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  #1  
Old 05-23-2010, 05:09 PM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Originally Posted by UGAalum94 View Post
Oh, signing on completely to the Church's teaching on sexual and medical ethics is really hard, no doubt. And I think a significant number of Catholics deal with it by just living with a constant baseline level of hypocrisy in their own private behavior, (I think most draw the line before abortion.)

But I'm not sure that the solution is for the Church to modify its teachings necessarily. Their concerns may rightly be focused only on the more spiritual or metaphysical aspects, but of course, I can't say for sure. There's no historic reason to particularly assume the Church has no political motivation for a given teaching.

I doubt that God takes a hard "love it or leave it" attitude about the Church, but I get frustrated a little when people think the church should modify its teachings rather than just maybe that they shouldn't worry about being Catholic when they don't agree with the positions.
I don't know that I see it as hypocrisy unless they're actively professing the opposite of what they're doing. Sort of back to the 'why would you confess a sin if you didn't think it was a sin' thing.

The implication within your last paragraph though is that Catholicism is more about the social mores than the belief in Jesus and the sacraments. In my mind, those should take priority and it shouldn't be all or nothing. My voting for a politician who is pro-choice, whether it is because s/he is pro-choice or not, shouldn't be a determining factor in my religious identity. I think people can have their actions/votes/etc informed by their faith and come to different conclusions.

A person who thinks that abortion should be legal because otherwise more women die, who think that gay marriage should be legal, and supports birth control while encouraging sex to take place only in a committed loving relationship AND believes in the full Nicene creed from beginning to end, the just war theory and the other teaching of the Church... they really have no place to go. There's no United Liberal Catholic Church (pick name here) under the authority of Rome.
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  #2  
Old 05-24-2010, 03:06 AM
VandalSquirrel VandalSquirrel is offline
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Originally Posted by Drolefille View Post
I don't know that I see it as hypocrisy unless they're actively professing the opposite of what they're doing. Sort of back to the 'why would you confess a sin if you didn't think it was a sin' thing.

The implication within your last paragraph though is that Catholicism is more about the social mores than the belief in Jesus and the sacraments. In my mind, those should take priority and it shouldn't be all or nothing. My voting for a politician who is pro-choice, whether it is because s/he is pro-choice or not, shouldn't be a determining factor in my religious identity. I think people can have their actions/votes/etc informed by their faith and come to different conclusions.

A person who thinks that abortion should be legal because otherwise more women die, who think that gay marriage should be legal, and supports birth control while encouraging sex to take place only in a committed loving relationship AND believes in the full Nicene creed from beginning to end, the just war theory and the other teaching of the Church... they really have no place to go. There's no United Liberal Catholic Church (pick name here) under the authority of Rome.
They have somewhere to go...an ELCA Lutheran Church. They could come every Sunday and we'd (the congregations I've been involved with) never ask them to convert, be rebaptized, reconfirmed, or anything else. They could call themsevles Catholics Affiliated With Lutherans, or something like that. I know quite a few Catholics who spend Sundays with ELCAs Lutherans because they want a home and a relationship with God, but don't feel as if they fit in anywhere else without religious pressure to convert.
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Old 05-24-2010, 11:03 AM
Psi U MC Vito Psi U MC Vito is offline
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Originally Posted by VandalSquirrel View Post
They have somewhere to go...an ELCA Lutheran Church. They could come every Sunday and we'd (the congregations I've been involved with) never ask them to convert, be rebaptized, reconfirmed, or anything else. They could call themsevles Catholics Affiliated With Lutherans, or something like that. I know quite a few Catholics who spend Sundays with ELCAs Lutherans because they want a home and a relationship with God, but don't feel as if they fit in anywhere else without religious pressure to convert.
The Episcopal Church is much the same. There is even a term for Episcopalians who still follow most of the beliefs of the RC church.
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Old 05-24-2010, 01:28 PM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Originally Posted by VandalSquirrel View Post
They have somewhere to go...an ELCA Lutheran Church. They could come every Sunday and we'd (the congregations I've been involved with) never ask them to convert, be rebaptized, reconfirmed, or anything else. They could call themsevles Catholics Affiliated With Lutherans, or something like that. I know quite a few Catholics who spend Sundays with ELCAs Lutherans because they want a home and a relationship with God, but don't feel as if they fit in anywhere else without religious pressure to convert.
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Originally Posted by Psi U MC Vito View Post
The Episcopal Church is much the same. There is even a term for Episcopalians who still follow most of the beliefs of the RC church.
But RC's believe that communion is only valid at a RC Church (or an Orthodox church but that's not reciprocal). There are certainly strong similarities but if you truly believe the dogma then there is no substitution.
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Old 05-24-2010, 02:18 PM
AGDee AGDee is offline
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Originally Posted by Drolefille View Post
But RC's believe that communion is only valid at a RC Church (or an Orthodox church but that's not reciprocal). There are certainly strong similarities but if you truly believe the dogma then there is no substitution.
http://www.examiner.com/x-27298-Indi...Holy-Eucharist

