I decided to read the region section of the New York Times online yesterday between patrons at the library and encountered a delightful article about faith. The writer in question was raised Roman Catholic, and is raising her children in the same faith, but is far more convoluted in her own religious beliefs than strict dogma allows. The
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The unspoken truth here is that the Catholic Church as an ideais larger than the Roman Catholic Church as an institution, and the RCC is far more tolerant than people think of the "odd bits in the junk drawer" like me who reject the Filioque and both the Calvinist and Arminian views of God. (I embrace the only view that ( ... )
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I love this idea--both here and in other places I've seen you mention it. I think there's always been some divide between "religion" and "faith," and the way that you depict it--that the idea is larger than the institution--makes it feel less like there's a conflict of interests and more like there's the possibility of evolution, of change into something bigger and brighter that better reflects the relationship of the people to God. It's a remarkably hopeful notion (especially in the presence of the number of atheistic bestsellers in the publishing marketplace in the past few years...).
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I loved your description of the ballroom and how your own experience made clear for you what that scene from an earlier era must have been like.
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