Well, since I am kinda in the renewal, i thought that I would take a look at the article. First shock
*“Baptized in the Spirit,” “Praying in tongues,” “The gift of prophecy,” and “A personal relationship with Jesus” are all indispensable buzz-words of the so-called Catholic Charismatic Renewal (hereafter referred to as the CCR), a movement which traces its roots to an unsupervised student “retreat” at Pittsburgh’s Duquesne University in 1967. By 1990, the movement claimed *
Has the person who wrote that ever read the bible? Especially the Acts of the Apostles or 1 letter to Corinthian chapter 12 and 14?
The implications of this statement should be lost on no one with even a cursory knowledge of his catechism. From an orthodox standpoint and to give the author the benefit of the doubt, one could see this statement as a reference to the sacrament of Confirmation, the sacrament in which the Holy Ghost comes to us in a special way to make us true Christians and perfect soldiers of Christ.
Yeah, but how many of us were aware of what Confirmation really is!!! If i had to go through it now, I would have prayed and fasted, and I would have chosen my favorite saint as my patron, St Faustina. But I am afraid I just went to confirmation then because everyone else did… And the Saint I chose was on the basis whether the name sounded nice or not… That is why there is so much fuss about that Baptism in the Holy Spirit because now I understand the importance!
*On the contrary, charismatics deny any clear connection between “Baptism in the Holy Spirit” and the Catholic sacraments since “sacramental rite and religious experience are complementary parts of the basic Christian initiation.” 3 *
Deny? That’s new to me… actually, once I asked a priest, if someone was confirmed and baptised, they recieved the Holy Spirit, so why would they need the prayer for the infilling. The priest had nothing to do with Charismatics at that time, but he pointed out that Pentacost was not a one time experience - there is another instance in the Acts where the Apostles were once again filled with the Holy Spirit during the prayer - again, read the Acts.
*It is obvious that many people, sometimes even great Saints, are never given notable consolations in their Faith, much less extraordinary manifestations of the Holy Ghost. To say that an unbaptized person who has experienced this “Baptism in the Holy Spirit” is somehow as close to God as (or even closer than) a pious, baptized Catholic who has never had such an experience is clearly absurd. *
Who said that a person who has the gifts of Spirit is closer to God? There is a big stress, at least in the group that I attend that what matters is the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Spirit, but the FRUITS. Jesus said that not everyone who calls me Lord will enter the kindgom of heaven, and some will say that didn’t we cast out demons in your names, or didnt we prophesy in your name? But that is not the basis for sanctity. What matters is what kind of person you are and whether you are bearing the fruit. So I just find that comment mean.
And I think I will just stop at that, because it would take too much writing to argue with the rest of the article, I think it’s better to reach for the sources - books by Charismatic priests/authors, and Cathecism and the Bible or the Pope’s opinion to get a clear picture.
Of course, there are a lot of bad things that could be said about the Movement, I just know that as long as it has the approval of the Pope and Bishops, it cannot be wrong. Strangly, it is Charismatic Movement that helped me best to appreciate Rosary (and we do pray the Rosary) - first thing that struck me - I knew one person, he had those charisms of prophesy and what not, but at one point I knew he was going through a very rough time. I tried to help so when I reached home, I just prayed the Rosary for him. The next day he thanked me for my prayers saying that he really felt the power of it. But the funny thing is that I never told him I was going to pray for him…
Well, I could go on like that - about the time when the same person told me that he saw someone from my family very sick, a few months later my father was in very serious condition in hospital, the doctors gave up hope, and that is when that person told me that he had a vision of Mother Mary praying the Rosary, and the light was coming out of the Rosary. He also told me that Jesus was asking me to meditate on His Passion, and that my father will live even though the doctors do not believe that - my cousin was one of them, so my father had the best possible care at that hospital. So what I did - I just prayed Sorrowful Misteries every day and my father is alive and well today. The Lord even confirmed that that there was something more to my father’s recovery - when the nurses diconnected him from those respirators, after over 6 weeks you are supposed to learn to breath - first they diconnect you for 15 minutes, then for longer etc. But they said that my father was the first such case, after diconnection - he just started breathing on his own and all was well and is till now, it’s been five years since that time.
Anyway, I could go on with that, I do not want to defend all, there are errors, and not all the criticism is unfounded. But is it Catholic? For me - yes, or I would not be a part of it.
Or maybe just take a look at this testimony of one Indian priest, for me it is amazing
jmanjackal.net/eng/engpers.htm