That is the problem, posted above. If you believe that, you cannot accept another denomination, even if you don't believe in all the man made rules the Catholic church has (birth control, abortion, etc).
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Old 05-24-2010, 02:28 PM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Originally Posted by AGDee View Post
http://www.examiner.com/x-27298-Indi...Holy-Eucharist

That is the problem, posted above. If you believe that, you cannot accept another denomination, even if you don't believe in all the man made rules the Catholic church has (birth control, abortion, etc).
Oh thank ye. I didn't feel like getting into the details but that article does an excellent job.
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  #7  
Old 05-26-2010, 11:31 AM
dekeguy dekeguy is offline
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Originally Posted by Drolefille View Post
But RC's believe that communion is only valid at a RC Church (or an Orthodox church but that's not reciprocal). There are certainly strong similarities but if you truly believe the dogma then there is no substitution.
==================

Actually, that might be drawing the line a bit too restrictively. The (RC) Church recognizes the validity of the sacraments if the celebrant is in recognized Holy Orders. This would include all of the Oriental Rites of the Church which are in Communion with Rome. Also recognized (but not reciprocal) are Western rite churches not in communion with Rome such as Old Catholic, Polish National Catholic, and other break away sects which have been careful to preserve the validity of their Holy Orders through Apostolic Succession. Anglican orders are somewhat difficult in that many Curch of England Bishops and Priests were influenced by the Oxford Movement of the nineteenth century and arranged to be "re-ordained and re-consecrated" by Bishops of Orthodox and valid but schismatic churches. Anglican clergy tracing their orders to these Oxford Movement re-consecrated bishops are viewed as being in valid holy orders but not in communion with Rome.
It is interesting to note that the late Pope John Paul II invited Anglicans to receive RC Communion when in areas where it was not reasonably convenient to attend Anglican services. In the case of recognized Anglican clergy it would appear that this is a major move towards inter-communion.
Thoughts?
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Old 05-26-2010, 11:37 AM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Originally Posted by dekeguy View Post
==================

Actually, that might be drawing the line a bit too restrictively. The (RC) Church recognizes the validity of the sacraments if the celebrant is in recognized Holy Orders. This would include all of the Oriental Rites of the Church which are in Communion with Rome. Also recognized (but not reciprocal) are Western rite churches not in communion with Rome such as Old Catholic, Polish National Catholic, and other break away sects which have been careful to preserve the validity of their Holy Orders through Apostolic Succession. Anglican orders are somewhat difficult in that many Curch of England Bishops and Priests were influenced by the Oxford Movement of the nineteenth century and arranged to be "re-ordained and re-consecrated" by Bishops of Orthodox and valid but schismatic churches. Anglican clergy tracing their orders to these Oxford Movement re-consecrated bishops are viewed as being in valid holy orders but not in communion with Rome.
It is interesting to note that the late Pope John Paul II invited Anglicans to receive RC Communion when in areas where it was not reasonably convenient to attend Anglican services. In the case of recognized Anglican clergy it would appear that this is a major move towards inter-communion.
Thoughts?
True points, although I would find taking communion at a church where the acceptance was not reciprocal to be a violation of their hospitality.

I'm not sure if it will lead toward intercommunion or if, following the current social and political developments of the Anglican/Episcopalian church(s?) it won't now instead lead to encouraged conversion to RCatholicism by conservative Anglicans and then a discouragement of cross-communion.
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  #9  
Old 05-26-2010, 11:47 AM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Originally Posted by dekeguy View Post
It is interesting to note that the late Pope John Paul II invited Anglicans to receive RC Communion when in areas where it was not reasonably convenient to attend Anglican services. In the case of recognized Anglican clergy it would appear that this is a major move towards inter-communion.
Thoughts?
Isn't the general canon law that, under extraordinary circumstances, the bishop may give permission for any Christian not in full communion with Rome may receive communion in a Catholic church provided (1) they believe what the Catholic Church teaches regarding the Holy Eucharist and (2) they are deprived of access to a church of their own communion for a significant period of time?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Drolefille View Post
True points, although I would find taking communion at a church where the acceptance was not reciprocal to be a violation of their hospitality.
In the Presbyterian Church, any baptized Christian may take communion. In our congregation on occasions where it is known that more than the usual likelihood of visiters exists (like confirmation), it will be made clear that "those under a sprirtual discipline that would prevent receiving communion in a Presbyterian church" may come forward for a blessing. FWIW.
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  #10  
Old 05-26-2010, 11:10 AM
dekeguy dekeguy is offline
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Originally Posted by Psi U MC Vito View Post
The Episcopal Church is much the same. There is even a term for Episcopalians who still follow most of the beliefs of the RC church.
============================

Yes, Lord Peter Wimsey described them as "Roaming Catholics" although the usual rendition is "Anglo-Catholics".
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