M
Murmurs
Guest
I think that’s the point.I don’t think we can separate ourselves from the world around us, but at the same time we must set a standard for our worship. It seems that Catholic worship is continually being watered down by the surrounding culture and we are accepting it because that is what we do with everything else. Maybe there should be a very sharp line between what is Catholic/Christian and what is not. We aren’t just like everyone else with some fellowship on Sunday and some nice humanitarian ideals. Christianity is a radical idea. Everyone claims love as an ideal. What makes Christianity different? Are we just really enthusiastic humanists?
I suppose if you excised the divinity of Christ and everything that follows from it, then what you have left is basically “enthusiastic humanism”. Obviously that’s not really His message of itself, though.
But what this (the fact it’s more “complex” than enthusiastic humanism) means, is that we can’t just protect our radical idea by walling it off and practising and protecting it ourselves. Though a ghetto is ultimately just a word (as roseofshannon already said) meaning a distinct part of a city where people of one religious/cultural/ethnic community live, I think it was clearly used in the OP’s article to mean a deliberate (if limited) “cutting-off” from the world. Now it’s obviously only my opinion but I think this is pretty much diametrically opposed to what Christ asked of us in the first place.
It is enough, for ourselves, to maintain and practice our faith, I suppose, in terms of ticking all the right boxes that gives the greatest chance of our own salvation. Creating Catholic ghettos probably does that very well.
But I think it runs so counter to the spirit (for want of a better word!) of the Son of God, and so very many of the saints through twenty centuries since His time among us on Earth, that it should be borderline anathema to any Catholic who is not in immediate danger of life or limb for living their faith openly and for whom actual martyrdom is perhaps not viable.
Yes we have our own Catholic communities around our own parish, or the diocese, or in relation to a religious house, etc - but I think unless we have actually found a personal call towards being an enclosed religious, it’s not practical, helpful, or frankly very healthy for our faith.
PS. Happy New Year :whackadoo: