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(Sarcasm)
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
ummm, mother teresa anyone?Top Gun wrote:Way to show respect at the passing of a much better man than any of us will ever be. Even if you're not a Catholic, you at least have to recognize John Paul's contributions to world peace and social justice. No one, and I mean no one, has come close to speaking up for the oppressed and the downtrodden over the last 25 years. The world lost a great man today; the least you could do would be to acknowledge that.
Not bad company to find yourself in.whuppinboy wrote:ummm, mother teresa anyone?Top Gun wrote:No one, and I mean no one, has come close to speaking up for the oppressed and the downtrodden over the last 25 years.
Utterly disgusting. This proves once and for all that the Times is now no better than a two-bit rag.
I agree with you. Did you read the results of the AP poll released just today? Over 60% of American Catholics interviewed wanted clergy to be able to marry. Let me guess; they're the same ones who attend Mass only on Christmas and Easter. John Paul II's so-called "ultraconservative" preachings represent actual faithfulness to Catholic doctrine; those who disagree with his stance on such issues as abortion and birth control aren't really living as Catholics. My high school theology teacher always liked to use the term "pseudo-Catholics." Too many American Catholics (true in name only, I suspect) are paying more attention to popular culture than to the actual doctrines of the Church. I would also love a return to the Latin Mass, or at least an option for it; singing the Latin hymns on Holy Thursday only gives you a glimpse of the elegance of the pre-Vatican II service.Top Wop wrote:The church needs to go back to being more traditional, pre VCII in terms of the liturgy of the mass. Im very anxious about the sucessor, because he may screw up the church even more than it already is. We've already made some good progress in the right direction towards going back to the way things should be, now we need a catalyst, probably a cardinal from Africa who can set it in stone without AMerican pop culture dictating to the church what IT finds acceptable and what the church should do.