Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What an uncharitable bunch of Catholics on this thread. You do not do credit to your Church.
Well most of DCUM is high on anti-Catholic bigotry so just think of it as some variety in your day!
Yes because Jesus said "when anyone insults you, clap back"![]()
This is a thread about a family trying to find a Catholic Church to fit in. Isn't growing the Church important to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What an uncharitable bunch of Catholics on this thread. You do not do credit to your Church.
Well most of DCUM is high on anti-Catholic bigotry so just think of it as some variety in your day!
Yes because Jesus said "when anyone insults you, clap back"![]()
This is a thread about a family trying to find a Catholic Church to fit in. Isn't growing the Church important to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Camillus in Silver Spring is Franciscan. Very diverse parish, very big focus on social justice. Also very welcoming if you are new to the area.
The Franciscans are good! Their pro-life stance is not limited to focusing only on the sin of abortion but to supporting the dignity and sanctity of life at all stages.
Yes my favorite. St Camillus has a big focus on environmental justice, for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What an uncharitable bunch of Catholics on this thread. You do not do credit to your Church.
Well most of DCUM is high on anti-Catholic bigotry so just think of it as some variety in your day!
Anonymous wrote:What an uncharitable bunch of Catholics on this thread. You do not do credit to your Church.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Camillus in Silver Spring is Franciscan. Very diverse parish, very big focus on social justice. Also very welcoming if you are new to the area.
The Franciscans are good! Their pro-life stance is not limited to focusing only on the sin of abortion but to supporting the dignity and sanctity of life at all stages.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't surprise me in the least that the Catholic church of choice for the pseudo liberal and well monied DCUM crowd is Trinity. This website sure loves rich white folk!
I'll stick with Queen of Peace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nativity in Burke has always been pretty liberal and inclusive of all.
Yes more liberal. But openly gay couples there? I find that hard to believe.
Anonymous wrote:Nativity in Burke has always been pretty liberal and inclusive of all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you can attend any you want, but you can't pick or choose for sacraments. We learned this the hard way when we weren't allowed to be godparents because we weren't tithing to the correct church. We also couldn't get our own babies baptized because we attended the wrong church![]()
I will always feel Catholic in my heart, but they clearly didn't want us so we became Episcopalian
I've never heard of such a thing. What is the "wrong" Catholic church? Or do you mean you didn't attend a Catholic church and so were not a practicing Catholic?
So, the old rule is that people are supposed to attend the church they are "assigned" to. Meaning geographically in the catchment for.
If you attended mass at a Shrine or somewhere outside of the district it wasn't following the rules or didn't count. It meant you couldn't choose your own Parish. I didn't grow up in a diocese that "enforced" this, but apparently some did.
Never, ever encountered this in the many places I have lived in CT and in this area. Since childhood, I have rarely attended the parish to which we were "assigned." Everyone is up to date on their sacraments and no issues.
My three kids were all baptized in three different parishes and only once was it our "home " parish.
If this is some weird Arlington diocese thing, the posters from there should realize that it is atypical and stop generalizing.
Actually, my niece received her first communion in a church that was different from their assigned parish in Arlington Diocese. So even there it is not a hard fast rule.
These posters always omit the fact that they are not regularly attending parishioners anywhere.