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  1. Practices identified by outside observers as folk Catholicism vary from place to place and may sometimes contradict the official teachings and practices of the Roman Catholic Church. In general, when aspects of folk religion intermingle with Catholic beliefs in an area, folk Catholicism will result.

  2. Folk Catholicism can be broadly described as various ethnic expressions and practices of Catholicism intermingled with aspects of folk religion. Practices have varied from place to place and may at times contradict the official doctrines and practices of the Catholic Church.

  3. Because the apostles’ teaching was divine revelation, it could not embrace any untruth. There must be untruth where there is contradiction. Doctrines that contradict one another cannot both be true. Therefore, there can be no contradictions in the teaching of the apostles and their successors.

  4. May 22, 2023 · Deconstructing Folk Catholicism: Combating Catholic Hegemony during the Philippines’ Colonial Era. Posted on May 22, 2023. This paper was written by Chloe Foor and was awarded the Civil Resistance Prize by the History Department in 2023. It was written for History 600: Empire and Revolution in Southeast Asia taught by Professor Alfred McCoy.

  5. Folk Catholicism can be broadly described as various ethnic expressions and practices of Catholicism intermingled with aspects of folk religion. Practices have varied from place to place, and may at times contradict the official doctrines and practices of the Catholic Church as well as overall Christianity.

  6. Nov 19, 2018 · Catholics, if we believed in something that—if the Bible is a revelation from God, it’s God’s word, and doctrine is found there, and Catholics believe something that contradicts what’s in the Bible, that would be a serious problem for Catholic theology.

  7. Aug 23, 2022 · Catholics were much confused by this new contraceptive method. After all, the Pill was not a barrier method—and so hormonal contraceptives did not appear to physically alter the conjugal act. Many Catholic couples wondered if such “invisible” methods actually fell under the Church’s ban on contraceptives.