R
robertaf
Guest
Does anyone else find this post a bit strange? Not to be critical, that is not the SPIRIT it is meant.I just knew it was merely a matter of time before somebody would drag the spirit into this discussion!
I agree that the liturgical free spirits that cry āPhariseeā at the first opportunity are cowering behind that term in order to compensate for a lack of any justification for their position (or posture, in this context) on the matter of rubrics. Furthermore, the fact that they most often misuse the term when applying it demonstrates the shaky foundation upon which their understanding is built.
It is the letter of the law through which the spirit of the law is made apparent.
What could possibly be the objection to the use of the spirit of things. We are or should be spiritual folks, guided by the Holy Spirit.
I would say it is the Spirit through which the letter of the law is made and in which the spirit of the law is manifested.