Yes Diana. I think geography, as well as history and culture make a HUGE difference. I spent 6 months in Europe going to school and traveling. Granted that is not a huge amount of time - but I was impressed by the great differences I saw between "U.S. Catholicism" and "European Catholicism." Whereas in Europe the Catholic church predominated especially prior to the 1800s, in more ways than just religion being deeply embedded in its culture, politics, and society - here in the U.S. Catholicism was not only a minority religion - there was enormous prejudice against it. I remember even the huge controversy and outcry when Kennedy (1960s) was running for President simply because he was a Catholic. Electing a Catholic as president, much less governor, or mayor was verboten. Further throughout U.S. history Catholicism was associated with poor, undesirables - especially immigrants (Irish, Italian, etc.). Thus as a severely oppressed minority, and a religion that had to prove itself against the implacable tide of Protestantism - Catholicism developed into a vastly different strain here, than it did in Europe.Diana wrote: ↑28 Feb 2020, 07:24That was I was going to ask your opinion about. Because I'm wondering if "North American Catholicism" has a different taint or colourings than for instance, Italian or French Catholicism. My "knowledge" of Catholicism comes from mostly my contacts with French people, or people who were originally immigrants from "rural Europe" as you mentioned in your first post. And it seems there's a lot more superstition or old beliefs amongst these people.
Not wanting people to read the bible reminds me of that great film The Name of the Rose.
respectfully,
Belenus