tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9006673250886122803.post8657996375589874273..comments2023-04-24T10:58:04.691-04:00Comments on The Monk who Stole the Cow: Sinead O'Connor and the Pope's ApologyJack Keoghhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17382043901379998330noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9006673250886122803.post-18846627144696298482010-03-30T15:38:45.413-04:002010-03-30T15:38:45.413-04:00Whenever anyone says that the faithful should boyc...Whenever anyone says that the faithful should boycott Mass (or Baptism, or whatever Sacrament it is) I wonder what hope they can have for a church on this world in the sense Paul talks about it. And what hope they can have for communing in the body of Christ - for eating his body and drinking his blood - true food and true drink - for eternal life. The pain is clear (although she seems to assume the abuse of the homes unto herself) - where is the Spirit of which she speaks? Even if she had mentioned the Palmarians that would have given some hope, some sign of a Catholic understanding of the economy of salvation, even if the palmarians (the group that ordained her) are wrong.Joenoreply@blogger.com