O
Orogeny
Guest
What if it was a ground-floor window? Just sayinâŚIt is the thinking of today that self-harm is a sin, yes. And the thinking of yesterday too.![]()
Peace
Tim
What if it was a ground-floor window? Just sayinâŚIt is the thinking of today that self-harm is a sin, yes. And the thinking of yesterday too.![]()
The situation with John of the Cross has to be understood in its historical context. There was a great penitential movement that was heretical. It was feared that John could be part of that.St. John of the Cross the greatest Doctor of the Church was imprisoned by his own order for 2 1/2 years.
This never happened. Our Holy Father died as the Superior General of the Order. He never abdicated or was asked to leave. We have his Testament that he wrote a month before he died.St. Francis of Assisi was kicked out of the order he founded (the Franciscans) and made to roam in the woods.
Bl. Charles of Jesus did not want to join any order. He was originally a Jesuit. He asked for a dispensation from the Jesuits, but to remain in vows. This was granted, just like Mother Teresaâs case. He then moved to the Arab world to live as the Holy Family lived. It was his hope to found a new religious community. He was murdered and the community was never founded during his lifetime. Today, the Little Brothers of Jesus and the Little Sisters of Jesus follow the spirit of Br. Charles. He left the Society of Jesus of his own free will and with permission from the Holy See. He was not sent away or abandoned. Once you make solemn vows in a religious order, you may not be dismissed without a canonical process. Br. Charles was a solemnly professed religious in the Society of Jesus. Br. Charles chose to live abject poverty, as did Mother Teresa, Francis of Assisi and Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton. A vocation to live this way is not the same as being evicted from oneâs religious family. This was not the case here.Blessed Charles de Foucald was never accepted into any order and he was homeless on the streets preaching Godâs word.
I am in formation for the Diaconate. I would be very devastated if I was told I was no longer invited to pursue ordination. Still, I would be grateful for the opportunity and the formation that I did experience.I was admitted to my dioceseâs deacon formation program and was doing very well. I received excellent grades in the course work, was very active in my parishâs ministries, attended and participated in daily mass, and even did things outside the parish such as visiting the needy and teaching the faith outside the parish (all approved). The parish pastor completely supported me and told me frequently that he looked forward to the day that I was ordained! My program reviews were all excellent and there was absolutely no indication of a problem at all.
Then about halfway through the program we got a new formation director and something seriously changed. He took this instant disliking towards me, which I could not understand at all. Everything I did was wrong to him and he became very critical. My course work continued to excel and I had the admiration and support of all the guys in the program, but this new director seemed to be really out to âget meâ. There may have been two possible reasons for this: 1. My support for the Tridentine Latin Mass as per Pope Benedictâs Summorum Pontificum motu proprio, though of course I complete support and promote the modern Mass as well as Vatican II, and 2. My weight. I have been seriously overweight, but have since trimmed down. The director is a serious health nut, always talking about his workouts and nutrition.
Then on my first review with him, I was brought into a room with another priest there (I had no idea why he was there) and told that there was ârecently discovered discrepancyâ in my initial psychological evaluation at the beginning of the program! He then suggested I âget counselingâ and dismissed me from the program! I was horribly shocked! And the worst part is that my neither my pastor or bishop (who is very liberal) would hear me, ignoring my requests to talk to them about this. I was then treated like a pariah by the parish staff and the diocesan chancery, and have been the laughingstock of my parish and diocese ever since.
I have no idea what happened to me and have been completely numb ever since. It has been months now and I have tried to move on, but cannot. I am so wounded by what happened that I have been seriously considering to finally leave the Catholic Church all together. I am sick and tired of the patronizing statement âWell, you can still be a GREAT layperson!â I have always believed that I am called to clerical ministry, but if the church rejects me for no reason given or no chance to work out whatever is the problem, then how can I go on? Was it my support of the Latin Mass? And why was my initial psychological evaluation brought up when there was nothing wrong with it beforehand? I was admitted to the program with this evaluation reviewed and approved, was I not? If there was a problem, then why was I admitted to the program? I cannot talk to my pastor about this, and the other guys in the program, who were so supportive and loving, now avoid me like the plague, for fear of being associated with me and finding themselves kicked out so close to ordination.
I just donât know what to do or say. Has anyone else had this experience, and if so how did you move on? I just do not understand what happened. I really want to leave the Roman Catholic Church, but only stay for my wife and family. I have no love for the church any more.
