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Elizabeth502
Guest
I agree that it’s easy to blur the line between reinforcing what the teaching is, and coming off as one who supposedly Has It All Figured Out. It’s easy for any of us to do that, including myself.When I hear people in CAF decrying folks as “Cafeteria Catholics” while they exalt themselves for perfectly following the Catholic lifestyle, I smell Pharisees. I read that stuff day in day out in here. It’s unhealthy to constantly feel the need to measure up to someone and feel people are “below” you not living up to the rules. There is so much judgemental stuff in here some days, it’s very Pharisaic. Some obsess about the lack of full Catholic obedience in some that it makes me wonder…
I think the reason, gurney, that one sees so much of what you call Phariseeism, is a reaction. (And remember, the Pharisees of Jesus’ time were there merely to represent what authentic Torah-living was, to “hold the line.” It’s just that in their laudable attempt to hold the line, they sometimes artificially looked only at the line, and not what also was beneath the line.) Jesus didn’t want to discard the line; he wanted the line more deeply drawn, to be more inclusive and comprehensive, and he made that clear.
The situation we have in the Catholic Church, reinforced recently by Pope Benedict himself, is a long-standing neglect of catechesis. That is often reflected directly on CAF. The “judgment” that you see is not usually a judgment of spirituality or morality, but a correction of catechesis. Lots of Catholics, today, are mistaken on the teachings themselves. That has nothing to do with how responders claim or do not claim to be living those teachings themselves.
Or at least, that’s how I see it.
