goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
More than four-in-ten Catholics in the United States (45%) do not know that their church teaches that the bread and wine used in Communion do not merely symbolize but actually become the body and blood of Christ.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1433340) wrote:Very interesting study. I will nitpick at this though... I guess for broader knowledge in general.
While Traditional Catholicism does not teach that it is symbolic, it also does not teach that it actually becomes the body and blood of Christ. Rather, it adopts ideas from Greek philosophy (as Augustine and Aquinas essentially Christianized Plato and Aristotle, respectively) regarding the idea, I think, of Plato's forms. With there being a perfect form of everything that exists.
And so it is not the blood and body of Christ materially, but rather they are the immaterial "essence" of Christ (This is more than just a "symbol"!). This may not be what is exactly taught nowadays, but that is what transubstantiation originally was.
Anyone, please supplement/correct me if I'm like... wrong or anything. XD
Cognitive Gear wrote:1) This isn't surprising. Americans are famously ethnocentric.
Cognitive Gear wrote:2) Why did this study decide to single out evangelicalism from all of the other denominations?
3) As would be expected in America, the results for the lowest level of education line up with that of African Americans. This indicates more of a socio-economic divide rather than a racial one.
4) What is a "White Mainline" Christian? Is it everything that isn't "Black Protestant" or "White Evangelical"? Both "Black Protestant" and "White Mainline" are incredibly general.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Yeah, I think you're a bit mixed up, MSP =).Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1433340) wrote:While Traditional Catholicism does not teach that it is symbolic, it also does not teach that it actually becomes the body and blood of Christ. Rather, it adopts ideas from Greek philosophy (as Augustine and Aquinas essentially Christianized Plato and Aristotle, respectively) regarding the idea, I think, of Plato's forms. With there being a perfect form of everything that exists.
And so it is not the blood and body of Christ materially, but rather they are the immaterial "essence" of Christ (This is more than just a "symbol"!). This may not be what is exactly taught nowadays, but that is what transubstantiation originally was.
Anyone, please supplement/correct me if I'm like... wrong or anything. XD
Catechism of the Catholic Church Section 1375 wrote: It is by the conversion of the bread and wine into Christ's body and blood that Christ becomes present in this sacrament.
Pascal (post: 1434714) wrote:I think they should of made the poll and asked if Christians that watch anime score better then average .
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Yamamaya (post: 1435546) wrote:The only way a Christian would know about the names of various Hindu gods would be if they studied it for themselves. Their pastor isn't going to tell them, and many Christians don't feel a need to study the other religions in the world which I find a tad sad.
Yamamaya (post: 1435546) wrote:Some of those questions were purely political or historical. I thought this was a study on religion, not religious history. They should have stuck entirely with teachings of various religions.
Yamamaya wrote:The only way a Christian would know about the names of various Hindu gods would be if they studied it for themselves. Their pastor isn't going to tell them, and many Christians don't feel a need to study the other religions in the world which I find a tad sad.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Peanut (post: 1435553) wrote:You bring up some good points but I have to heavily disagree with you on this. Part of the reason is, growing up in what would be considered Evangelical denominations, I've heard my share of messages that bring political topics like these into the message. High on the list is prayer in schools and I just kind of found out about the laws revolving around teaching the Bible because we actually studied some stories from it in my 9th grade English class. As for the history part, we need to remember that Christianity is a very historical religion and that history doesn't really end after the Apostles die. There is a lot we can learn from the history of the Church that gives us an understanding of what we believe and why we believe it. When it comes to the Reformation, I think just about anyone who lives in the west (Christian or non) should at least be able to recognize the name of Martin Luther. This is, after all, one of the biggest events in Western History so, not knowing its major figure, is kind of a bad commentary on our education system
Peanut (post: 1435553) wrote:I agree with both you and Corrie if that makes sense. It's true that we should be able to identify certain deities just by living in our culture however, if Christians can't recognize them it really doesn't say anything about the quality of our pastors. We can wish that our pastors would be expert history teachers, political analysts, world religion scholars, philosophers, and theologians in one, neat package but if they aren't it really isn't that big of a deal. So, really the questions on the Bible and Christianity (and maybe politics) are relevant to analyzing American Pastors as a whole. Clearly, they need to improve in some denominations however Evangelicals seem to be doing just fine. Others have work to do...
Yamamaya wrote:Many books bring up the violent past of Islam and some of their questionable teachings. While this is all well and good
Nate (post: 1435722) wrote:I swear if this turns into an Islam bashing/hate thread I'm going to be so mad.
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