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If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
#21
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
That story is from 2016 by the way. Still makes my blood boil.
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#22
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
(August 25, 2018 at 12:08 pm)Aegon Wrote: That story is from 2016 by the way. Still makes my blood boil.

Because the Catholic mentality in two years obviously hasn't changed.
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#23
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
(August 25, 2018 at 2:48 am)Aroura Wrote: A few years back I tried to formally leave the church.  Because I was baptized as a baby, my name was added to their official rolls at a time when I had no say-so in the matter.

In 2011, the RCC made it impossible to formally leave the church.  You can still stop going, and also submit a form that is symbolic, but once once your parents chose to sign you up, the church will not ever officially let you go.

Blame us Irish, the website countmeout.ie garnered 14,000 defections in a few months and, in a panic, the church hierarchy changed the rules to allow people to apostatise.

That's one of the main reasons why, whenever anybody has the gall to try and tell me Ireland is majority catholic, I forcefully correct them. Only for the baptismal requirements in most schools and mammies filling out the census for their children, catholicism would be a minor religious position, de iure.
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#24
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_C...buse_cases
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#25
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
(August 25, 2018 at 2:45 pm)Wololo Wrote:
(August 25, 2018 at 2:48 am)Aroura Wrote: A few years back I tried to formally leave the church.  Because I was baptized as a baby, my name was added to their official rolls at a time when I had no say-so in the matter.

In 2011, the RCC made it impossible to formally leave the church.  You can still stop going, and also submit a form that is symbolic, but once once your parents chose to sign you up, the church will not ever officially let you go.

Blame us Irish, the website countmeout.ie garnered 14,000 defections in a few months and, in a panic, the church hierarchy changed the rules to allow people to apostatise.

That's one of the main reasons why, whenever anybody has the gall to try and tell me Ireland is majority catholic, I forcefully correct them.  Only for the baptismal requirements in most schools and mammies filling out the census for their children, catholicism would be a minor religious position, de iure.

That should really read "...changed the rules to no longer allow people to apostatise", now that I look back at it.
Urbs Antiqua Fuit Studiisque Asperrima Belli

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#26
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
Go shit on their altar and see if they throw you out.
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#27
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
The sentiment is echoed here

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qxc0wYqOfwI
'Those who ask a lot of questions may seem stupid, but those who don't ask questions stay stupid'
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#28
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
(August 25, 2018 at 2:45 pm)Wololo Wrote:
(August 25, 2018 at 2:48 am)Aroura Wrote: A few years back I tried to formally leave the church.  Because I was baptized as a baby, my name was added to their official rolls at a time when I had no say-so in the matter.

In 2011, the RCC made it impossible to formally leave the church.  You can still stop going, and also submit a form that is symbolic, but once once your parents chose to sign you up, the church will not ever officially let you go.

Blame us Irish, the website countmeout.ie garnered 14,000 defections in a few months and, in a panic, the church hierarchy changed the rules to allow people to apostatise.

That's one of the main reasons why, whenever anybody has the gall to try and tell me Ireland is majority catholic, I forcefully correct them. Only for the baptismal requirements in most schools and mammies filling out the census for their children, catholicism would be a minor religious position, de iure.

Well, until recently it was majority Catholic (to the extent that the Magdalene Laundries remained in Ireland until 1996, and significant speculation that this only happened because most Irish had finally bought enough washing machines to make the slave labour inherent in such an enterprise financially unsound), but with this speech (given by Taoiseach Enda Kenny of Fine Gael, historically the most traditionalist and pro-conservative of Ireland's major parties):





and Ireland cutting diplomatic ties with the Vatican, and the recent referendum on abortion, it's safe to assume the days of Catholic dominance in Ireland are done. It's only a matter of time before they're not even bothering with those lip service identifications.
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#29
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
(August 25, 2018 at 2:48 am)Aroura Wrote: A few years back I tried to formally leave the church.  Because I was baptized as a baby, my name was added to their official rolls at a time when I had no say-so in the matter.

In 2011, the RCC made it impossible to formally leave the church.  You can still stop going, and also submit a form that is symbolic, but once once your parents chose to sign you up, the church will not ever officially let you go.

Pooping on a Jesus biscuit will do the trick.

Take pics, post on line, be very visible.

Use your real name, be a pest about it.
 The granting of a pardon is an imputation of guilt, and the acceptance a confession of it. 




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#30
RE: If you’re complacent, you’re complicit
(August 25, 2018 at 9:33 pm)vorlon13 Wrote:
(August 25, 2018 at 2:48 am)Aroura Wrote: A few years back I tried to formally leave the church.  Because I was baptized as a baby, my name was added to their official rolls at a time when I had no say-so in the matter.

In 2011, the RCC made it impossible to formally leave the church.  You can still stop going, and also submit a form that is symbolic, but once once your parents chose to sign you up, the church will not ever officially let you go.

Pooping on a Jesus biscuit will do the trick.

Take pics, post on line, be very visible.

Use your real name, be a pest about it.

Excommunication does not get you off the books either.  You are still a catholic, just a bad one at that point.

Quote: "excommunication does not expel the person from the Catholic Church, but simply forbids the excommunicated person from engaging in certain activities..."
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