Not at all. **Our Lord and the saints never attacked other people. ** They knew when to speak and what to say in the most clear way possible, without being militant.
I’ll tell you the problem that I have with many of these posts. It’s not the content, it’s the attitude that comes across. Maybe if we were in the same room having these discussions they would not sound so harsh. But when they are written and you can’t see the other person’s body language, all you can see are words that seem to be attacking you, rather than sharing.
Does that make sense?
For example, what you said above about feeding people without teaching the truth, etc.
The way that came across is that those, who like Mother, St. Francis, St. Vincent, St. Louise de Marillac, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and John Paul II who spent most of their adult lives doing more ministry than preaching were not doing God’s work.
If teaching truth is what is required as a sign of being a good Catholic over living according to the truth, how would we be able to justify contemplative life? Contemplatives are not allowed to go out into the world, not even to perform works of charity. They have made brought more graces into the Church than any other group of Catholics.
Do you see the problem that we can get into with over stating the importance of teaching truth? We run the risk of underestimating the life that is lived doing charity or in the quiet seclusion of a cloister where there is no ministry except to pray with the Church.
For example, if you look at certain religious orders, they tell you that they were founded for the sanctification of their members, not for the sake of any kind of ministry. These include: Carthusians, Franciscans, Cistercians, Poor Clares, some Benedictines, Trappists, Camaldalese, Carmelite nuns, Dominican nuns (not the sisters), and the Order of the Visitation. It is the belief of the Church that even though these orders were not founded to do ministry, but to live in community sanctifying their membes, not preaching or doing anything else in particular, whatever they do to sanctify themselves, will also sanctify the whole Body of Christ.
When anyone makes such a strong claim on preaching truth, without mentioning that truth can be lived without ever saying a word and it’s just as efficacious, it flies in the face of what the Church teaches concerning ministry and the perfection of charity.
In Perfectae Caritatis the Church makes it clear to religious that they are to live out the perfection of charity so that we the laity can immitate it.
When we look at someone like Mother, we should not only admire her, but also immitate her. This is why religious life exists, to teach the laity how to live the perfection of charity.
If we make blanket statements that teaching is the most important part of the faith, then we risk downplaying what the Church considers the most important part of the faith, the perfection of charity, the embrace of the cross and submission to the Gospel.
JR