I try to put things in my own experience and perspective to get a gist of things. I don't like generalizing cause there are so many people in the world that I bit my tongue when I do.
How does that work? Anything that isn't doctrine is political?
Taking and/or giving the sacraments to a Catholic isn't political.
Have you every practiced doctrine-in your heart-without influence of the outside world and their opinions in your devotions?
This seems like an odd question to ask when I just said we could still use the church's money to support them.
I go from top to bottom when I answer posts. So, whatever you answered later in the post I wouldn't have seen it yet.
Though, I do wonder how and what organization will pick up the slack if the Church is gone all of the sudden. The catholic church isn't the only organization that has people who sin in it.
There is a lot of investigative journalism out there. The church has officially apologized for many scandals, but many of the pope's apologies steer clear of actually implicating the Church in coverups.
It's good that the church is officially apologizing for many scandals. It's a good start.
What other place I can go to learn about the coverups beyond what I read on the media?
News Stations seem to be pretty bias-you can tell who likes who when they do the reporting.
Again, I think this attitude is overly simplistic. It was not just "some of its higher ups", it was institutional. Not every individual or parish within the Church is culpable, but every individual or parish who would continue to support the institute of the Church is at the very least partially responsible for the impugnity that allowed them to get away with it.
I would genuinely need to look more into it than what I read from media which is near impossible. I can only comment on the behavior but coverups? Even using that word sends a red flag that there's got to be more to the story than blaming the church on that alone.
History shows that the Church isn't going to reform itself if it doesn't have to. I strongly suggest you get over your issues with the media and read some investigative reporting on the church.
That's a fallacy. Appeal to tradition.
We never know. Probably not in our life time.
I don't watch media unless it's updating myself for COVID or something important; so this opinion is only for this conversation nothing more.
Is it reasonable to be "neutral" when you're covering a story about children being raped and an institution that is supposed to be the highest moral authority on earth protecting their rapists? I think it's fairly okay to take the "anti protecting paedophiles" side.
It depends on how the reporters tell it. I'm not saying the media is lying about the accusations itself just when they start saying coverups, and all of that, that sounds like getting audience attention for more views.
Has the church done anything else recently that had nothing to do with rape and children that gets the same attention?
No, they belong to the church on the promise and indoctrination that it is the on true moral authority on earth. I have never met a Catholic who chose to be one out of love for the doctrine and sacrements. By and large, they are Catholic because they had no choice and were simply raised in a Catholic family or in a strongly Catholic community. Catholicism is one of the mosy psychologically manipulative religions out there. I even have friends who are lapsed Catholics but still feel tremendous pangs of psychological guilt over such things as wanting to sleep with somebody, or using contraception. Coercion is a huge part of Catholicisms success.
I have. I went to a more liberal church, though. We had bible studies and people can talk about their faith and other topics.
Maybe you mean cradle catholics?
Christianity has that psychological guilt in general-my thing is, the catholic church is not special in regards to christianity being a guilt-oriented religion. I see a lot of beauty in people's devotion to the church but that's different than how I feel about it politically. I'd have to have more information before blaming an religious organization.
In other words, I don't have bad experiences with the church and christianity and don't like generalizing people negatively, so it makes it hard for me anything bad about people just because of their religious affiliation. Maybe those who had bad experiences in the church and/or dislike dogma have a bone to pick with the church-and seeing crimes within it kinda confirms that bias.
I'm pretty sure that if the same extent of wrongdoing were tied to any other organization, that would not be the case. In fact, I'm willing to bet that, in some cases, it would actually be far MORE widely reported. The Catholic church still has tremendous media influence, and there is still a huge movement to prevent information about the churches wrongdoing from being disseminated. There are many, many people who don't know about the mass child graves in Ireland, or the massive number of AIDS deaths in Africa. In fact, I often see these things downplayed in media.
Yeah. Media does downplay and "upplay" a lot. That's one main reason why I don't give it no nevermind.
Even without this mess, people would still have something to pick with with the catholic church. Main reason why we left to be protestants because of it.
Well... yeah. Because raping children is just about the worst thing you can do. So when an organization that is supposed to be the highest moral authority on earth not only has members in its order who do it, but actively PROTECTS THOSE MEMBERS FROM PROSECUTION and ALLOWS THEM TO CONTINUE RAPING CHILDREN, it's a pretty bad look.
You don't have to caps (hurts my eyes anyhow).
I personally don't see raping a child different than raping an adult. Both are "evil."
But I do bet that if the church coverup crimes that have to do with male, white, adults, it would have blown over.