Imagine if you like. In the beginning (1945), God founded a shepherd (Catholic church) in which our sheep followed blindly. The shepherd takes us all over, and we continue without complaint. Sheep do not dare to doubt the shepherds and fears classified as bad sheep (Catholic), suffering from the result of the eternal curse, do not like the flock. But as time passed, as shepherds' modernization progressed, the shepherd became obstinate and conservative and refused to change.
DOUTHAT: No. I think it is very representative and I think that the decline in the importance of Catholic in the literature since Waugh-Greene's golden era, in some respects, was consistent with a decline in the cultural significance of literature I will. Some of them depend on whether you declare Shakespeare for Catholics, this is one. In my opinion that even those writers of the era were not engaged in Catholic work, they were influenced in various ways like Hemingway and Fitzgerald. For example, Hemingway wrote in the context of Catholic culture in many of his stories, and Fitzgerald is certainly a failed Catholic. Therefore, I think that Catholic hangs in an interesting way through the literary era of the first half of the 20th century.
At the beginning of the 16th century, protestant reforms took place, and the popularity of Catholicism declined. In response to Protestant reforms, Catholic reforms were issued to rebuild the power and popularity of the Catholic and Roman Catholic Church. Catholic reform created a new society and solved the problem of the Roman Catholic church. The main reason for Catholic reform by Catholicism was response to Protestantism and response to the reform of the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church is filled with corruption and scandal, such as Simone (office church office), absenteeism (pastors do not seem to serve), sales of redemption tickets (payment of church exemption charges).