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maltmom
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Whew, at 1st I thought you were serious until I got to the end.Joel Osteen. The man works miracles and can cure you of cancer…if you give him all your money.
Whew, at 1st I thought you were serious until I got to the end.Joel Osteen. The man works miracles and can cure you of cancer…if you give him all your money.
His father, on the other hand, sounds like he may have been a genuine saint.Whew, at 1st I thought you were serious until I got to the end.
Yes…took longer for one of these type posts than expected…but one thing that can be counted on…they do get posted.Whew, at 1st I thought you were serious until I got to the end.
Yes. But only if the claims were substantiated. I’ve not really paid attention to that accusation.I put “maybe” behind MLK’s name because of the accusations that he was a womanizer. For Catholics, that would have to be disproved. Would it make a difference if he did have affairs for Protestants?
Okay, let’s leave MLK out of it. I was just using an example. What I’m asking is would Protestants do a search into the man/woman’s life?Yes. But only if the claims were substantiated. I’ve not really paid attention to that accusation.
Interesting question; I am not sure. Most people have skeletons in their closets, and there is a general mindset that we want to remember the dead in the best light possible, at least around the Protestants I know. Bringing up past grievances would only sully the reputation of what are viewed to be very respectable people. There is also a tendency to focus in on specifics and not get the full picture view. We say that MLK was the great leader, but we ignore the other parts of his life. This has generally been enough for Protestants; we can say that so and so was an example in such and such. But if we were to canonize… perhaps we would need to view the full picture of the person… skeletons and all.Okay, let’s leave MLK out of it. I was just using an example. What I’m asking is would Protestants do a search into the man/woman’s life?
Yes, you would.Interesting question; I am not sure. Most people have skeletons in their closets, and there is a general mindset that we want to remember the dead in the best light possible, at least around the Protestants I know. Bringing up past grievances would only sully the reputation of what are viewed to be very respectable people. There is also a tendency to focus in on specifics and not get the full picture view. We say that MLK was the great leader, but we ignore the other parts of his life. This has generally been enough for Protestants; we can say that so and so was an example in such and such. But if we were to canonize… perhaps we would need to view the full picture of the person… skeletons and all.
Lewis was extremly generous with many people who received support that he never spoke about. A person’s actions speak louder than his words, but Lewis not only wrote words, he lived them.Hmmm… as much as I love him, I don’t think I would canonize C.S. Lewis. The man was brilliant, but I would feel uneasy canonizing someone purely on written works. For sure those people that were martyred for the cause of Christ are on the short list:
Corrie Ten Boom
Jim Eliot (his co-missionaries and the women too but I forget their names)
Martin Luther King Jr.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
and others who might not have given their lives but were impressively charitable nonetheless:
Clara Barton
Florence Nightengale
Mother Teressa
William Wilberforce
John Woolman
I don’t think the accusation is seriously disputed. Hence, I don’t think MLK could possibly meet any traditional criterion for canonization.Yes. But only if the claims were substantiated. I’ve not really paid attention to that accusation.
Agreed.Lewis was extremly generous with many people who received support that he never spoke about. A person’s actions speak louder than his words, but Lewis not only wrote words, he lived them.![]()
I’d heard that Lewis was given that honor. I don’t disagree with it–I just have to wonder if Lewis would think it a good idea.Agreed.
We now include Lewis in the Episcopal calendar (in fact my own bishop was one of the people pushing for this, and he partly wrote the collect assigned to Lewis’ “feast day”), but as I said above including someone in the calendar isn’t quite the same as a traditional canonization.
Edwin