Hey, wait a minute.
Opus Dei is like an Army, that’s what it is. It’s not a light commitment. Some people think that because they don’t take vows that it should be like the best of both worlds, you get the community and soldiarity of a religious order but you get to do what you like in the rest of your life.
Not true. Opus Dei spirituality is very strong. It is not a cult. I have friends that are in Opus Dei (numenaries) and the priest that introduced me to the faith is an Opus Dei priest. They are all very orthodox and good people.
Basically, some people do not like it because its not fun and yes, it is controlling. I went on a humanitarian trip with 10 other guys to Nicaragua to dig latrines with an Opus Dei group and some aspects of it annoyed me. I did not like how we were not allowed to just ‘chill’ and drink beer and relax after digging ditches for 8 hours. Some aspects were tightly controlled. That’s the down side. On the good side, they have a very, very strong spirituality- how do you think they live without the fun? We started the day with prayer, said the angelus and read Deus Caritas Est during lunch, then prayed more after work, ate, prayed and read from The Way, then we did an examination of conscience, and went to bed.
Programmed? Well, I’m sure lots of secular-progressives out there would call most of us programmed because we don’t “make up our own minds”.
However, it wasn’t supposed to be a vacation. Opus Dei means Work of God. That’s the mentality that the members have, that they are supposed to work for the good of God and not themselves. Opus Dei is not a fun organization, I will dispassionately declare that to you. They are very rigid in some respects, but again, it’s like the Army, and those who join up are not doing so to ‘fulfill themselves’- it’s about a vocation (not vacation!), and they do not just let anyone join.
Basically the purpose of Opus Dei is two fold, firstly, to help people integrate work and their secular lives with their spiritual life, and the second is a bit more covert, to spread the influence of the Church in the higher professional echelons.
Opus Dei is a good organization.