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Convert66
Guest
There’s an interesting piece in the new issue of First Things, written by John Lamont, in which he makes a compelling argument that strict orthodoxy, and not “inclusive ecumenical tolerance” or political posturing, is the best recipe for religious devotion and Church growth.Well, my pastor is all for it. And, I am seriously thinking about changing parishes. Am getting sick and tired of all the sly immigration pieces he puts in his homilies, the preponderance of Spanish publications in our church lobby and bi-lingual services.
I certainly believe that the Church should be helping out, not the government, and diocesan bishops shouldn’t be going to Washington to promote immigration reform, when that terrible health bill was passed yesterday and not a word about that in the homilies.
In fact, our Pastor bragged that he voted for Obama because of the health bill overlooking the fact that Obama is pro-abortion.
Yes, our Church has changed since Vatican 11 but not for the better, and we can blame part of that on radical priest and nuns who never were silenced or punished by the Magistrate.
We are reaping the results of that harvest, and then we wonder why Catholics are drifting away? Churches were filled before that in the 50’s and we gave to the poor and the Propogation of the Faith as well as many missions.
Catholic Charities were in full swing to help others, and I know the priests at that time helped people get jobs, and probably food if they needed it.
Another recent article made the argument that at it’s root, the real problem in our current culture with regards to religious practice and observance (as well as virtually every other social problem) can be traced to a decline in fatherhood. The most committed Catholics, and Christians (or any other religious tradition, for that matter) all share common elements at home: a mother AND a father that model and practice their faith consistently; strong fathers who strike a principled balance between compassion and discipline; insistent attendance at Mass; and, perhaps surprisingly, suffering. Those who suffer for their faith in their formative and early adult years are far more likely to keep the faith as they age than those who have an easy time of it. This makes perfect sense once we recall the early martyrs or the currently suffering Church, however.
Remove those elements and the likelihood of rejecting one’s inherited faith skyrockets. In short, people intuitively prefer a religion that makes tough demands upon them, and models that walk it out in front of them on a daily basis. More precisely, and this has a tremendous effect on any notions of “social justice”, the Scriptural admonitions to care for the fatherless and the widow take on additional significance, as well as God’s promise to “…turn the hearts of the fathers back to the children, and the hearts of the children back to the fathers.” They are inescapable necessities if a culture is to survive.
All my best…