Progressive Philippines Catholicism

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What the Church is right now supports my argument. Thats the proof of strength of my argument. Our faith is never dependent on one language. Its dependent on Sacred Scripture, Sacred Tradition and the Magisterium.
And as I’ve said to you before, no one is making the argument for Latin as an exclusive transmitter of the Faith. If you keep repeating it it won’t make it any more true.
 
One might say that a church which seeks above all to be attractive would already be on the wrong path, because the Church does not work for itself, does not work to increase its numbers so as to have more power," he answered. "The Church is at the service of Another; it does not serve itself, seeking to be a strong body, but it strives to make the Gospel of Jesus Christ accessible, the great truths, the great powers of love and of reconciliation that come always from the presence of Jesus Christ. In this sense, the Church does not seek to be attractive, but rather to make herself transparent for Jesus Christ.”

Pope Benedict XVI

Read more: nationalpost.com/opinion/columnists/Above+holiness/3565625/story.html#ixzz10LtwCEhJ

Perhaps the time has come to say farewell to the idea of traditionally Catholic cultures. Maybe we are facing a new and different kind of epoch in the Church’s history, where Christianity will again be characterised more by the mustard seed, where it will exist in small seemingly insignificant groups that nonetheless live an intense struggle against evil and bring good into the world.”

Cardinal Ratzinger

ccr.org.uk/archive/gn0507/g09.htm
 
One might say that a church which seeks above all to be attractive would already be on the wrong path, because the Church does not work for itself, does not work to increase its numbers so as to have more power," he answered. "The Church is at the service of Another; it does not serve itself, seeking to be a strong body, but it strives to make the Gospel of Jesus Christ accessible, the great truths, the great powers of love and of reconciliation that come always from the presence of Jesus Christ. In this sense, the Church does not seek to be attractive, but rather to make herself transparent for Jesus Christ.”

Pope Benedict XVI
That is a relevant exhortation for this thread. The Filipinos are doing a good thing to make the Gospel of Jesus Christ more accessible by wanting the Mass in the language of the people.👍

Perhaps the time has come to say farewell to the idea of traditionally Catholic cultures. Maybe we are facing a new and different kind of epoch in the Church’s history, where Christianity will again be characterised more by the mustard seed, where it will exist in small seemingly insignificant groups that nonetheless live an intense struggle against evil and bring good into the world.”

Cardinal Ratzinger

That has no relevance to this thread. Cardinal Ratzinger is simply saying that the Catholic identity of certain nations is disappearing, and the only way for the Church to renew itself is by reacquiring the urgency and missionary spirit of the early Church.

Blessings
 
I believe Jesus said the harvest is plenty and the workers are few. We need more workers so the harvest is plentiful. Jesus never intended for a small Church. He wants to save all.
What exactly is “small”? And I thought we were going back to “many.”
From John:
{17:9} Ego pro eis rogo: Non pro mundo rogo, sed pro his, quos dedisti mihi: quia tui sunt:
{17:9} I pray for them. I do not pray for the world, but for those whom you have given to me. For they are yours.
{17:10} et mea omnia tua sunt, et tua mea sunt: et clarificatus sum in eis:
{17:10} And all that is mine is yours, and all that is yours is mine, and I am glorified in this.
{17:11} Et iam non sum in mundo, et hi in mundo sunt, et ego ad te venio. Pater sancte, serva eos in nomine tuo, quos dedisti mihi: ut sint unum, sicut et nos.
{17:11} And though I am not in the world, these are in the world, and I am coming to you. Father most holy, preserve them in your name, those whom you have given to me, so that they may be one, even as we are one.
 
That is a relevant exhortation for this thread. The Filipinos are doing a good thing to make the Gospel of Jesus Christ more accessible by wanting the Mass in the language of the people.
Hasn’t this already been done for 40 years? And are the Filipinos doing the “good thing” or is the Church by giving them a translation?
 
Does it follow then that for all the centuries the Mass was exclusively in Latin people were distanced from Jesus?

If everyone is loyal to the Magisterium like we’re told then Latin would be a part of every OF.

What some Filipino Catholics are trying to do is customize the Mass to make it their own. What’s lost on many is the liturgy is not about us. As our Holy Father points out the Church and liturgy are about God. When countries or cultures take the liturgy or Church teaching into their own hands they are on the path to becoming a denomination. Look at Holland’s history the past forty years for evidence.
 
