F
Fevronia
Guest
The problem with mushy homilies is that it lacks any content. It gives a experiential high but it dies away. Its useless and it encourages the person to think emotionally. That eventually leads to them even leaving the Church because they think God’s love cannot be reconciled with saying no to a gay couple.What you are doing is twisting my words. To be perfectly honest {and I don’t mean this to be rude}, you are reminding me of a {protestant} group that comes to my school every other Tuesday and literally yells at people walking by, telling them that they are sinners and are all going to Hell. They honestly think that they are preaching love. You and I both need to do our best to fully understand each other. We may not agree, but at least we can understand.
I believe I did define my “notion” of love precisely. However, I am only human, so I do apologize if it didn’t come across clearly. The noun: God. The verb: to not abandon them. Furthermore, it means being selfless, as Bl. Pope John Paul II put it. If we do things with true love, we put God at the forefront and we die to ourselves. It’s quite simple, really. Just like we shouldn’t abandon the outsiders and push them even further away, we also shouldn’t abandon the insiders. And, honestly, if the priest gives a mushy homily, why should we judge him for that? Is a homily preaching about the realities of Hell better than a homily preaching about the realities of Heaven? Yes, if the priest is preaching errors in his homily, he should be told. In virtually every single thread I’ve seen here regarding an error spoken or done by their priest, the members here at CAF have advised them to talk to the priest about it first, then go to the pastor, then the bishop, etc. So, what about the insiders who have to listen to “mushy homilies”? If there are any errors in the homily, we should tell them what they are and why. That being said, some people respond differently to different preaching styles. If someone responds well to a homily that is harsh {yet loving and containing no error} in tone, that’s not a bad thing. Likewise, if someone responds well to a homily that is mushy {yet loving and containing no error} in tone, that is not a bad thing.
If you want the people to be reasonable, you must emphasize reason and teach them be reasonable. If you reduce love to the emotions, you lead them to shaky grounds.
Please note that I am talking about inside the Church. Not to outsiders. To say that God is a trinity means nothing to an outsider unless they have reason to assent to Catholic teaching. So that is a different matter.
But my point is that the Church should be emphasizing its doctrine inside the Church without compromise. There should be excommunications for those who continue support abortions. Divorce should be treated for what it is without any flowering of it. Same for all the other countless issues. That cannot be compromised.
As for Hell, it should be something that gets reminded of often. Its a very real place that most people are going to go to because they will prefer darkness to light (Church teaching for 2000 years). So people have to be given that real sense of fear that they must work out their salvation and persevere. Today what you get is something completely different. Something is wrong with that message.
Other issue is fear of God. We have to stop doing the “If I was God, I wouldn’t do it that way” thinking. God is infinitely above us and he can do what he wills.
Final issue is pride. We have to realize that people inside the Church get upset when scolded because of pride. It should be shown that they can work on their humility using such occasions rather than get upset and angry over it. Parents have to be instructed on how to raise the children in a way that does not foster too much pride and builds humility.