Catholic and “catholic”
"We have lost our universality"

Catholic and “catholic”

Fr. Paul D. Scalia

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Below is the first couple of paragraphs from Fr Scalia’s article recently posted at The Catholic Thing (a good site – sign up for their email notices). Sort of a review of how we were catholic before we were Catholic – good read. The entire article can be found in the sidebar at thecatholicthing.org

 

In today’s Gospel, our Lord likens the Kingdom of heaven to “a net thrown into the sea, which collects fish of every kind.” (Mt 13:44-52) This net, which gathers not just one kind of fish but fish of every kind, serves as a good description of what we confess every Sunday: the Church is catholic.

Now, most people probably think of “Catholic” as the brand name of a particular Christian denomination. Yes, we speak colloquially of the Catholic Church as distinct from the Lutheran, Episcopal, Methodist churches, etc. But that’s a fairly recent designation, only since the Reformation. Before the Church was “Catholic” she was already “catholic.” It’s a truth we find expressed in the Church’s earliest years. The word “catholic” means universal, embracing and bringing all things together into a unity (from the Greek kata holos, “according to the whole).

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