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I agreed!This method of worship is certainly not for everyone and should not be entered into lightly.
I agreed!This method of worship is certainly not for everyone and should not be entered into lightly.
When Fr. Randall described his original encounter with charismatic gifts, it was after a meeting with (gasp!) a Pentecostal, David Wilkerson, whose ministry in Brooklyn was ablaze with virtually miraculous conversions from lives of drug addiction and gang life. You may know his book The Cross and the Switchblade.Again, I ask that if attending one of those seminars were to speak to a young person, a person who had fallen away from the Church, someone who was struggling in their faith, AND IT BROUGHT THEM BACK TO THE EUCHARIST WITH A PASSION AND ZEAL FOR GOD, why is that bad?
I do not believe it is a question of being “led.” If these gifts were normative in the Church at one time, then we should not dismiss them as foreign. However, they DID fall into disuse. Nevertheless, “the spirit bloweth where it listeth” and for us to deny that he moves among non-Catholics would be an insult to his Providence.As I understand it, the gift of speaking in tongues was for a specific purpose–that is, the spreading of the Gospel to those of different cultures and nations. Language is not a barrier to the Word of God. I don’t see how this relates to every day worship, however. And, if one says there is an interpreter present, does the interpreter verify that an actual true language is being spoken, or is it a “spiritual language” only? If it is spiritual language only, then where can there be objective analysis of what is being spoken? Isn’t that the point of an interpreter?
I worked for a Charismatic church in college and had the opportunity to attend a service or two. I was not impressed with what I found, but I do acknowledge that some strong Christians seem drawn to this. From my limited interactions, though, they seem like people who constantly crave “emotional highs”.
My grandfather who is a retired Protestant minister related a story once of a missionary couple who had just returned from service overseas. The couple attended a Chrismatic service and were shocked to realize that one of the congregation was saying horrible things, blasphemy in the language of the country in which they had just served as missionaries. The “interpreters”, of course, had no idea what was going on–e.g. it sounded good to them.
I’d urge great care be taken to ensure that you’re speaking a real language and that you have an interpreter that understands the specific language with which you are speaking. Otherwise…it seems like self edification alone, while it is really only an illusion.
Lastly, if the Catholic Church is the fullness of truth, why would we be led (concerning something so important to our understanding of God and worship) by a Protestant church–a denomination that may not even believe we are “saved” through Christ.
I think you make a good point here. I suspect that many Catholics fear (irrationally) that because charismatic gifts are often experienced by non-Catholics, that they somehow invalidate the Catholic faith, which I believe is not true at all.I do not believe it is a question of being “led.” If these gifts were normative in the Church at one time, then we should not dismiss them as foreign. However, they DID fall into disuse. Nevertheless, “the spirit bloweth where it listeth” and for us to deny that he moves among non-Catholics would be an insult to his Providence.
You are correct that caution and discernment are absolutely essential.
How beautifulWhen Fr. Randall described his original encounter with charismatic gifts, it was after a meeting with (gasp!) a Pentecostal, David Wilkerson, whose ministry in Brooklyn was ablaze with virtually miraculous conversions from lives of drug addiction and gang life. You may know his book The Cross and the Switchblade.
Wilkerson asked Fr. Randall what he wanted to pray for and Randall replied that “we need what you have!” Wilkerson prayed with him and sent him on his way. Randall said that nothing happened right then, and on the way back home to Providence from Brooklyn, all he was thinking about was that he would get to bed around 4:00 a.m. and had to get up for the 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. Masses, and wondering how he would get through it.
When he stepped out onto the altar, he felt as though he had stepped into the Upper Room, and that Jesus Christ was saying that Mass . . . Randall said there was a “whoosh” and everything changed. In Randall’s words: “It took the Mass to a whole new level, and it has never changed.” A few months later, again, after prayng with a charismatic – this time a Catholic – he picked up his breviary to say the office, and couldn’t get through the Psalms because he was so overwhelmed with the intensity of what he was reading that his tears soaked the page . . .
That’s a gift. Whether it is “for everybody” depends partly on one’s disposition. To chase emotions, even “good” or “spiritual” emotions would probably be an error. But to be open to the gifts is a blessing.

AMEN!If you believe in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist, if you believe in the power of Confession, if you believe in the Sacrament of Holy Orders, then YOU are a charismatic, whether you like it or not. Who do you think DOES all of that? It’s the Holy Spirit. Who do you think enables you to pray? It’s the Holy Spirit.
Truthfully, if you are nervous about what those guys are saying in this internet thread, then you don’t below with us Charismatics. If you really are interested, I would suggest that you step out one night and go to a real Charismatic Church. After you receive the anointing your faith will be strong enough to stand against what ever Satan brings against you… Charsimatics are non-denominational, so you don’t have to worry about what church building you are in.How about a new question:
Should I attend an upcoming Catholic Charismatic Conference to hear Ralph Martin speak? After reading this entire thread, I’m a little nervous. I just want to go hear a speaker that I’ve heard on Catholic radio recently.
