meowzician
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Loved your post!
To what degree are you still a practicing Catholic today?
There is a tendency in the human mind to want a religion that has always been there and has always remained the same. But no such religion as that exists. It is the nature of the universe for everything to evolve, including religious ideologies.I was interested in the brief discussion here about the use of the word because I don't think the Roman Catholic church is the same as was meant by the word 'catholic' in the first 5-10 centuries or so of Christianity. Catholic originally just meant universal, and I believe it applied to all who could sincerely profess the Nicene Creed once it's form had settled down. The same term (I believe in one, holy, catholic church) still appears in the creed as used by the Orthodox and many Protestant churches, as well as my own.
I agree with you that the connotation of "Catholic Church" has changed over. I think originally it mean that it wasn't exclusive to one ethnicity the way Judaism is. It certainly came to refer to the institutional church which, as I think we would all agree, because EXTREMELY institutional for a while. And today in your post-Vatican 2 world means the community of all believers.
All quite true. And when you add to this that the Catholic Church includes peoples from all over the world without exclusion, I do think the name "Catholic" fits very, very nicely.I think the Roman Catholic Church is like this - like the Jewish religion it runs all the way from organised and structured worship, through many sorts of public service, through many social activities, to the deepest of mystical prayer and experience. As such it can cater for a very wide range of folks with very different spiritual paths from each other.
There are all sorts of scientific studies documenting that participation in a religious community increases human flourishing in a unique way.As I have learnt over many decades too, an organised religious community such as the Catholic Church (as well as many others) provides individuals with very great support when life is difficult, or you hit a spiritual dry patch.
I can tell we are going to be good friends.But I don't think this is the only way up the mountain - there is only one peak and as long as a path is going upwards towards the summit, maybe it doesn't matter where you start from, though, like climbing Everest, some ways up may be more challenging than others.
In the end, for me what matters is not the outer form, but the heart within. A true spiritual path brings us to the possibility of a direct and loving experience of the divine person within each of us, and to be aware of and to love that divine spark within all people - and to accept it as a gift freely given to anyone who can take it.