Also, these rumors about having your watch and cell phone taken are deeply troubling. if Iâm using NFP, how am I going to know the right time to take my temp without my watch? As far as the phone, I have family members who worry about me, and would want me to call and check in. It all sounds very sketchy.
Iâve been on individual retreats where you are asked to not use your phone, now thatâs not the same as taking it, but assuming one is honest then it is practically the same thing. Actually, as I have never been to a cursillo, I canât say that they take your stuff. On monastic retreats the schedule is VERY different from our contemporary sleep schedule and one might reasonably call this sleep deprivation.
I can say that my father and mother did go one Cursillos when I was a child and it really helped them. It helped bring our family closer in faith. We had weekly prayer time etc. Actually itâs the only time I have ever seen my father cry, which, though odd to me as a kid, was beautiful.
Was this change permanent, no, but it was certainly positive for us.
I am also a person who tends to be introverted and not so sociable. I went on a âEncounter with Christâ weekend as a kid and didnât like it. I would think that this weekend has some of the features of the Cursillo. I do believe that if I would have opened my heart more I would have gotten something out of it.
I believe that the Cursillo is, largely, a good thing in the Church. It may not be oneâs cup of tea, but, like human nature, that could be a signal that it is exactly what we would benefit from most. âNo pain, no gainâ you know.
My inclination is to attend more traditional, silent, individual retreats, and chances are, I wont attend a Cursillo, because I donât want to annoy my wife, who, though Catholic, isnât as âchurchyâ as I am.
But, surely, Cursillo isnât a cult as it is simply one devotional movement within the Church. A cult is a religion in and of itself characterisid by control and abuse.
Growth is hard, growth is scary.