Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So....it was too....much fun?
Eh, I don't know. I'm Catholic and I really don't like the arm-waving, praise music kind of thing. It feels so disingenuous and forced to me. Not saying that it is those things, but that's how it feels to me and it makes me uncomfortable. I like the ritual of mass, and depending on the parish and the priest, the homily and music choices can bring levity or a celebratory feel without feeling too touchy feely for my taste.
This from a person practicing a religion where people prostrate themselves before relics such as St. Catherine's preserved HEAD (yes, ma'am, ever been to Sienna?), self-flagellate, crawl up steps on their knees (google Scala Sanctum), not to mention practice EXORCISMS.
So I suppose Catholics should know some "disingenuous and forced" when they see it then?
Oh yes, American Catholics are engaged in all of these practices.![]()
If you think it makes you sound intelligent to pick out the fringe practices of a religion to insult the whole, it doesn't. Just FYI.
The point is you priggishly distinguish yourself as a Catholic separate in some way from religious practices (singing and swaying, the horror) you deride as "disingenuous and forced," when there are plenty of Catholic practices (whether you participate in them or not) that strike many people as more out there than singing and waving ones hands.
And oh the irony; just because American Catholics don't commonly practice ROMAN Catholicism as those in, for instance, ROME do (relics, scala sanctum, etc) doesn't make those any less Catholic practices! They really aren't all that fringe if you're familiar with Catholic practice world wide.
Anonymous wrote:What a ridiculous statement!
The Catholic Church protected pedophiles for years! There were worldwide pedophilia rings, for Christ's sake! The church is made up of people who blindly follow ridiculous doctrine like sheeple - and then there are people like you who pick and choose. So you're basically a hypocrite, no?
You either believe in that mess, or you abandon it.
There is no in between, hon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah that makes it ok.
You know, this tired debate gets really old, especially when people resort to these silly, stale, junior high schoolyard retorts. My entire family is Catholic and no one is homophobic. We have gay family members and friends. The church is the people; we are not going to abandon our faith because the powers that be have it wrong.
Anonymous wrote:My impression of catholics is that it is a religion on its own. Everyone else reading the same book are protestant
Anonymous wrote:We left the Roman Catholic Church for Episcopal and haven't looked back. We always felt like we had to pick and choose what we would believe/follow in RC and it felt very ingenuous*