What happens when the history we know about the Church is a distortion? The most basic answer: it distorts our ability to talk about the contemporary Church dealing with its current challenges. Whether we demonize or glamorize the past, showing our ancestors the respect worthy of parents gives us not only an honest stance toward the past, but an authentic way to move forward.
What happens when the history we know about the Church is a distortion? The most basic answer: it distorts our ability to talk about the contemporary Church dealing with its current challenges. Whether we demonize or glamorize the past, showing our ancestors the respect worthy of parents gives us not only an honest stance toward the past, but an authentic way to move forward.