The Catholic Church

2127 Words5 Pages

Patrick Strycharz
3/17/14
Rough Draft
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of the Catholic Church

The modern Catholic Church has been through significant highs and lows in the past sixty years. Evangelization has been tougher then ever because scandal after scandal has plagued the Church and in consequence the priesthood is unattractive and the drop in membership is too significant.The Church is not a political party and the Pope is not the President so the expectations of corrupt politicians is not placed on the clergy. Looking back at the greatest meeting of all time, Vatican II, the Church gathered a corpus of theologians, officials, and experts in other fields to make a great change in how the clergy would go about and christify or exclaim the message of Christ to the world.Years later, it seems now everyday a sex abuse scandal is revealed or the Vatican is being questioned about their bank and whether or not secrets are being kept from the outside world. However, The Church is made up of human beings who are not infallible and the reason it has survived since Christ is because of a persistent following and belief in the consistent sacramental traditions. Every person or group of people goes through a period of instability and a phase of lesson learning.Vatican II and the that comes after that in eventful Church history reveals some of the things that could be expected in the future. The Church has been stuck in every direction, but past responses to similar circumstances are they key to understanding the future.
Vatican II is sometimes regarded as one of the most important meetings or councils in history, and especially in Church history. Vatican II was held for four sessions and contained twenty five hundred bishops...

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...sense, but also in terms of livelihood." Francis escapes the Vatican every night to work at bringing out the sacred vision and message of Jesus to all.
Finally, the Church, which must remain true to her mission of preaching the whole of Christ’s truth, must continue to challenge “cafeteria Catholics” in the United States who only select certain beliefs and practices from the “menu” of Church doctrine and the nominal Catholics in European countries like France, have become increasingly secular and even hostile to traditional Catholic teaching. Faithful Catholics may look at the future and feel overwhelmed at the problems the Church faces. However, a study of Church history reveals that the Church has always been confronted with problems but a unified Body of people can overcome the modern issues that distract away members from the true purpose of the Church.

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