I don't talk very often about being Catholic -- well, I mention it a lot, but I try not to be very in-your-face about it, but recent events demand a response from me and my limited sphere of influence.
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Education about traditional Catholic Church structure, the new bill with resources cited, and a response. )
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So am I reading correctly that the reason for this is parishioners feel like they have no recourse if the church misuses funds? Obviously if it's criminal misuse of funds, they have the legal system, but there could be other ways to misuse funds that aren't criminal. If it were a Baptist church (just for example), you could just pick up and join a different church. Or start a new church. But with the parish system, that's not an option? I guess I can understand the parishioners' frustration, but the state can't mandate how a church is run if it's not violating the law. I guess I'm asking, what recourse would a parishioner have in the current system?
You know I'm an atheist, but I firmly believe churches have the right to operate the way they want to operate. I may disagree vehemently with their choices, but tough titty.
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Seriously, though, how did they come up with this brilliant plan? We're regulated and governed by the Vatican. The Catholic Church is older and better organized than pretty much anything in the US.
And why is it that when the government (or anyone) goes after a religion is it usualy the Catholics?
Sorry. Mini-rant there. Thanks for the news!
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But then you can bet the federal government and the Supreme Court would get involved, and it would fail.
I'm not Catholic, I'm a Mormon, but the repercussions this could have are utterly frightening. As well as pretty unmanageable. This isn't just a few branches of a church solely in Connecticut. This is the Roman Catholic Church. CT doesn't have any jurisdiction whatsoever on the vast majority of it.
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If it does,and they've gone after the Catholic Church first, who or what is next?
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::boggles::
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Okay, Episcopalian here, so we have a similar apostolic set-up on some levels, though the parishioners are far more involved in the running of the parish. But, uh, no. That is definitely a violation of separation of church and state; it's not up to the government to tell any church how it must run its business as long as they're not currently violating existing laws. Besides, getting the parishioners involved doesn't mean it'll cut out misappropriation of funds; it just gives them a chance to participate. (Oh, like we had our our church a few years back.)
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