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I have always wondered why Catholics don't have a bible study program like we do in Protestant Churches.

This is from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops:

[quote]Scripture always has played an important role in the prayer life of the Catholic Church and its members. For the ordinary Catholic in earlier centuries, exposure to Scripture was passive. They heard it read aloud or prayed aloud but did not read it themselves. One simple reason: Centuries ago the average person could not read or afford a book. Popular reading and ownership of books began to flourish only after the invention of the printing press.

Once the printing press was invented, the most commonly printed book was the Bible, but this still did not make Bible-reading a Catholic’s common practice. Up until the mid-twentieth Century, the custom of reading the Bible and interpreting it for oneself was a hallmark of the Protestant churches springing up in Europe after the Reformation. Protestants rejected the authority of the Pope and of the Church and showed it by saying people could read and interpret the Bible for themselves. Catholics meanwhile were discouraged from reading Scripture. [/quote]
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You would think after the Printing Press was invented, the Catholic Church would be gleaming with joy. They were not happy about the printing press. They wanted to keep the bible in Latin and in the confinement of the church, so no one but clergymen could read it.
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JimboSaturn · 51-55, M
Catholics would argue that there is more to Christianity than scripture, there is a body of knowledge, culture, and learning as well. I was never discouraged to read the Bible but it wasn't strongly encouraged either.
SW-User
@JimboSaturn But which are inspired by the Holy Spirit?

I read the views of other Christians. But they are only opinions. Some are interpretations of another age.
JimboSaturn · 51-55, M
@SW-User I suppose they assume their studies, like Jewish scholars is interpreting divinely inspired texts. I'm not defending them because, I'm no longer a believer.
Justice4All · 36-40, M
@JimboSaturn Catholics sure are very knowledgeable when it comes to church history, Ecumenical creeds and the early church fathers. Most Protestants don't know much about the ecumenical councils or early Christian saints and martyrs, Ignatius of Antioch, Pope Clement I, etc.
SW-User
@Justice4All some so called non denominational churches do not ascribe to the creeds.

Most do.

Some Protestants don’t know much about the Early Christian Fathers. And orthodox Christians do of course.
JimboSaturn · 51-55, M
@SW-User There are downsides and upsides. The downside is that a lot of Catholics don't know their own Bible. The downside to the printing press is that everyone who could read and afford one could read the Bible; the bad thing is that without an understanding of history, language, and the times the gospels were written, it could lead to misunderstanding. The famous quote by a Governor in the Southern United States " If English was good enough for our Lord Jesus Christ, it's good enough for me!"
SW-User
@JimboSaturn Indeed. The renaissance brought in a greater understanding of Greek and Roman culture, at the same time as the printing press. Sadly Greek never took off in English schools, and Latin abandoned in the sixties.