M
Miserissima
Guest
If I’m understanding both sides, I think, but am called to weigh in with my “feelings” here – no small matter because I was taught that feelings are second to reason, no matter how much the two may dovetail.
If an RC wants to say the Jesus Prayer, he or she may. If an EC wants to recite the Rosary, he or she may.
These prayers can only build up an interior prayer life based on PRIVATE devotion, and any questions arising from any perceived conflict are for an individual to define, reconcile, or master as long as the spiritual growth comes to the same understanding.
This is why a Spiritual Director is so important, lest we fall into our own error of understanding.
This has nothing to do with “Latinizing” or “Easternizing” or “Orientalizing” one’s interior, private prayer life, because not one of the approved private devotions could ever detract from interior growth…unless, of course, it brought one to a different conclusion…but that can’t happen because the two or three major schools of thought (Theologies), though different, come to same end. In this is the unity of the Churches.
I’ve wrestled with this because of my personal journey. I didn’t want to cherry-pick what made me “feel good” lest I borrow what wasn’t mine, or insulted or brought dishonor to the Church from which a particular devotion came.
Instead, I was encouraged to look at prayer with an Eastern eye, as it were: with proper disposition of feeling and intention, not referring to an Enchiridion (though useful when justifying my prayer life to my RC friends).
Others should be able to do the same to enrich their spirituality. There would be no dilution of the spirituality of a Church if someone from a related Church participated in private – or even public-- devotions. There is dilution if and when another Church imposes its praxis in another.
Adoption is not equal to imposition. Adoption is not cafeteria Catholicism. It is the deepest commitment of a personal choice and no one is blurring lines or stealing anything, as long as there is right intention, or correct disposition. To ask anyone to prove intention is akin to becoming legalistic and petty.
Long story short (too late) I apologize if I am misunderstanding the discussion here, and I’ll quietly dismount my soapbox.
If an RC wants to say the Jesus Prayer, he or she may. If an EC wants to recite the Rosary, he or she may.
These prayers can only build up an interior prayer life based on PRIVATE devotion, and any questions arising from any perceived conflict are for an individual to define, reconcile, or master as long as the spiritual growth comes to the same understanding.
This is why a Spiritual Director is so important, lest we fall into our own error of understanding.
This has nothing to do with “Latinizing” or “Easternizing” or “Orientalizing” one’s interior, private prayer life, because not one of the approved private devotions could ever detract from interior growth…unless, of course, it brought one to a different conclusion…but that can’t happen because the two or three major schools of thought (Theologies), though different, come to same end. In this is the unity of the Churches.
I’ve wrestled with this because of my personal journey. I didn’t want to cherry-pick what made me “feel good” lest I borrow what wasn’t mine, or insulted or brought dishonor to the Church from which a particular devotion came.
Instead, I was encouraged to look at prayer with an Eastern eye, as it were: with proper disposition of feeling and intention, not referring to an Enchiridion (though useful when justifying my prayer life to my RC friends).
Others should be able to do the same to enrich their spirituality. There would be no dilution of the spirituality of a Church if someone from a related Church participated in private – or even public-- devotions. There is dilution if and when another Church imposes its praxis in another.
Adoption is not equal to imposition. Adoption is not cafeteria Catholicism. It is the deepest commitment of a personal choice and no one is blurring lines or stealing anything, as long as there is right intention, or correct disposition. To ask anyone to prove intention is akin to becoming legalistic and petty.
Long story short (too late) I apologize if I am misunderstanding the discussion here, and I’ll quietly dismount my soapbox.