Aragon was a country on the Iberian peninsula which was Catholic. Would a modern Catholic country be morally acceptable if a parcel of land was allotted by the UN and the Vatican for that purpose?
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Aragon was a country on the Iberian peninsula which was Catholic. Would a modern Catholic country be morally acceptable if a parcel of land was allotted by the UN and the Vatican for that purpose?
Can we please use a capital C for "Catholic" when we're talking about the particular kind of Christianity? The word "catholic" with a small c is an adjective. It means "all-embracing" or "universal".
Aragon was a country on the Iberian peninsula which was Catholic. Would a modern Catholic country be morally acceptable if a parcel of land was allotted by the UN and the Vatican for that purpose?
Aragon was a country on the Iberian peninsula which was Catholic. Would a modern Catholic country be morally acceptable if a parcel of land was allotted by the UN and the Vatican for that purpose?
Aragon was a country on the Iberian peninsula which was Catholic. Would a modern Catholic country be morally acceptable if a parcel of land was allotted by the UN and the Vatican for that purpose?
Why not just use the Vatican? Catholic land....
There already is such a place. Check out Malta. The Mediterranean archipelago south of Sicily. Maybe the most devoutly Catholic country in the world. From the Wiki article:
"The Constitution of Malta provides for freedom of religion but establishes Roman Catholicism as the state religion. Freedom House and the World Factbook report that 98 percent of the population is Roman Catholic, making the nation one of the most Catholic countries in the world. The Sunday Mass Attendance Census 2005 commissioned by the Archdiocese of Malta reports that 52.6% of the population attends regular religious services. This is one of the highest rates of attendance in Europe..."
Malta is the only European country (Vatican excepted) I know where abortion is totally banned.
Here's more on Malta's Catholicism:
http://www.mi-culture.com/Rrvu.htm
80.4% of Spain's total population (97.2% of those professing any faith) are Roman Catholics, though other studies suggest that about half that number are nominal rather than active.
I'm wondering, however, what Autumnleaf means by "a Catholic country" -- one where everyone is expected to be Catholic? One where the majority are Catholic? One where the civil law is based on canon law? Something else?
Yeah, yeah... you couldn't even be bothered to type your own name out with a capital C.
Oi, I've just noticed this!