I’m thinking today’s homily will rattle some non-Catholics:
catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/1301801.htm
Parts of it:
Christian identity is not a bureaucratic status, it is “belonging to the church … the mother church, because it is not possible to find Jesus outside the church,” Pope Francis said. “It is the mother church who gives us Jesus, gives us identity.”
This is how ecumenism works. He says something to Catholics within earshot of non-Catholics. He’s not going after the non-Catholic directly. It’s a very clear, yet diplomatic style of preaching.
…
Pope Francis asked the cardinals to join him in praying that they, too, would have the “fervor to move forward – as brothers, all of us – forward, forward, carrying the name of Jesus in the heart of holy mother church, which is – as St. Ignatius said – hierarchical and catholic.”
This is very Jesuit. Here is where I have been harping for weeks. Many people have been objecting to his simplicity, because allegedly it is not appropriate for a pope. I have been harping that this is a Jesuit pope. Here we have a very Jesuit statement and a very Jesuit approach to ecclesiology that needs to be implemented in driven home. Only a Jesuit can do it justice, because only Jesuits fully understand what Ignatius had in mind when he said this. Terms such as “hierarchical and Catholic” do not translate the same Jesuit theology as they do in mainstream theology. Men like Ignatius, Francis, Robert, Alphonse Ligouri and Louie de Montford had a vocabulary all their own, which is very difficult to understand unless one is a student of theirs.
I won’t even dare to try to unpack Ignatian ecclesiology and suggest that others do not try to do so either. Let the Jesuits unpack it for us or other scholars who are experts in Ignatian ecclesiology, which are very few in today’s world, probably under 200. The cardinals themselves will have to go home and read Ignatius and Robert Bellarmine.
Personally, I’m loving this. Obviously he isn’t being rude, but he is also being pretty darn clear about Christian identity and where Jesus is found: the Catholic Church.
He’s being very specific. He’s not being pushy with those who are not Catholic. But he is pushing Catholics to become Christocentric in a very Jesuit way. By bringing up Ignatius’ statement, it forces the hearer to go back to Ignatius and his sons to look at the entire context of that statement. You can’t just take a quote from Ignatius and run with it, unless you know more about the whole. He’s throwing down a challenge to those who are listening, which happen to be Catholics.
This is what I mean by gentle with non-Catholics and rattling Catholics.
Thanks for the link, I hadn’t seen this part:
“If we want to take the path of the mundane, negotiating with the world,” the pope said, “we will never have the consolation of the Lord. If we seek only consolation, it will be superficial.”
This is pure Ignatian ascetical theology. This I know about. Ascetical theology is my area. Ignatius’ times were not very different from our own. There was much going on. Much of it was good, but embedded in the good, there was dissent, heresy, materialism, concupiscence of the flesh, laziness, indifference in matters of morality (especially when money was involved), and governments that had run amuck. There was a spirituality in Spain that was similar to our New Age stuff. There were people who thrived on penances, hardships and other exaggerated forms of asceticism. In reality, they were not looking to do penance, but to feel good about their penance (consolation). Kind of a “look at me, I’m so Catholic,” or “I thank God that I’m not like the rest of men.” Ignatius and Teresa of Avila were very strong opponents to such nonsense spirituality. Theirs was a very practical approach to the spiritual life. “Stick to the Gospel and follow the Church’s lead.”
The life of the church is a path that always alternates between “persecution and consolation, between the Cross and the Resurrection,” he said."
Here he’s pulling from St. Paul of the Cross. St. Paul stressed the importance of not avoiding the Passion in one’s journey to perfection.