Why Catholics Don't Read the Bible

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Michie

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A few years ago I wrote a book that was very pessimistic about the future of the Church in the United States. American Catholicism is a religion, I argued, in a state of probably irreversible decline. It is on the road, not to total disappearance exactly, but to a reduced state in which it will have no more than a small impact on American society and culture. Since writing the book, I have often wondered if I had been too pessimistic. I hope so. Even while writing I hoped I was wrong. Indeed, I hoped that my pessimistic prognosis might serve in a small way as a wake-up call and might therefore help to reverse the Church's decline.

But when, rambling through the Internet recently, I stumbled on a Rasmussen poll that had to do with Bible-reading in the United States, I couldn't help but feel that my pessimism is well grounded.

According to the poll, 25 percent of Evangelical Protestants read the Bible daily, as do 20 percent of other Protestants, while daily Bible-reading is done by only 7 percent of Catholics. Now this result didn't bother me very much, since one can be very familiar with, and very greatly influenced by, a book without reading it on a daily basis. I myself don't read the Bible daily; nor do I give a daily reading to Plato or Shakespeare; and it's years since I read Matthew Arnold's Culture and Anarchy. Yet I know that all these writing have had a strong influence on the way I look at life and the world.

Far more disturbing was the poll result that showed that 44 percent of Catholics "rarely or never" read the Bible, while this is true of only 7 percent of Evangelicals and 13 percent of non-Evangelical Protestants. The level of religious vitality must be very low in a Christian church in which 44 percent of the membership almost never bothers to read the Bible.

Of course, there is an old tradition among lay Catholics of not reading the Bible. Prior to the Protestant Reformation, this non-reading was a natural byproduct of the fact that the vast majority of lay Catholics were illiterate. Besides, such Bibles as were available were written in Latin, not the vernacular languages. And then, once the Reformation took place, Bible-reading took on the color of being a distinctively Protestant thing, therefore something faithful Catholics should avoid. Protestants, after all, appealed to the authority of the Bible to challenge the authority of the pope and the bishops, and when they read the Bible they came to certain theological conclusions that conflicted with Catholic doctrine. Reading the Bible was dangerous for Catholics.


In the long period from the Council of Trent to Vatican II, a period of approximately four centuries, the Catholic Church adopted a highly defensive mode of being. There were two great intellectual dangers to the Faith -- first the Protestant danger and then the secularist danger that stemmed from the Enlightenment. The Index of Prohibited Books was created to defend Catholics against these dangers. Of course, it was impossible to put the Bible on the Index, since the Bible, according to Catholic teaching, was the inspired Word of God. But if the Bible couldn't be banned, at least Catholics could be effectively discouraged from reading it. There were several ways of doing this:

  • A strong emphasis on Natural Religion had the effect of depreciating the value of Revelation generally.

  • A strong emphasis on Tradition as a second source of Divine Revelation had the effect of depreciating the value of the Bible.
  • Secondhand narrations of biblical stories, instead of moving Catholics to consult the original sources (the Bible itself), more often gave them the impression that it was not necessary to examine the Bible.
  • Catholics were told that they must not read Protestant translations of the Bible (e.g., the Authorized Version); if they insisted on reading the Bible, they must read properly annotated Catholic translations.
  • Some gentle ridicule directed at the Biblicism of our "separated brethren" taught Catholics to shy away from the Bible.
  • In general, Catholics were seldom seriously encouraged by their priests and nuns to search the Scriptures.

Continued- http://insidecatholic.com/Joomla/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5386&Itemid=48
 

Michie

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Well even the priests nowadays say you should read the Bible in context. That the hearing Scripture during Mass excuse does not really fly.

I just got done watching a program on EWTN discuissing this also.
 
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namericanboy

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I know non Catholics who don't read the bible...Here's the thing, if you love Jesus and want to follow Him you will want to get to know Him better..How do we do that, by seeking His face through prayer and worship and by getting into His word. We hide it in our hearts to keep us from sin..We study it to show ourselves approved.For those who like me have eye problems we can even hear it being read to us...Thing is, it's what the Holy Spirit uses to teach us and mature us in the faith..Blessings in Christ....nab
 
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Michie

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I know non Catholics who don't read the bible...Here's the thing, if you love Jesus and want to follow Him you will want to get to know Him better..How do we do that, by seeking His face through prayer and worship and by getting into His word. We hide it in our hearts to keep us from sin..We study it to show ourselves approved.For those who like me have eye problems we can even hear it being read to us...Thing is, it's what the Holy Spirit uses to teach us and mature us in the faith..Blessings in Christ....nab
Absolutely agreed.:thumbsup:
 
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Auntie

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A couple of statistics I heard a few years ago:

One-fourth of Americans have never read the Bible.

One-fourth of Americans can't read well enough to fill out a job application.

These statistics weren't linked together in any way, but I always thought it was interesting. Being expected to read is enough to keep the non-readers from attending church. Just something to think about.
 
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Fish and Bread

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I don't really feel that article was fair in it's negative characterizations of the pre-Vatican 2 Church in some respects. I was surprised to see that the link was to a site that characterizes itself as Catholic.

Having said that, I do think it is very important to improve biblical literacy across the board for Christians. Even Protestant "bible" churches and such tend to be very lacking in that area.
 
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