-- Anita --
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger is now Pope Benedict XVI.
An interesting choice of names. The new pontiff will certainly keep the
Catholic Church on the same heading as his predecessor John Paul II (may
he rest in peace).
--
the black rose
Research Associate in the Field of Child Development and Human
Relations
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Which unfortunately the Catholic church doesn't need. My husband read
they wanted an old pope age-wise and and old school pope views-wise.
For the world the Catholic church lives in (modern world, internet,
instant news, etc.) and the problems it is facing (the whole sex
scandal stuff and the further deteriorating levels of people joining to
be nuns and priests among other things) the Catholic church needed a
younger in touch Pope open to new view and ways of thinking. This new
pope is not that.
I am not Catholic (my DH is) so I have no vested interest in what the
Catholic church does or does not do...but I personally think that now
that the church is going to decline further sadly when it had a real
opportunity for revitalization and growth.
Just my two cents!!!!
Melissa in NJ
I have to warn ya, I'm an Orthodox Christian. Orthodoxy isn't just any
Christianity -- it's iron-fortified, steel-belted Christianity. We
spend a third of each calendar year fasting. Those who don't like
Catholicism will really hate us. We believe in metanoia -- the change
of heart. It is not the Church which must change, it is the hearts and
minds of those living in the world which must change, must become
conformed to the teachings of Jesus Christ. Modern people sometimes
don't understand this, which is a pity -- but not a reason to change the
teaching.
> I am not Catholic (my DH is) so I have no vested interest in what the
> Catholic church does or does not do...but I personally think that now
> that the church is going to decline further sadly when it had a real
> opportunity for revitalization and growth.
Revitalization at what cost? The possibility that the Catholic Church
will decline isn't a good enough reason to change fundamental moral
teachings. Conservative religious orders are blooming while liberal
ones are in desperate decline. The Catholic Church is growing and vital
in exactly those parts of the world which are not infected with
modernism: Africa and Latin America, and the African Cardinals and
Bishops are about as conservative as Roman Catholics can get. The
wheezing warriors of the liberal left would have us believe that
conservativism is the death of Catholicism. I beg to disagree. The
Catholic Church is only withering in those parts of the world that are
most liberal.
> Just my two cents!!!!
And mine! :-)
This is the whole thing in a nutshell. I would rather see the church stay
faithful to
it's teachings and lose members in America, than have America change the
Roman Catholic church.
I get sick of hearing 'The American Catholic Church'. There is NO American
Catholic Church, however, there are Roman Catholic Churches in America.
Tricia
(who is devoutly Catholic by conversion, not cradle)
I am a very lapsed Catholic from reasons of disgust (went to them in my time
of need and was promptly given priestly advice and asked "so how much of
your weekly income can you donate to the church?") and am not overly
concerned about it but perhaps if the church concerned themselves less with
monetary and more with taking care of their flock, they would have more
devotees.
Just my 5 cents (2 cents has been outlawed here!)
--
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"the black rose" <blackro...@netscape.net> wrote in message
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So on that thinking...only America is the modern world? I was encompassing
all the modern world in my post, not just America!
What a neat OT thread for discussion!
Melissa in NJ
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Remove STOPCRAP to reply
--
I don't think it is unfortunate for the church at all that it will
apparently stay conservative and keep its doctrines and teachings in place.
It isn't a democracy where majority rules.
The Catholic Churches in America thought was just an add on to the post
because of how I feel.
I just feel like the people of America (where I live, so it's their media I
see) expect the church -- to hop to it, get with it, accept the way life has
changed, etc. -- and it shouldn't be that way.
If people don't like the Catholic Church and its teachings, there are at
least a thousand other churches to choose from.
The church shouldn't change.
Tricia
http://photos.yahoo.com/momiixii
Arlinda in FL
"A&T" <an...@noearthlink.net> wrote in message
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the black rose wrote:
> Irrational Number wrote:
>
>> There is white smoke coming out and bells
>> are ringing in St. Peter's!
>>
>> -- Anita --
>>
>>
>
> Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger is now Pope Benedict XVI.
