The turth hurts.
You'll find that out for yourself before this whole child rape thing blows over.
The turth hurts.
With all the drama going about in the Catholic Church, it makes me wonder if there's any Catholics here on CFC who're considering leaving or have left it, due to having been convinced that the Pope couldn't possibly be Jesus' substitute on Earth?
If there are any Catholics who aren't leaving it, please state why. Also, I'd like you to answer this question: Could the Pope do anything? Is there a line that can be crossed? Is there anything worse than covering up a child rape?
Note: Leaving the Church doesn't necessarily mean leaving Christianity.
Note 2: I'm fine with religion vs atheism debates occurring (those are pretty much inevitable), but try to stay to the topic at hand please. Thanks.
(BTW Mods, I'd appreciate it if you could add another poll option: I have never been Catholic)
Isnt the church larger than any one person? Why leave over what a single person does?
Isnt the church larger than any one person? Why leave over what a single person does?
Because he has not done what he's being accused of.(Unless, of course, you're like NBAfan and do not think the Pope has done what he's being accused of.)
Strictly speaking, they're correct, although Confirmation is required to be a "full" Catholic. At that point, the Church will claim you to your grave, regardless of what you yourself think. As Dara O'Briain put it, Catholicism is the stickiest, most adhesive religion there is. It's probably also worth noting that in certain countries, Catholicism is often connected to a particular ethnic or cultural identity, and so carries more meaning that religious adherence. In Scotland, for example, "Catholic" is almost synonymous with the Irish-Scots minority, to which I myself belong (although it covers, of course, the Italian and Polish minorities, who, at this point, are all thoroughly joined at the hip, even as they dissolve).
And I've never heard this "Catholic, not Christian" thing before. In my experience, the argument is about who the real Christians are. I suppose, in the American case, it may be a Well-Sod-You-Too reaction to the traditional tendency among certain forms of Protestantism, particularly in the United States, to associate "Christianity" with Protestantism to the exclusion of Catholicism.
Anyway, yeah, I'm in the set that bailed years ago, because it's just silly.
Granted, but that's just the modern form of that position. It used to be a rather mainstream position in the Protestant world to consider Catholicism a sort of Christianised paganism. I can see a bloody mindedly contrary position evolving over the years among certain members of a Catholic minority.Actually, at this point it isn't so much Catholics that aren't "real Christians", as anyone who doesn't subscribe to to an ultra-orthodox reactionary conservative version of Christianity. So most of the Episcopal church any "liberal" protestant churches are the enemy as well.
Whoah, so did I.
Interestingly, the one time I participated in the avatar swap, you took my avatar, and we are the only 2 players in the CivIV HoF to submit a cultural win with Boudica
Never been a catholic.
Because its not one person. There's institutionalized child molestation.
What you say is usually true, but in this case, the single person isn't just some random person. He's the Pope. One of the major things that differentiate Catholicism from the other denominations and that makes Catholicism Catholicism is that they have this super-duper awesome man-sage whose words regarding Church doctrine is to be considered supreme and infallible. He's the orator of God All Mighty on Earth, the Supreme Being who is closer to God than any other.
So when this guy messes up, you might start to doubt the veracity of Catholicism.
(Unless, of course, you're like NBAfan and do not think the Pope has done what he's being accused of.)
No, its not. Institutionalized would indicate that it happens in every parish.
Let me get this straight. You folks are giving the Pope a hard time for actually practicing forgiveness?
Isnt that kind of one of the tenets of his faith?
No it wouldn't. It would suggest that it took place within institutions in a manner which was known and tolerated.
From the posts I've seen, you seem to be pretty anti-religious, so I'm surprised that you never thought to "unregister" before.Up until recently, I haven't given it much thought - I don't believe in God, so why should I bother whether the Church thinks I do?
From the posts I've seen, you seem to be pretty anti-religious, so I'm surprised that you never thought to "unregister" before.