Chuck rost the weirdo religious troll puppet, obsessed with hell & demons, who can never voice a personal opinion but has someone else (the church puppet master) do it for him.
Knowledge of spirituality has pretty much died over the centuries in mainstream Christianity. The biggest problem with Christianity these days is that it's become too literal. Even most Catholics don't understand their rituals these days. Here's a view of a Benedictine Monk.
Hmmmmm, New Norcia Monastery, a couple hours drive from where I live. Mate, when it comes to religion, don't believe the bs. I spent the day there once, the place run down, earily quiet, spooky. The place has quite a history, certainly not prosperous, farmers in the surrounding area look broke. From Wiki .....A series of Catholic colleges were created, with the school that became St Benedict's College in 1965 later gaining notoriety for being the site of sexual abuse that took place in the late 1960s and 1970s. St Mary's Mission, also known as St Mary's College, was founded in 1848 as a boarding school for Aboriginal boys. Some boys, including wards of state in the 1960s, were place there by the state government. In his 2021 autobiographical book God, the Devil and Me, Alf Taylor (1945–2023) recounts the horrific verbal and physical abuse meted out to Aboriginal boys living in the mission by the brothers and nuns during the 1950s and 1960s. The book was short-listed for the 2022 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Indigenous Writers' Prize. St Joseph's Native School and Orphanage was founded in 1861 by the monks. Benedictine Missionary Sisters sent from Spain took over in 1904 and ran it until its closure in 1974. Aboriginal girls and young women lived and attended school there, sometimes sent by their families, and sometimes placed there as government policy if they were children of single mothers. The school and orphanage were rebuilt in 1909. There were stories of physical and emotional abuse of the girls at St Joseph's. The monks Latinised the children's Aboriginal names, making it hard to trace who they were later. From the time of Abbot Fulgentius Torres onwards, the focus changed and tensions arose in how the "orphanages" were being run. Adults were prevented from visiting their children, and in 1907 an incident occurred in which 32 Aboriginal fathers were arrested by police when they tried to storm the mission to see their children.