J
JReducation
Guest
I’ve been reading your posts on this thread and the problem sounds like you seem to come from the same background that many on CAF do. You have a fundamentalist literalist attitude toward Catholicism.PLEASE CUT AND PASTE A DIRECT QUOTE ON SALVATION—DOES HE EVER MENTION HELL OR ETERNAL PERIL??? PLEASE CUT AND PASTE A DIRECT QUOTE FROM THOSE ENCYCLICALS.
This is the attitude that Catholicism has to be demand that people convert and that Catholicism has to threaten people with hell. This same attitude conveys that the only important thing the Church can show for herself are rules and written words.
This is the same set of beliefs that we find in other fundamentalist right wing religions. Catholocism is not fundamentalist and not right wing. And it certainly is not a religion of words alone.
You may disagree with the Assisi gathering if you wish. It’s not a dogma of the Church. But how much do you know about John Paul II and what he did for the world to call him a “weak weak pope”?
What do you know about the mystical man inside John Paul II and about his spiritual strength?
You disapprove because he did not push the conversion agenda. Have you ever thought or remembered that the agenda of the Catholic Church is to lead all people to discover the fullness of revelation through evagelization and by giving witness to our own faith.
The conversion ministry belongs to the fundamentalist religions of the world. It has no place in Catholocism today. This is not the way that the Church operates today. Today’s Church announces the Good News, engages in dialogue with people about their common believes and when everyone is ready, we then discuss the things that separate us.
Don’t forget this morning’s reading from Peter at mass.
“Act with gentleness and reerence toward all, so that when you are maligned those who defame you will be the onesput to shame” (1Peter 3:15-18).
We announce the Good News that “Chirst is our Hope.” We do not push conversion. Conversion is a gift of grace that comes from the Holy Spirit.
If you consider John Paul II weak, I assume that you would consider Benedict XVI weak as well. When he prayed at the Synogue in NYC he never mentioned conversion. Instead he said that the experience made him think about the number of times that Jesus must have prayed in a sacred space such as this. He proclaimed the connection between Judaism and Jesus without demanding conversion or threatening with hell.
When he prayed with the non Catholic Christians he proclaimed that Jesus was our Hope and repeated that we must put aside the issues of the past and work to correct the mistakes that have been made in hermaneutics. He didn’t call to conversion, but to discovery of Truth through reason. He admitted that there was much that we have in common that still unites us and there are some mistakes in hermaneutics that have to be addressed. His invitation was to dialogue over the things the unite us and the mistakes in interpretation of revelation.
When Benedict met at the United Nations with the different religions of the world, he left a simple message of Christian humanism. There were no threats of hell or demands for conversion.
Do you notice a pattern in the way that the Church pursues this ministry? It is slow, deliberate and full of Good News, not demands.
You cannot pull popes from the past and put them into today’s context. That does not work. They did not live in today’s situation, nor did they have access to the same ideas and theological development that the Popes of today have.
The truth does not change, but the Church’s understanding of it grows everyday. Today we understand things that have been hidden in the truth that were not understood by our anscestors.
Just as our anscestors did not understand the Hypostatic union during the first 400 years of Church history and they argued and debated until they got it right, people did not understand the scope of the term “church” when they declared that there is no salvation outside the Church, as John Paul II and Benedict XVI do.
We must understand history, mysticism, ecclesiology, social conditions, and other religions. We must be willing to learn from them as well as teach.
We do not have to be afraid of this process or fear that we are losing souls. In today’s Gospel Christ promised that he would not leave us alone. This was not a promise just to the Apostles, but to the world.
If you prayed the Liturgy of the Hours this morning you will have noticed that St. Luke said “He commissioned us to preach to the people and to bear witness that he is the one ser apart by God as judge of the living and the dead.” Our job is to preach and bear witness by our lives, not to judge either popes or non Catholics. That job belongs to Christ and only Christ can convert.
JR