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!
Yup. Taking communion once is not enough.
For that matter, nothing a Catholic does is enough. There's always more to add, more to do....
They tell us baptism saves, except that it doesn't. You have to add......
And so it goes....
Christ often spoke mystically. Spiritual experience (always referencing the bible, as the “high minded” did, to look for whether, and if so how, it fits) is necessary to figure it out. This could even be a dual-meaning dictum like many in Scripture are. God is not averse to punning... what would you expect out of a joyful God?
I lean on the explanation by context. Passover seder, and the same words “this is” would be used over all the symbolic foods. The Passover Haggaddah as Jews have it goes back almost to gospel days and supports this strongly. Making it stand out as special here is something that happens when we lose sight of context.
Catholics hear the Scripture, at minimum, every Sunday at Mass. It is a mini-Bible study because readings from the Old Testament, psalms, New Testament, and Gospels are read together to facilitate meditation on a theme. The priest then gives a talk on the readings. The prayers we recite all contain Scripture, as well.
Now add in the fact that the entire sacrifice of the Mass is Scriptural. Every Mass is a Bible study, if you know how to look for it. All Catholics are also encouraged to attend additional Bible studies at their parish, and to read the Bible on their own.
Excellent.....
Thank you.
Ideally it would be. Practically... any mumble over the format seems to be accepted as a “Mass” because after all isn’t the view here that the “important thing” is the “transubstantiation miracle”? There’s room for improvement. There’s a reason you don’t usually get mumbles in Crazy Evangelical churches.
OK, go check out post 828 by bkaycee.
Pinging a few others for their input but I daresay that they'd agree.
I, for one, throw in my hat with it. SO there's two now, at least.....
The core issue here, and both honest Roman Catholics and Evangelicals can see it, is “OK, why keep going? why not coast?”
Well once you DO understand what Christ is and has done for and with you, it becomes silly to sit and coast. You’ve been endowed with God filled powers to run down the troops of hell. What are you going to do, sit there and sin? The bible does have a word for people in such a position and it’s not “unsaved” — it’s “shortsighted.”
Very good!!
You’re priceless.....
nope she’s been bought with a price
You can add me to that list.
Well, God would bless America as soon as America let itself be blessed... total sinlessness is impossible but the less the better... a sincere effort to cleave to the Lord and exalt Him again will be honored AND blessed... in fact that probably would be needed BEFORE this holocaust could be halted.
You know, all this stuff about metaphors brings to mind examples of something like if you have a car accident and draw out the scene on a piece of paper and tell the insurance agent *This is my car.* and *This is his car.*
Well, I think that it’s clearly understood that the symbolism isn’t the real thing even though we say * This is...*
Passover was not only looking back at the first Passover in Egypt, but it was also looking forward to the Messiah coming. Just like communion is not only looking back as Christ’s death, but looking forward to His (soon, I hope) return again.
So the elements of the Passover meal represented things. The broken bread represented the broken body of Christ. Hence, *This is my body.*
It’s a word picture.
Nope, HE'S been bought with a price.
But there's no way of knowing that unless you've been around Elsie for a while.
OK, that makes three.
BTW, I am saving that post. It’s about the best I’ve seen, (with all due respect CB.)
Da, da, mein schatz!
Hey, the Crazy Evangelicals want to go as far as the bible says they can. They saw the glory of the Lord getting snuffed out in actual Roman Catholic congregations, as far back as Luther. Luther, you may remember, wanted to fix the problem locally... which was exactly the right spirit. When it wasn’t fixed, then independent Christian worship community was plan B. We know that as Lutheran, but Luther himself asked them not to go by that name; he wanted Jesus Christ exalted alone. Alas the misleading name, applied generally by their opponents not themselves, stuck. Other such ironies are seen in Christendom. Methodists from their methodical habits trying to work their salvation (unbiblical) as much as they were trying to work it OUT (biblical). Baptists from their insistence on baptizing believers only. (At least the less flattering Dunkards name died out.) Calvinists... argh! John Calvin did NOT die for anyone’s sins! ARGH!
Anyhow, we Crazy Evangelicals go as far as Christ was documented to go by the bible. Invocation of visual contact with a departed saint would be a very special thing at best, viz. the Transfiguration scene, and then Jesus would do all the talking there. (I actually wrote a song featuring a saint appearance, based on this scenario. If you ever hear a country song “With Duct Tape On His Boots” remember this ole Redneck.) Alleged God-independent contacts with sub-divine supernatural entities, even departed saints, just give us the willies. Too much caution in the bible against doing that.
Mr. Elsie!?
I thought it was also. I think it just expanded on what I posted and made it more clear.
Yup. At least his wife thinks so......
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