Paradoxes of Catholicism Quotes

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Paradoxes of Catholicism Paradoxes of Catholicism by Robert Hugh Benson
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“the Catholic Church, therefore, that strange mingling of mystery and common-sense, that union of earth and heaven, of clay and fire, can alone be understood by him who accepts her as both Divine and Human,”
Robert Hugh Benson, Paradoxes of Catholicism
“The Church, then, is too much interested in men and too much absorbed in God. Of course she is too much interested and too much absorbed, for she alone knows the value and capacity of both; she who is herself both Divine and Human.”
Robert Hugh Benson, Paradoxes of Catholicism
“Therefore she is bound, when her supernatural principles clash with human natural principles, to be the occasion of disunion. Her marriage laws, as a single example, are at conflict with the marriage laws of the majority of modern States. It is of no use to tell her to modify these principles; it would be to tell her to cease to be supernatural, to cease to be herself. How can”
Robert Hugh Benson, Paradoxes of Catholicism