What stage are you in formation? I will be ordained Saturday at 10 AM mass. Five years of work coming to fruition!I am in formation for the Diaconate. I would be very devastated if I was told I was no longer invited to pursue ordination. Still, I would be grateful for the opportunity and the formation that I did experience.
I would never leave the Church under any circumstances. In fact, your position (reaction) is one that calls into question your suitability for the Diaconate in the first place. Perhaps, the formation director detected a defect that would have made you unsuitable for ordination.
I know this is painful for you. But, this really isnât about you. Itâs about Christ and His Church. He may be calling you to a mission that he has chosen uniquely for you. If you close the door on Him, you will never know.
May God bless and keep you.
You are in my prayers as you carry this cross.
Thatâs wonderful, Lapey. May God bless your ministryâŚWhat stage are you in formation? I will be ordained Saturday at 10 AM mass. Five years of work coming to fruition!
Just a minor correctionâŚCharles de Foucauld was actually a Trappist and not a Jesuit, but the story as you relate it is accurate aside from the particular Order.Bl. Charles of JesusâŚwas originally a JesuitâŚHe asked for a dispensation from the Jesuits, but to remain in vows. He left the Society of Jesus of his own free will and with permission from the Holy SeeâŚHe was not sent away or abandoned. Once you make solemn vows in a religious order, you may not be dismissed without a canonical process. Br. Charles was a solemnly professed religious in the Society of Jesus.
Hi cargau and excellent comments, I thought, and I hope that our OP is still reading this thread, although I really would not blame him if he was notI am in formation for the Diaconate. I would be very devastated if I was told I was no longer invited to pursue ordination. Still, I would be grateful for the opportunity and the formation that I did experience.
I would never leave the Church under any circumstances. In fact, your position (reaction) is one that calls into question your suitability for the Diaconate in the first place. Perhaps, the formation director detected a defect that would have made you unsuitable for ordination.
I know this is painful for you. But, this really isnât about you. Itâs about Christ and His Church. He may be calling you to a mission that he has chosen uniquely for you. If you close the door on Him, you will never know.
May God bless and keep you.
You are in my prayers as you carry this cross.
I really do feel for the OP and I can understand him feeling angry on a few scores and not only his dismissal from the Diaconate and apparently with no explanation - at least I knew why I was leaving and no one told me to leave. If he does indeed leave The Church and a bit of knee jerk reaction I think to a very painful overall situation - and entirely understandable - and even to my mind a somewhat unjust painful situation on a few unfolding scores, then my hope and prayer is that he will come to realize he has made a wrong decision and change that decision. And honestly, who amongst us has not made a bad decision, and regretted it and in most cases, bad decisions can be corrected. There are some that we cannot change and need to live with the consequences with Peace and Tranquility and trust in God and His Divine Providence forever with us always in all things.CCC #311 (in part) : God is in no way, directly or indirectly, the cause of moral evil. He permits it, however, because he respects the freedom of his creatures and, mysteriously, knows how to derive good from it:
For almighty God. . ., because he is supremely good, would never allow any evil whatsoever to exist in his works if he were not so all-powerful and good as to cause good to emerge from evil itself.
Hi cargau and excellent comments, I thought, and I hope that our OP is still reading this thread, although I really would not blame him if he was not
When I left monastic life I was totally disillusioned and confused. I knew for sure where I was not called but had no idea at all to what God was calling me and at first this felt like ânot calling nowhere at all!â. I was hurt, a bit angry back then too I think, most of all I was deeply saddened verging on depressed if not depression itself. As time rolled by and I worked through these feelings - and it did take time, a lot of time, I began to see some light about to what God just might be calling me. More time, this call became clearer and I set out on a way of life that was just unfolding in my path and totally and absolutely unexpected, let alone imagined in any way. Nowadays, nothing and no one could ever convince me that I am not following my vocation - that I am not following Godâs Call for my life although it probably defies definition under current terms. Since all that and still rather defying definition - and by that I mean putting it into some predetermined category, I have received affirmation that I am indeed following Godâs Call and by those I respect as wise, holy and informed, educated in the Faith - and one affirmation in writing from heirarchy.
