Anonymous wrote:Op here. Cool idea about rcia, thank you
They really wouldn't mind if I said I'm Protestant but interested in the course? Sounds like I could offend them
Anonymous wrote:I read an old thread about how only certain Catholics are allowed to take communion and it made a Catholic service sound kind of uncomfortable for a visitor
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/476684.page
I was thinking of visiting a local Catholic church but this has me reconsidering it a bit. I don't want to end up embarrassed because of my ignorance of what to do. I guess I can just take a seat and never leave it and that's fine?
Between the scandals and the seemingly non-visitor friendly approach, I wonder how the church gains new members.
That being said, I'm impressed by the 'stickiness' of the faith with the Catholic schools, knights of Columbus etc. It definitely feels like a club that people wouldn't leave so easily once they join.
Anonymous wrote:Anti Catholic troll, find a different thread please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2. When regular parishioners do not go to communion, everyone knows it means they have sinned and not gone to confession to have their sins absolved.
I guess all the nuns in my parish have committed mortal sins then!
Except on Christmas and Easter, when you can go to communion during the vigil and during the day, Catholics can only go to communion once a day.Believe it or not, many Catholics in my parish go to church more than once on Sunday, for a variety of reasons. Examples: Some churches have the same choir sing at multiple masses.People who go to the "family mass," often helping with the kids, playing guitar, leading songs, etc., who also go to an evening mass because they want to hear an adult homily. One of the ushers in my parish feels that he can't really "focus" on mass with all the things he has to do, so he goes to a second mass at which he doesn't usher. In some parishes, there are too few volunteers, so one person might agree to usher, lector, or otherwise help at two masses.
Some people are gluten intolerant. These people usually take communion in the form of wine. They either go to a parish where this is always an option or make special arrangments. If they are traveling and attend a different parish, they won't take communion if there's not a wine option.
Nobody assumes anything if you don't take communion.
You just refuted your own point. People assume all sorts of things if you don't go to communion. In addition to sin and lack of absolution, there is gluten intolerance, attending more than one mass, etc. The main reason for going to communication is to have your soul cleansed. Only a small % of people have gluten intolerance or attend more than one service, so it's obvious that some of the people who don't go have unconfessed sins.
They might be big sins like marital infidelity or smaller sins, like missing mass. But they are sins that people know disqualify them from the sacraments until they go to confession. Why deny it?
Anonymous wrote:I read an old thread about how only certain Catholics are allowed to take communion and it made a Catholic service sound kind of uncomfortable for a visitor
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/476684.page
I was thinking of visiting a local Catholic church but this has me reconsidering it a bit. I don't want to end up embarrassed because of my ignorance of what to do. I guess I can just take a seat and never leave it and that's fine?
Between the scandals and the seemingly non-visitor friendly approach, I wonder how the church gains new members.
That being said, I'm impressed by the 'stickiness' of the faith with the Catholic schools, knights of Columbus etc. It definitely feels like a club that people wouldn't leave so easily once they join.
Anonymous wrote:Sit up front in church and you won’t see anyone behind you. Then you won’t have to be keep score about who goes and who doesn’t!
Anonymous wrote:The Catholic Church really isn't focusing on drawing in new members. IME, you either grow up in the church or marry into it.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t tell if you are an Uber obnoxious holier than thou Catholic or a nasty anti Catholic. For me, I don’t assume anything about people who don’t take communion because I’m not really watching. I’m spending that time singing I’d thers music, or you know, actually praying and worrying about my own soul rather than judging others. But you do you, PP.