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I am not sure I still understand. Could you state it in your language?
I have no language that identifies the fruit of the Spirit better than the infallible and inerrant Word of God.
If a person receives authentic gifts from God, those gifts will lead one into devotion, virtue, and growth in the fruit of the HS.
I don’t see how anything above claims something specific to the Holy Spirit or to a non-Catholic.
If you don’t see how the fruit of the HS is specific to the HS then I don’t think I can help you.
I was not claiming anything “specific to a non-Catholic”.
… all of this would be just meaningless debate if we are loosing more people than we are retaining.
I am not sure I agree with this. I would say that an authentic move of the HS will always lead participants deeper into the Church. However, I also agree with the Holy Father, that it is better to have a smaller, but more pure Church. I think the Church is better off divested of those lukewarm persons, dissident, and disobedient persons who claim to belong to her, yet are not obedient to her teachings. They are already “protestant” in faith, so formally exiting and aligning themselves with an ecclesial community that stands in opposition to the One Faith is actually an act of integrity on their part.
I also have a another question for you, what happens if you experience a dark night of the soul like John of the Cross or Mother Theresa?
Then I do what they did. Obey, pray, walk in faith, hope and charity day by day and trust in the sacramental life of the Church to work out my salvation. What do you do?
How does this CCR related experience reconcile with the possibility that you might have had to go through something like that?
For me the CCR led me into a deep confrontation with many unresolved issues in my life that were contributing to lifelong depression and failing to be active in ministry. A dark night of the soul was required of me, since the only way out of such things is through them. In the CCR I learned to walk in the power of the HS, and not fulfill the desires of the flesh. I learned how to have an empowered experience of my Christian faith that did not come from my own willpower, but cooperating with God, who was already at work in me to will and to do His Good Pleasure.
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In essence what I am trying to say is, we are treading a dangerous line with CCR. It seems to be experiential based.
The fact that it manifests itself in experience does not make it “based” in experience. Everything that happened in and through the Apostles the day they experienced the tongues of fire in the upper room was based only in the HS.
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In all honesty, a bit of an emotional high. What happens when it runs out?
I think this is a valid point, since God wants us healed in the area of emotions, and to have that we must reach a full range, both joy, and mourning. I think Catholics have an advantage in this area over all the faith traditions of our separated brethren, because we have the inheritance from the Apostles on the meaning of suffering. Charismaticism is not about having an “emotional high”, though they happen. I am sure the Apostles were quite exuberant on the day of Pentecost. But, we can see from what they later suffered that it was not all that way. In the readings the other day, we had this:
Phil 4:11-13
11 Not that I complain of want; for I have learned, in whatever state I am, to be content. 12 I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound; in any and all circumstances I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and want. 13 I can do all things in him who strengthens me.
When a person is mature in faith, they are content in whatsoever state they find themselves. When one accepts and uses the gifts that God has provided, one grows in faith.
Would you not agree that it is better to come back to the church because the church is true rather than try to find out the church is true through some emotional experience?
You are making a false dichotomy. You are assuming that people have “left the Church” who have embraced the CCR. This is not the case. I know there are some people who drifted from their faith, and the CCR brought them back to their sacramental life. I was one of those.
For people who have not had severe injury on the plane of emotional experience, it is hard to understand why others need healing in this area. God created human beings with emotion, and He expects us to use ours as He intended. This cannot happen when they are wounded, frozen, or otherwise impaired.
You are also assuming (falsely) that because an experience has an emotional component that this is the only basis for it. Let us take Jesus as our example:
John 11:35-36
5 Jesus wept. 36 So the Jews said, “See how he loved him!”
Do you see something inherently wrong with His emotional response to death? I think not.
Neither is there anything wrong with people having emotional responses to God’s overwhelming grace and mercy poured out upon us in His beloved Son. Experiencing emotion does not in any way prevent a person from communion with the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church.