klr wrote:Seth wrote:klr wrote:Seth wrote:If you don't like Catholic orthodoxy and dogma, don't be a Catholic. Sounds pretty simple to me. Why you would bitch about how someone else runs their private club is a puzzlement.
Why? Because I was forced to attend this club for many years. Now that I'm out, I usually couldn't care less about what goes on at Sunday mass, but the irony in this story is inescapable.

There are apostates, heretics and dissenters in every religion, including Catholicism. Martin Luther was just such a dissenter, and he went on to form his own church in response to disagreement with the Pope, which is perfectly appropriate.
There are liberal, far-left, and overtly socialist/communist priests in the Catholic church. The American Council of Catholic Bishops is way liberal and butts heads with the Vatican on a regular basis over doctrinal issues. But the Pope is the spiritual head of the church and the Vicar of God and what he says, goes, like it or not.
Catholicism is not a democracy, and splinter sects and doctrinal dissenters are excommunicated from the church all the time. All that means is that they don't get support from the church, and may not call themselves "Catholics" any more. They are free, however, to believe and worship as they choose, just like Martin Luther did.
All true, but you see: I really just don't care ...
What an ....erudite...rebuttal.
Seth wrote:
There's no irony whatsoever in the story, it's just a bunch of dissident priests who are displaying disobedience to Catholic doctrine for reasons of their own, which appear to be a mix of procedural and political objections.
Irony is in the eye of the (otherwise disinterested) beholder. The irony as I see it is that they are claiming that a variation in the mass is sexist and elitist, whereas every variation I ever attended (and there were a great many) merited that description. And to think that they got rid of the Tridentine before I had a chance to experience it.
Seth wrote:
Sucks to be them, I guess, because the Pope is in charge, not them.
And if you were "forced" to attend services, then sue your parents, because they are the one's who did the "forcing," not the church.
My father is long since dead, so I guess I won't be suing him.
There's a legal term for this: estopple. It means "if you sit on your rights for too long, you lose them."
BTW, the Catholic church still controls the vast majority of the primary education system in this country, and exercises real power over who gets to go to its schools, and teaches in them. That's where a lot of the pressure for parents to raise their children "in the faith" comes from, so this is one thing that does exercise me. But I suppose you'll be telling me next that it's the fault of the populace for not demanding that this state of affairs be changed. And actually I'd agree with you - up to a point. So save your efforts and please don't bother ...
Yup, sounds like a political/social issue to me. Presumably Ireland still uses democratic processes to determine public policy, right? It's not a church-run theocracy and you have the right to vote, right? That being the case, your educational system, and all the rest, is an exercise in democracy. Presumably you are free to emigrate, right?
Seth wrote:
If you remained in the Catholic church for very long, you were "confirmed," which means that you were given the option to become a full practicing Catholic BY CHOICE.
Hmmm ... I was 11. Hey, maybe we should allow 11 year-olds to vote, drink, join the armed forces, etc. Confirmation was just a ritual, the next step in the tiresome list of Catholic sacraments. we all pretty much took it like that.
Choosing to be a full member of a religion that you are free to walk away from any time you like (and evidently you did) is entirely different from voting, drinking or serving in the military, which makes your statement a strawman fallacy.
Seth wrote:
Nobody held a gun to your head and required you to profess faith. And I'm betting that unlike Islam, nobody put a gun to your head when you decided not to be a Catholic any longer.
Man-up and take responsibility for your decisions, quit trying to blame Catholicism for your change of heart or what your parents may have done to you as a child.
Oh, give over and stop getting up on your high horse about it.
You first.
Stop trying to manufacture some sort of angst or unresolved issue on my part that simply doesn't exist.
I can only comment upon what is written here, and I see quite a lot of angst and hostility in evidence.
Church was just boring and annoying and a waste of time, especially since I usually had to dress up in my best clothes and fast for Sunday morning mass. But beyond that, I personally couldn't give a rat's ass, since I never really believed in any of the voodoo anyway - far too rational, even as a kid.
If you say so...
It looks to me that you're the one with the issues, if any superficial discussion or light-hearted commentary on this or any other matter causes you to get up on a high horse. Or flog a dead one ...
I take debate quite seriously, and I note that this thread is in the "serious stuff" section of the forum.
If unreason, illogic or other fallacies are presented, I have no compunctions about commenting upon them.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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