C
ctos
Guest
In a January 2007 “U.S. Catholic” article, Bob Smietana effectively urges Catholics to pray with non-Catholics:
“There is also danger in praying together. Some Christian groups have in the past forbidden their members from praying with outsiders. … There is more danger, however, in not praying. When we don’t pray together, when we only pray with those who are “good enough,” when we don’t acknowledge that our standing before God is grace, we become afraid of God’s mercy. We stop believing in grace.”
He also says that to become one: “Begin by seeing our fellow Christians as companions rather than competitors.”
He suggests taking meals together:
“Eating together also can erase boundaries. … Jesus understood the power of eating together and often was criticized during his earthly ministry for sitting at table with the wrong kind of people.”
I find these comparisons with Our Lord rather worrying. In the same issue Bryan Cones is critical of closed Communion:
But what about this praying with non-Catholics? This idea makes me shudder. It makes me shudder because the non-Catholic simply doesn’t understand what he’s doing. And I’m being lumped in with what he’s doing. What’s really scary is that one day I want to apply for entry into the seminary. I’m very nervous that they’re going to make me do this kind of thing routinely or accept it in principle. How should I understand ‘praying with non-Catholics’? To do that effectively makes faith a purely personal matter, something psychological, and makes “praying” into an exterior on which point we are supposedly all identical. I feel that when the Catholic prays with the non-Catholic, he imagines himself to be on a higher plane of truth, but in fact is degrading himself and should really be having pity and mercy for the unbeliever, and doing everything possible to tell him the Truth.
“There is also danger in praying together. Some Christian groups have in the past forbidden their members from praying with outsiders. … There is more danger, however, in not praying. When we don’t pray together, when we only pray with those who are “good enough,” when we don’t acknowledge that our standing before God is grace, we become afraid of God’s mercy. We stop believing in grace.”
He also says that to become one: “Begin by seeing our fellow Christians as companions rather than competitors.”
He suggests taking meals together:
“Eating together also can erase boundaries. … Jesus understood the power of eating together and often was criticized during his earthly ministry for sitting at table with the wrong kind of people.”
I find these comparisons with Our Lord rather worrying. In the same issue Bryan Cones is critical of closed Communion:
Even from the earliest days of the Church, adherence to the teachings was a requirement. Pre-baptism education was rather lengthy, from what I understand.Unfortunately we have just seen some further additions to the list of who can’t receive Communion, and on it will be no small number of Catholics. A document approved by the U.S. bishops at their November meeting discourages from Communion those who “knowingly and obstinately” reject “the defined doctrines of the church” or its “definitive teaching on moral issues.” … In our attempt to protect the defenseless eucharistic Jesus from sinners, we inevitably drive away the very people Jesus spent his time with.
But what about this praying with non-Catholics? This idea makes me shudder. It makes me shudder because the non-Catholic simply doesn’t understand what he’s doing. And I’m being lumped in with what he’s doing. What’s really scary is that one day I want to apply for entry into the seminary. I’m very nervous that they’re going to make me do this kind of thing routinely or accept it in principle. How should I understand ‘praying with non-Catholics’? To do that effectively makes faith a purely personal matter, something psychological, and makes “praying” into an exterior on which point we are supposedly all identical. I feel that when the Catholic prays with the non-Catholic, he imagines himself to be on a higher plane of truth, but in fact is degrading himself and should really be having pity and mercy for the unbeliever, and doing everything possible to tell him the Truth.