>
> An interesting choice of names. The new pontiff will certainly keep the
> Catholic Church on the same heading as his predecessor John Paul II (may
> he rest in peace).
>
--
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(take the dog out before replying)
the black rose wrote:
.... The Catholic Church is growing and vital
> in exactly those parts of the world which are not infected with
> modernism: Africa and Latin America, and the African Cardinals and
> Bishops are about as conservative as Roman Catholics can get. The
> wheezing warriors of the liberal left would have us believe that
> conservativism is the death of Catholicism. I beg to disagree. The
> Catholic Church is only withering in those parts of the world that are
> most liberal.
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"Melissa in NJ" <Melis...@comcast.net> wrote in message
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"Sharon Harper" <shar...@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
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"DrQuilter" <mvig...@dogu.washington.edu> wrote in message
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And yet I can remember Father Hogan from my early childhood who took me for
my communion and confirmation. He was the ideal priest, someone I would
like to believe Jesus was like. I would have walked over hot coals for him,
just a wonderful, wonderful man. Guess it all depends doesn't it?
--
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"SNIGDIBBLY" <snigd...@cox.net> wrote in message
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> ... or the possibility of Priests being able to marry.
>
If you think a married priesthood would solve the vocations crisis, just
take a glance at the Orthodox Church. We *do* have a married
priesthood, and we *still* have the same vocations crisis.
And the Protestants have a married clergy and they still have sex abuse
scandals. They're just not as juicy a target as the Catholic Church, so
you don't hear about them so much.
Two things are going on with vocations to the priesthood. One is, both
Churches are suffering from decades of people praying -- not in as many
words, but in essence -- "God give us priests, but keep your hands off
my sons." The other is, for decades popular culture has been making the
priesthood look like the worst life in the world, so most intelligent
young men won't even consider it.
As for the ordination of women, the Catholic Church clearly teaches they
don't have the authority to ordain women, it's not something that can be
dialogued about. Don't look at me, that's what they teach (I'm not
Catholic, I just live with them). But I have to admit I don't
understand why people keep whining about this issue when the answer is
pretty clear. It's like trying to talk to children who don't want
Grandma to die -- it is the way it is, whether we like it or not. The
Catholic Church isn't going to change something she doesn't have the
authority to change.
The silliest thing I've seen written since this whole thing started with
JP II's death was, "What about nuns, why can't a nun have the right to
get married?" Uhhhh. That one left me speechless. Someone just
doesn't get it.
One of the funniest things I've seen since yesterday is, "God's
Rottweiler is now more of a German Shepherd." ba DUM dum
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"Sharon Harper" <shar...@optusnet.com.au> wrote in message
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"the black rose" <blackro...@netscape.net> wrote in message
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The guy is like 80 years old. It appears they were looking for an interim
Pope, until the Church can decide in which direction it is going.
The next choice will be the telling one.
Cindy
> The Catholic Church is only withering in those parts of the world that
> are most liberal.
>
Well, ya know what? I don't want to belong to Mel Gibson's hate filled
Catholic Church. I want to belong to the Church of my childhood that
focused on helping families and wasn't involved in politics. Who stood up
for working people and spoke against the excesses of the Corporate world.
They were the voice for the poor and the money that was given to the church
was used to help the church family, not to give donations to political
candidates who pander to the right.
When I saw my church align itself with the far right conservative movement
because they perceived an ally in their stand against abortion, they lost my
support. The allies they grew to embrace don't support any other aspect of
church teaching.
So, if the Church is withering, I guess it's because of people like me who
can't abide the hypocrisy anymore.
Cindy
liz young in cool california
liz young in cool california
Elizabeth Young wrote:
> Yeah, the usual pattern is young pope followed by old pope - my
> professor explained it to us this way: (paraphrase) the conclave tends
> to pick an old man to follow a long-serving pope; a man who will
> probably continue the policies of the previous pope. Then the cardnals
> can think for a few years about who they _really_ want to be pope.
>
> liz young in cool california
--
So, I go for the Mass and the music and tune out everything else. And try
to live as good a life as I know how to do.
Cindy
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