S
Shakuhachi
Guest
Please say more about what you are talking about when you speak of “death to self”. You lost me.
Precisely. But this isn’t the death of self Rohr has in mind. Rohr’s death-of-self is an undiscriminating acceptance of all and everything. As the title of the book I read says: “Everything belongs.” Rohr invites his readers to “allow everything to be”, to “not be so judgmental”. Rohr is a spiritual relativist, basically. His idea of religious insight is basically the same as most pop-spirituality: that there isn’t really any intrinsic evil. That some things only seem evil because of our inability to “accept it all”. That indeed we can all get along and be happier people by learning to accept everything. He basically invites you to deny your innate ability to discriminate and see that “in the bigger scheme of things everything has its place.” (Paraphrasing from memory again.)Jesus is speaking about dying to the false self our ego’s have created and being born again in Him. When we surrender ourselves to Jesus, we die to the old self and in return, Jesus gives us a new life, but it’s the person God had in mind when he created us.
See post 62 in this thread, in response to JimR-OCDS.Please say more about what you are talking about when you speak of “death to self”. You lost me.
Before I disagree with you on this, could you please explain your understanding of “death to self”, and what, to you, separates that from the process of “ridding oneself of one’s old tendencies, attachments, and circumstances, so that one may follow Christ’s inspiration the more whole-heartedly“.Except that Jesus never taught a “death of self”. And neither did any other authentic religious figure, ever. Insofar as self-denial is part of authentic spirituality, it pertains to ridding oneself of one’s old tendencies, attachments, and circumstances, so that one may follow Christ’s inspiration the more whole-heartedly. This does not involve a “death of self”. On the contrary: it involves the discovery (or renewed cognition and appreciation) of one’s true self.
I am not in a position to be able to sit down and research anything today. I have too many errands to run.Can you give a recent example of clergy espousing liberal ideas being publicly corrected/reprimanded and their works denounced?
I think I clicked it. Sometimes I’ll open a link by pasting…adgloriam:![]()
Is it? But you didn’t click the link to it!The article is reasonable up to a point.That, or CAF’s click-count feature is miraculously broken today, because as yet it remains at zero.
Hey @mrsdizzyd I remember one noteworthy such case: ‘double membership’. To the best of my understanding you could be a member of any religion or any sect, you could even be a public sect leader going to catholic mass whenever it pleased you and receive communion.I do remember a couple high profile censures for priests that were advocating women priests. I also remember from earlier this year that Pope Francis rebuked the German bishops for trying to institute wide scale communion for non-Catholics. From time to time we also hear about priests who are lacized for one thing or another.
Upsetting for sure.Shakuhachi:![]()
Uh, yes. Off-topic – I’ll get back to it in a paragraph or two – but wasn’t the abortion referendum in Ireland strong enough proof for you that the Church does nothing even if her members severely violate her ethical teachings with regard to an extremely serious matter? To the best of my knowledge, Irish yay-sayers were welcome to take Communion as usual the following Sunday. And we’re not talking about skipping Mass or watching adult movies here. We’re talking about one of the worst atrocities that the modern world has ever come up with. What does this prove? That the Church does nothing even when extremely severe transgressions against her teachings occur.Ok so even the Church isn’t Catholic enough for you and fails in keeping its members in line. I think I see where you are coming from now.
Actually it is what Fr Rohr has in mind.Precisely. But this isn’t the death of self Rohr has in mind. Rohr’s death-of-self is an undiscriminating acceptance of all and everything.