" Us “Charismatics!! Please don’t put all of us together I am a catholic first Charismatic next. My loyalty ,my love and my heart are in the RCC .this charismatics is denominational!!!Truthfully, if you are nervous about what those guys are saying in this internet thread, then you don’t below with us Charismatics. If you really are interested, I would suggest that you step out one night and go to a real Charismatic Church. After you receive the anointing your faith will be strong enough to stand against what ever Satan brings against you… Charsimatics are non-denominational, so you don’t have to worry about what church building you are in.
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DiggidyDog,How about a new question:
Should I attend an upcoming Catholic Charismatic Conference to hear Ralph Martin speak? After reading this entire thread, I’m a little nervous. I just want to go hear a speaker that I’ve heard on Catholic radio recently.
Charisms
799 Whether extraordinary or simple and humble, charisms are graces of the Holy Spirit which directly or indirectly benefit the Church, ordered as they are to her building up, to the good of men, and to the needs of the world.
That being said, I think it’s important that in each movement, group, program, etc., those involved must regularly and honestly critique themselves, for the sake of efficacy.800 Charisms are to be accepted with gratitude by the person who receives them and by all members of the Church as well. They are a wonderfully rich grace for the apostolic vitality and for the holiness of the entire Body of Christ, provided they really are genuine gifts of the Holy Spirit and are used in full conformity with authentic promptings of this same Spirit, that is, in keeping with charity, the true measure of all charisms.253
Your praying not to have any division is great, and that is what we all need to pray.“Why didn’t I fall down, too? Am I blocking the Spirit? Am I chosen? Is there just too much sin in my life? I’ve been going to communion all my life, why wasn’t I slain in the Spirit?”
Now I ask you, did this experience build my brother up? Was my being slain-in-the-Spirit working for the common good?
No. To me, it just made my brother feel bad about himself. He felt he wasn’t part of “the Holy Spirit club.”
So I prayed that evening and asked God to just give me Himself. I told Him I didn’t need charismatic graces/consolations if they resulted in division with the rest of the body of Christ. Your gifts are wonderful Lord; but I want you.
The Mass is Him.
Yeah- your point being? I’ve never spoken in tongues- so what-Same Spirit- different Gifts.!I’ve never had an ecstatic experience like Teresa of Avila Does that make her or me suspicious? does it make me envious? Heck yeah!But that’s her not me-/ I could sit and bemoan the gifts or charisms that I wasn’t given or I can discover what i was given and go with it. After going to study scripture and graduating I felt I was called to teach. You gotta understand I;m not a person who ever spoke in public!! I almost failed English in school because of public speaking!! So when I discerned that was what i was supposed to do I asked"why me Lord"? I felt like Moses only I didn’t have Aaron to take my place! What CC taught me was" let go -let God". I submitted My will to His . I prep but somethings come out of my mouth that i know is not me- !that is a powerful gift of the Spirit .Maybe it’s not the gift I would have personally chosen but what I was given to be and to do is for the good of the whole Body of Christ. This will be my fifth year God has blessed me beyond my worth.Suspicious charismatic experience #4—
It’s 1994, I’m still a new convert to the Catholic faith—and it’s GREAT!! (it still is), — my mother invites me to a Charismatic healing Mass. I go with a buddy of mine, a cradle Catholic discerning the priesthood.
At one point, we line up to get healed by the priest touching us on the foreheads as we go up to the altar, in communion-line fashion.
There are volunteers catching people as they fall backwards so they don’t get hurt.
Well, when I got up there the priest didn’t even touch my forehead. I was flat on my back with just a forward wave of his hand. Folks, this stuff is REAL.
I was on by back for at least half an hour. While others were getting up, I was still on the floor. I felt “floaty” and made a conscious effort to get up, but it just felt like it wasn’t worth the trouble so I stayed flat on my back on the floor. I would describe it as restful. I can only assume this is what charismatics call a slain-in-the-spirit experience.
Anyhow, afterwards, as we were driving home my buddy, who also had gone up in the healing line behind me was talking about the evening.
“Why didn’t I fall down, too? Am I blocking the Spirit? Am I chosen? Is there just too much sin in my life? I’ve been going to communion all my life, why wasn’t I slain in the Spirit?”
Now I ask you, did this experience build my brother up? Was my being slain-in-the-Spirit working for the common good?
No. To me, it just made my brother feel bad about himself. He felt he wasn’t part of “the Holy Spirit club.”