But it all takes time and it can be a painful journey. While I left unasked and by my own decision, I still had a painful and long journey ahead. I made decisions, that I later corrected realizing I had made the wrong decision. And, I confess, some of those decisions and the consequences, I just have to live with and cannot change. Yet we are always being guided and informed by Godâs Loving Will, either His Direct or His Permissive Will and I think that this is an important theology to insight for a life of Peace and Trust in God leading to Joy in Him who is Ultimate Reality and Love - we do not pray in the Hail Holy Queen âthis valley of tearsâ for naught -
I really do feel for the OP and I can understand him feeling angry on a few scores and not only his dismissal from the Diaconate and apparently with no explanation - at least I knew why I was leaving and no one told me to leave. If he does indeed leave The Church and a bit of knee jerk reaction I think to a very painful overall situation - and entirely understandable - and even to my mind a somewhat unjust painful situation on a few unfolding scores, then my hope and prayer is that he will come to realize he has made a wrong decision and change that decision. And honestly, who amongst us has not made a bad decision, and regretted it and in most cases, bad decisions can be corrected. There are some that we cannot change and need to live with the consequences with Peace and Tranquility and trust in God and His Divine Providence forever with us always in all things.
It may take time and a perhaps long journey before our OP can realize that possibly only he may not have a vocation to the Diaconate - that God is calling him elsewhere and it may take time and perhaps a lot of time before he realizes what Godâs Call actually is for his life. He may have many even negative feelings to work through and a journey ahead in doing so and it may lead to a very deep insight into his Faith. It can be difficult for some discerners to separate what God is asking from what they personally want and envisage for their lives. I just think it is sad and damaging to pound a person all around the place, if we do, and because of a situation they find themselves painfully dealing with and even with much personal non understanding and confusion. If I am not confused and can understand as one on the outside, looking in as it were, then this is simply Godâs Gift to me and always rather easy to not be confused nor lack understanding when it is not my personal problem. We share a common faulted and fallible humanity.
I will be keeping our OP in prayer.
TS
God is Good:thumbsup: - and may you also kiss The Face of God with all of us!Thank youâŚI am so very inspired by your testimony! Only one who has been through this would truly understandâŚpeople like you make advice real and holy!
Brother, what you said about Blessed Charles is correct.Bl. Charles of Jesus did not want to join any order. He was originally a Jesuit. He asked for a dispensation from the Jesuits, but to remain in vows. This was granted, just like Mother Teresaâs case. He then moved to the Arab world to live as the Holy Family lived. It was his hope to found a new religious community. He was murdered and the community was never founded during his lifetime. Today, the Little Brothers of Jesus and the Little Sisters of Jesus follow the spirit of Br. Charles. He left the Society of Jesus of his own free will and with permission from the Holy See. He was not sent away or abandoned. Once you make solemn vows in a religious order, you may not be dismissed without a canonical process. Br. Charles was a solemnly professed religious in the Society of Jesus. Br. Charles chose to live abject poverty, as did Mother Teresa, Francis of Assisi and Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton. A vocation to live this way is not the same as being evicted from oneâs religious family. This was not the case here.
Thanks for the correction. I knew that he was a religious. I put him in the wrong order.Just a minor correctionâŚCharles de Foucauld was actually a Trappist and not a Jesuit, but the story as you relate it is accurate aside from the particular Order.
Firstly the bible as having being compiled by the RCC?, no not exactly something I believe blindly.Corrupt Church? So you deny Jesusâ words in Matthew 16:18?
[bibledrb]Matthew 16:18[/bibledrb]
The Church is made up of human beings, it is not perfect, it will never be perfect but as has been pointed out, the reactions of the OP show that there might be something to the dismissal and the reasons he was given though he does not wish to see this.
Whatâs âblindâ is to think that it came from anywhere else.Firstly the bible as having being compiled by the RCC?, no not exactly something I believe blindly.
Perhaps I was not articulate enough - the FACT that the bible was compiled by the RCC is why itâs the last think I would believe to verify their claims.Whatâs âblindâ is to think that it came from anywhere else.
The three Councils that gave us the canon of the New Testament were staffed with Catholic Bishops. The Pope who ratified their findings, and made the final infallible declaration that closed the canon also held the title of âBishop of Rome.â They were also the ones who made the decision to include the Old Testament in it.
It takes quite a lot of willful blindness to avoid the fact that the Bible is a Catholic book.
OH, I see - I misread your other post. Your logic is certainly consistent. I happen to disagree with your original premise, but at least your conclusion is logically sound.Perhaps I was not articulate enough - the FACT that the bible was compiled by the RCC is why itâs the last think I would believe to verify their claims.
If I write a book or even gather a lot of books that say âIrish Joe is inchargeâ, and then say that the collection of books is correct/inspired/canon/whatever because Iâm incharge then it seems a bit circular to me.
The bible is inherently catholic, I agree 1000000% with you on that, itâs also why I think protestantism is a bit short sighted. âLets base our faith on a book that some dude* mangled that a church we think is wrong compiledâ
*the dude being Martin Luther