C
CutlerB
Guest
That clears things up, Brother!Humility is part of truth. For example to use something that you pointed out. The Church does not put kindness before truth. Truth speaks of kindness. We cannot limit truth to dogmas and moral laws. Truth is much richer. It includes dogma, moral laws, the practice of virtue, human interactions which is kindness comes in, and the exercise of discipline, which is self-control.
Self-control is important. The fulness of the Church of Jesus Christ subsists in the Catholic Church. We know this and we believe it with our whole heart. I hope we do. No one expects us to deny this. If one listened to Pope Francis last Saturday as he spoke about peace to Jews, Christians, Muslims, Hindus, and atheists, he repeatedly said that real peace is only found in Christ. There is the difference between the triumphalist and the humble man.
The triumphalist wants to take advantage of the fact that he has all of these non-Catholics in front of him to tell them that we have the fullness of truth. The humble man simple speaks about the truth without making any reference to us.
Such a statement “peace is only found in Christ” triggers the question in the mind of the non-Christian. “Who said so?” or “Why do you say that?” This opens the door for further conversation without triumphalism. There is that simplicity that Fr. James and I are talking about that all of us need to cultivate.