So I prayed that evening and asked God to just give me Himself. I told Him I didn’t need charismatic graces/consolations if they resulted in division with the rest of the body of Christ. Your gifts are wonderful Lord; but I want you.
The Mass is Him.
I really don’t want to play"my catholicism is better then yours." As far as “arrogantly superior” there is enough on both sides of the issue. I’ve been told that my faith is" immature" and my CC family told they were “ego centered” and “not catechized properly” . If that isn’t arrogant I don’t know what is. I think some CC want everybody to feel the way they do or experience what they have- or some might be just arrogantI have never experienced a “Life in the Spirit” retreat but know Catholics who have. I’ve witnessed their growth in faith and how they attribute their renewed zeal for their faith and for building up the Church to their being “baptized in the Spirit.” I am happy for them, and am happy that the Church is blessed by their spiritual vigor.
We’re so blessed to have the sacraments and the gift of the Mass to reinforce us in faith and help bring us to heaven. There are various other gifts within the Church which supplement these gifts, such as Eucharistic adoration and other private and public devotions, retreats, opportunities for service, good writers and speakers, and movements and programs, such as Cursillo, Marriage Encounter, and yes, Life in the Spirit.
I think we need to acknowledge and appreciate the good in these gifts (which are all given by the Holy Spirit), which build up the Church.
Belle10 has quoted from the Catechism:
That being said, I think it’s important that in each movement, group, program, etc., those involved must regularly and honestly critique themselves, for the sake of efficacy.
It is understandable that people who feel spiritually and emotionally energized by, and grateful for, a retreat or some other experience, want others to experience the same thing.
Back to the issue of being “charismatic.” I’ve been involved in the Church in a number of ways in my life, and try to remain prayerful and energetic. People who call themselves “charismatic” have approached me several times, assuming that I’ve attended one of their retreats. They’ve been shocked that I never have. One man told me he had assumed that I was able to discern my gifts at a “Life in the Spirit” retreat – and he then went on about how I should definitely attend one for more help, because the Spirit is obviously calling me to something.
It didn’t seem to occur to this man that all the ways I involve myself in the Church are my efforts to respond to God’s call for worship and service, and that it’s God’s Holy Spirit which enable me to do so. I didn’t bother arguing with him. His zeal was just misplaced. I just said “maybe sometime.”
I’d like to encourage more caution by those who proclaim themselves as “charismatics” to be mindful how they present their movement to others. Some (not all of course) come across as rather arrogantly superior in faith and zeal, implying that others need to experience what they’ve experienced, in order to grow as they have. This is an unintended consequence of many movements and programs, I suspect.
Although I am suspicious of charismatics also, but still searching. I agree on this point. I do notice there are many charismatic members who attend daily Mass regularly and there are those just show up for the prayer group. I do believe if it brings people closer to Our Lord and to reverence Him and love Him more than it is a good thing, as long as it is not through feelings alone but also through truth; since I believe the more one knows and understanding of the deeper meaning of the Redemptive Mystery the more one grows to marvel at His deep and infinite love, and one would grow deeper in love with Him.I’m a Catholic convert since '92 and am also very suspicious of the charismatic movement. Why?
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Quote from a charismatic at my parish,“I’m so in love with the Holy Spirit!! I don’t even go to Mass anymore–our ‘Life in the Spirit Seminars’ on Friday nights are so powerful!!!”
He was in love with his own enthusiasm for what he believed to be the Spirit.
Now I ask you—What spirit would lead someone away from the Mass?
I think the OP meant saints that derived from the Charismatic Movement (capital C). I think we sometimes misunderstood and mingled the term with the movement. These saints were not Charismatic (movement) but they were charismatic, and even without using the term, they were what they were, filled with the Holy Spirit. Bishop Fulton J. Sheen’s Divine Romance identified the Holy Spirit as the Divine Love, the love between the Father and the Son, so strong that it seems so real, a real person. That is why in ICorinthians 13, St. Paul sums up with charity (love of God) as the ultimate gift of the Holy Spirit, because that is what He is, love, any other gift is inferior. So, I would say, aim for that ultimate gift, for it is love that compels Our Lord to descend from his throne to redeem us, humbled himself in a little piece of bread just to remain with us, and it is love for Our Lord that set the fire in our brothers and sisters saints to do all for Him.The OP stated that the Catholic church has no Charismatic Saints. I merely pointed out that yes, it does, and gave the example of St. Paul and others we consider to be Saints in the early Church who received the gifts of the Holy Spirit as written about in 1Corinthians, and also at Pentecost, and used them to benefit the Church and build up the Church. Read 1 Corinthians and the book of Acts for these examples.
The Church received the Holy Spirit and His gifts at Pentecost. The Church has always recongnized and taught this, it has nothing to do with Protestant teaching, it has everything to do with Catholic teaching. It is written in the Scriptures. Nothing new there.