Smaller, more conservative, Catholic Church
After all of the hippie priests retire, we get our church back!!
After all of the hippie priests retire, we get our church back!!
747Ag said:
So many pearls clutched in that article...
Quote:
At St. Maria Goretti, once steeped in the ethos of Vatican II, many parishioners saw the changes as a requiem.
"I don't want my daughter to be Catholic," said Christine Hammond, whose family left the parish when the new outlook spilled into the church's school and her daughter's classroom. "Not if this is the Roman Catholic Church that is coming."
Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
powerbelly said:
You seem to continually miss the point in this whole debate while insinuating the other side is being mislead by the devil.
The next time you are honest in this discussion will be the first.
Would you say it is a Pablovian response?Captain Pablo said:powerbelly said:
You seem to continually miss the point in this whole debate while insinuating the other side is being mislead by the devil.
The next time you are honest in this discussion will be the first.
Don't hold your breath
Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
The more conservative parishes seem to be growing.Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
Captain Pablo said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
See Germany since they started their idiotic Synodal Way, and went rogue. 522,000 gone in 2022
2023 numbers are not in, that I know of. Wouldn't surprise me if similar numbers left
They're leaving for the same reason Protestant churches are drying up. Liberalism. Destroys everything
747Ag said:Captain Pablo said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
See Germany since they started their idiotic Synodal Way, and went rogue. 522,000 gone in 2022
2023 numbers are not in, that I know of. Wouldn't surprise me if similar numbers left
They're leaving for the same reason Protestant churches are drying up. Liberalism. Destroys everything
Why remain when, in practice, it's barely distinguishable from the culture at large? Why join a religious order that's essentially a group of social workers that don't date? If everyone is all good, why keep all these strictures?
powerbelly said:The more conservative parishes seem to be growing.Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
What's your evidence that Church membership would not have tanked if they had just been way more conservative and strict?
Sapper Redux said:powerbelly said:The more conservative parishes seem to be growing.Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
Not the one in the article. A single parish that offers a very conservative interpretation may grow as it draws from surrounding parishes, but where's the evidence that if the conservative approach was adopted universally that the Church would grow?
Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
What's your evidence that Church membership would not have tanked if they had just been way more conservative and strict?
It's impossible to know what would have happened. I just know what happened.
The Banned said:Sapper Redux said:powerbelly said:The more conservative parishes seem to be growing.Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
Not the one in the article. A single parish that offers a very conservative interpretation may grow as it draws from surrounding parishes, but where's the evidence that if the conservative approach was adopted universally that the Church would grow?
I know it's a bit old school, but these parishes seem to be growing organically. A parish that attracts 100 families with 6 kids on average will do much better than 3, 100 family parishes that have 2 on average. Because the true Catholic faith is being taught (be open to life as a blessing from God, Sunday obligation, consistent confession, etc) chances are the singular large family parish will outstrip the other 3 in short order.
I could talk about the many other beneficial byproducts of these types of parishes (which primarily is adherence to 2000 years of orthodoxy for the benefit of souls), but since you want to boil it down to simple economics/consumer base, I'll stop there.
Captain Pablo said:
I'm not concerned about TLM. I certainly don't need it. It's not a bad thing to have Mass in the local language.
That doesn't mean you can't get back to basics, even if the mass is conducted in the local language
The toxic, corrosive, destructive forces of liberalism are destroying congregations.
Not the English language.
Agreed. A discussion on the differences between the two missals (1962 vs 1970) would be interesting, but in another thread. There was an interim missal (1965) that was quickly discarded (see the video of "Let Us Pray" by Elvis Presley for a likely glimpse at it).Faithful Ag said:Captain Pablo said:
I'm not concerned about TLM. I certainly don't need it. It's not a bad thing to have Mass in the local language.
That doesn't mean you can't get back to basics, even if the mass is conducted in the local language
The toxic, corrosive, destructive forces of liberalism are destroying congregations.
Not the English language.
Nobody is focused on "the language". The current problem is that the TLM is being suppressed and denied to those that do want it. Nobody is working to deny your ability to go to Mass in the local language, but right now Catholics are being denied the ability to attend the TLM.
The liturgy was drastically changed with the NO…if the church had simply translated the Latin into English and left everything else alone the Mass today (NO) would look very different. The desire to modernize the Mass and make it "more relatable" and appealing had the opposite effect. It just took a generation or two to realize how much was lost.
ETA: I attend a NO Parish. I am not a TLM Catholic, but the church's eagerness to snuff out the TLM worries me greatly.
Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:Bob Lee said:Sapper Redux said:
I thought the idea was to grow the Church?
We've traded orthodoxy for membership for decades, and all we have to show for it is a bunch of Christine's. People whose faith is so fragile, as soon as the Church doesn't serve their perceived self interest, they split. What have we lost REALLY when all the Christine's leave? If all it takes for you to leave the body of Christ is exposure to right teaching, and outward signs of metaphysical realities, what's the difference?
So what exactly do you get when you drive off more than half the parish in your zeal and wind up having to shut down things like schools because of a lack of interest in your brand of Catholicism? Conservative Christians mock mainline Protestant denominations as weak for losing members and then turn around and find ways to lose members. But somehow it's a sign of strength and a positive?
I think the opposite happened. Treating the mass irreverently and inculturation, subordinating Catholic culture to popular culture has decimated Church membership. Large dioceses like Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and others have had to close a lot of Parishes, and it didn't happen because of what's being described in the article.
What's your evidence that Church membership would not have tanked if they had just been way more conservative and strict?
It's impossible to know what would have happened. I just know what happened.
Im assuming that if you're going to argue that "the opposite has happened" and that a reversal will improve things, you have some evidence to support that argument? Right now it seems like a lot of projection that "because I like 'x,' it will result in good things while 'y,' which I do not like, only results in bad things."