Posted on 08/27/2013 11:53:37 AM PDT by NYer
Megachurch. Two young ladies. Both had left the Catholic Church. Both were now attending megachurches. We had a good chat together. I wanted to understand their reasons for why they left the Catholic Church for a megachurch.
I was at the bank and somehow I got into a spiritual conversation with two Hispanic executives that worked there.
When I asked why they exchanged the Catholic Church for the megachurch, they gave me a number of reasons:
Although these two ladies didnt articulate it explicitly to me, I could tell that they were very proud of their new churches. I could also discern in them a surprise that I am so spiritual and yet I am very excited about being Catholic. They assumed the “with it” people were leaving Catholicism for the bigger and better and deal.
I asked them what they miss about being Catholic. They replied with two answers:
I asked both about the Eucharist: Dont you miss the Eucharist?
This question didnt phase them one bit. Oh we still have communion. They pass out little crackers and cups of juice. I like this better because I thought drinking from one big cup is icky. Spreads germs.
But in the Catholic Church,” I replied, “we believe that the Eucharist is the real Body and Blood of Jesus?
I may as well have said, Dont you know that there are Martians in my back pocket. She was unaware that the Catholic Church taught this. No idea.
This, my brothers and sisters, is the crux of the problem. These girls were raised as Catholics, but did not know about the Eucharist. They did not know that the Eucharist is God. They did not understand the Holy Eucharist is the center of the Catholic tradition.
So when they compare our ho-hum Catholic music and pedestrian sermons to snazzy well produced musical productions and highly polished bulleted sermons from handsome professional speakers…where are they going to go?
If they had believed that the Holy Eucharist is truly the Lord Jesus Christ, then they would have stayed. This is the task of the New Evangelization if there is going to be one. Can we communicate the mystery of Eucharist. If we fail in that, everyone is leaving the building.
Godspeed,
Taylor
PS: I dont mean to suggest that having the Holy Eucharist is an excuse for bad music, bad vestments, bad architecture, and bad sermons. The Eucharist is like a precious diamond. It deserves a platinum setting…not a plastic setting. We cant say, Well, we have the Eucharist – so youre forced to stay and have a miserable experience every Sunday. We cant keep the sacraments hostage to mediocracy.
PPS: With 1 billion strong, the Catholic Church is the real megachurch!
You keep doing this over and over, and I don’t know why.
I posted that 94% of Mexicans have been baptized by Catholics in Mexico, not that 94% of Mexico is Catholic, not only do you keep ignoring my posts, but you even misquote sources that you use for whatever it is that you are talking about, for instance Pew says that while Catholicism is shrinking in Mexico, that today 85% are still Catholic, yet you list it as 84%, just as you listed the CIA numbers as 82% instead of 83%.
All this nonsense over post 52 which pointed out the absurdity of post 34 “”I have yet to meet a single first generation immigrant from Mexico is Catholic.They are evangelical, Jehovahs Witness, or unchurched.
“”.
In other words, that poster who meets plenty of Mexican immigrants, enough that he knows some who belong to Evangelical Protestant churches, some who are atheists, and some who follow the Jehovah Witness religion, claims that he has never met a Catholic who immigrated from Mexico.
My responding to that absurdity has sent you into a flurry of irrelevant and confusing posts with wrong numbers and misdirected counters, it is bizarre.
I believe neither that she is divine, nor that she requires worship.
If she is called "the divine mother" by the abbot you quoted, he did not mean that she was a goddess, but that she is the mother of a divine Son. It's like calling the court comedian the "the royal jester" --- it doesn't mean the jester is the king, it means he serves the king.
Divine has a range of references:
Two people divided by a common language!
We deserve to be judged but not by fellow sinners but by God. And thus guilt is a natural consequence of sin.
God has taken our sins, past, present and future and hung them on the cross. They're paid for. But there are still consequences in this life of sin. And there is still guilt until we take it to the Lord and ask for His forgiveness.
No, it appears that you wanted to defend someone’c bizarre claim that he is meeting plenty of immigrants from Mexico, but has never met a Catholic one, judging from all the useless posts you have sent my way in defense of that poster’s absurd claim, his claim seems to serve some purpose.
YMMV!
Well, that might be why so much is lost in your understanding. You refuse to give any historical context to what you are reading.
If you read the Bible, you will see that Jesus makes many references to a Jewish Marriage, the proposal process and the traditions he observed for the wedding day and for the marriage. He did this so we would be comforted and understand. We also need to get to know our Savior. He is a real man.
If you blow that off, and refuse to look at the context of His life- you are going to miss a great depth of his character and love for us.
The wedding ring is a very important part of the Gospel of Jesus Christ- and not at all pagan.
Matthew 22:1-14
#1, you apparently did not get my humor
#2, the Scripture you cite does not include any mention of a wedding ring.
I know exactly what Divine Mother of God means...And so does the author of the article I linked to...And God says it is anathema...
Is the Queen Mother the Queen?
What??? Tons of people left him over the parables...That's why he used the parables, to weed out the unbelievers, Just as he did in John...
You can't just make stuff up to justify your religion...
Oh c'mon now...She is given half of the kingdom of God...She is to be served...She is in charge of all mercy...Not to mention everything else that is in the article...
This guy meant what he said...
Maybe in England...God has no mother...And there is no queen in heaven...
There reaches a point where you are convinced that you know what others believe — even when they tell you otherwise.
At that point, dialogue is useless.
First of all, I don’t know where we read of so many leaving Jesus because of any one thing he said, parable or not. We’re talking about thousands of people in this instance.
Secondly, my point is not that people may or may not have left Him because of what was taught in a parable, but that a parable was used in the first place, and no one left Him because He used parables. They left (or rejected) Him because of what he taught IN the parables.
My point is that even at that time, people had an understanding of what parables are or even, what should and should not be taken literally, and when.
The point remains that you can’t escape from: if you believe the Jews in John 6 left Jesus because they were wrongly taking Him literally, then John 6:63 can’t mean what you say it means. It can’t mean “Don’t worry guys, I’m not REALLY saying you have to eat my flesh and drink my blood. I only mean that metaphorically”.
That can’t mean what John 6:63 means or else the Jews that were clamoring earlier wouldn’t have left Him. Or perhaps you could explain to me why a group of people would reject a guy only a few minutes before they wanted to make king? Why would they do that, if He even “explained” in John 6:63 that He was speaking metaphorically?
The “Hail Mary” was made when she was actually being hailed. She ain’t here to hail anymore. She’s dead. Dust-to-dust and all of that.
I'm speaking, of course, of the contra-Biblical doctrines. Such as infant baptism, use of statues (graven images), forbidding of priests to marry, and Marian worship (under any label).
Wow, this is crazy, you didn’t refute anything, you tried to defend his bizarre claim, and you started with a fake number, claiming that 70% of Mexican immigrants are Catholic when they leave Mexico.
To: ansel12; nickcarraway
“In real life,” 70% of them arrive Catholic. How many of the ones that a person has met, who are Catholic, may differ regionally or neighborhood by neighborhood.
Your Mexicans May Vary.
90 posted on 8/27/2013 1:49:26 PM by Mrs. Don-o
I corrected you. “”but on your numbers you confused the percentage of foreign born Hispanics currently being Catholic in the United States, with what percentage they were on the day they left Mexico””.
Why such a determined fight for the bizarre claim of post 34, and why try so hard that you post so many inaccuracies to do it, in so many useless posts?
Remember the claim of post 34, I have yet to meet a single first generation immigrant from Mexico is Catholic.They are evangelical, Jehovahs Witness, or unchurched.
.
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