run by the Vatican. If they don't require Mass, no one does.
That is funny. Catholic U is not the most "Catholic". I went to CUA at the same time my sister went to Notre Dame. Mass is available at both but neither required. At CUA we were not even allowed to put up signs in the dorms that said Merry Christmas because it might offend the non Christian students!
It's not run by the Vatican; it's run by the US Bishops.
It is still run by the Vatican. No other U.S. catholic school is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown is by far the best school on this list in every sense of the word, by every metric both objective and subjective. The others don’t come close. And my Georgetown grad Jewish son was not required to attend mass (nor was anyone else).
How about naming ONE of these many metrics?
Ranking, prestige, 4 year graduation rate, job acceptance rate, diversity, percentage of kids going on to grad school, and location. Shall we continue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown is by far the best school on this list in every sense of the word, by every metric both objective and subjective. The others don’t come close. And my Georgetown grad Jewish son was not required to attend mass (nor was anyone else).
How about naming ONE of these many metrics?
Ranking, prestige, 4 year graduation rate, job acceptance rate, diversity, percentage of kids going on to grad school, and location. Shall we continue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown is by far the best school on this list in every sense of the word, by every metric both objective and subjective. The others don’t come close. And my Georgetown grad Jewish son was not required to attend mass (nor was anyone else).
How about naming ONE of these many metrics?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown is by far the best school on this list in every sense of the word, by every metric both objective and subjective. The others don’t come close. And my Georgetown grad Jewish son was not required to attend mass (nor was anyone else).
How about naming ONE of these many metrics?
They can't. They never can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown is by far the best school on this list in every sense of the word, by every metric both objective and subjective. The others don’t come close. And my Georgetown grad Jewish son was not required to attend mass (nor was anyone else).
How about naming ONE of these many metrics?
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown is by far the best school on this list in every sense of the word, by every metric both objective and subjective. The others don’t come close. And my Georgetown grad Jewish son was not required to attend mass (nor was anyone else).
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Some require mandatory weekly mass.
Maybe at a seminary. I went to Catholic U (so pretty Catholic on the scale) 30 years ago and no mass was required then. I doubt it’s been added.
Catholic U is by far the most Catholic, since it is run by the Vatican. If they don't require Mass, no one does.
That is funny. Catholic U is not the most "Catholic". I went to CUA at the same time my sister went to Notre Dame. Mass is available at both but neither required. At CUA we were not even allowed to put up signs in the dorms that said Merry Christmas because it might offend the non Christian students!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Some require mandatory weekly mass.
Maybe at a seminary. I went to Catholic U (so pretty Catholic on the scale) 30 years ago and no mass was required then. I doubt it’s been added.
Catholic U is by far the most Catholic, since it is run by the Vatican. If they don't require Mass, no one does.
Anonymous wrote:
Some require mandatory weekly mass.
Maybe at a seminary. I went to Catholic U (so pretty Catholic on the scale) 30 years ago and no mass was required then. I doubt it’s been added.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some require mandatory weekly mass.
Really? Which ones?