Hasn’t this already been done for 40 years?
Really? The EF has been in the Filipino language for the past 40 years? Do you have any sources to back that up?
And are the Filipinos doing the “good thing” or is the Church by giving them a translation?
Yes, the Filipinos are doing a good thing by wanting the EF in their language. And the Church would be doing a good thing to give it to them.

Blessings
 
Really? The EF has been in the Filipino language for the past 40 years? Do you have any sources to back that up?

Yes, the Filipinos are doing a good thing by wanting the EF in their language. And the Church would be doing a good thing to give it to them.

Blessings
Maybe I missed something, but where does vernacular EF come into this? :confused:
 
Really? The EF has been in the Filipino language for the past 40 years? Do you have any sources to back that up?

Yes, the Filipinos are doing a good thing by wanting the EF in their language. And the Church would be doing a good thing to give it to them.

Blessings
Is this a typo? The EF is not being translated.
 
And as I’ve said to you before, no one is making the argument for Latin as an exclusive transmitter of the Faith. If you keep repeating it it won’t make it any more true.
Thanks! But someone is
 
What exactly is “small”? And I thought we were going back to “many.”
Ockham said the Pope prefers a smaller Church (less members, but more faithful). Honestly, I prefer that too. But I don’t think that is the mission of the Church. Jesus did say he came not for the righteous, but for the sinners.
 
Its one of the things that spilled over from the other thread. We’ve all been asked to keep the discussions relevant to the topic so I suggest we all comply.
So you are thread jumping, off topic, and unable to provide evidence to your accusations. Is that correct?
 
To get this thread back on track, we should not disregard the culture of a country and the situation the Church there faces. A lot of people don’t realize that how huge the difference is the situation between the Philippines and North America. You have a country thats 80% Catholics that is now dealing with an ever greater Western influence of secularism at moral relativity. Because the Church has been the dominant faith for 400 years, there is greater pressure from anti-Catholic groups to destroy the reputation of the Church and pull out the believers. There is also an increasing presence of Evangelical churches.

To understand the issue of why people would want increased inculturization and participation among the laity is not a simple straight foward understanding of the situation. There is a character ingrained in the culture that calls for that. People want a sense of community because that is who we are. If you live in the Philippines and its your birthday, you don’t throw a party for 10 of your closest friends. You throw a party for your friends, co-workers and your neighbors. A simple birthday party can have in excess of 50-100 people. Its a cultural thing. The same reason when an overseas contract worker who’s about to leave for 6-months to a year for work, gets driven to the airport by 2 busloads of friends and neighbors. Its the way we are. That is why I ask that before criticizing these requests as simple “modernism”, you have to understand the culture because its not what people are looking for. Even pre-V2 Catholicism in the Philippines is vastly different from Catholicism in North America.
 
To get this thread back on track, we should not disregard the culture of a country and the situation the Church there faces.
Actually the individual culture of any country is not greater than the Church Jesus Christ founded. If the Philippines can customize the liturgy to their own particular preferences then every other country and culture should be able to do the same. If the priority is the preferences of the people then the focus is no longer on God and the Church will break into thousands of individual denominations. Look at the example of Martin Luther and history of Protestantism for an idea of what can happen.
 
Actually the individual culture of any country is not greater than the Church Jesus Christ founded. If the Philippines can customize the liturgy to their own particular preferences then every other country and culture should be able to do the same. If the priority is the preferences of the people then the focus is no longer on God and the Church will break into thousands of individual denominations. Look at the example of Martin Luther and history of Protestantism for an idea of what can happen.
As a person who actually lives in this country, I have to say what you demand is downright impossible. Take Latin for instance. We may be known internationally for our capability to speak English well but that’s only so far as the educated middle and upper classes go (including myself). However, even there, English is still a second language in my generation. I’m an AB English student of Ateneo (a prestigious university here) yet even now I’m one of the few my classmates run to when they want corrections, definition of terms, and I also have a reputation for being a grammar-nazi. I get pitied by my patriotic, left-leaning Creative Writing professor for being a product of a mentality that sought to destroy our native tongue because I was raised to speak mostly English. He says writers like me are less qualified to write for the masses in this country because we can’t write Bisaya/Tagalog on a literary level. Wonderful. -.-

That pales though to how the ones in poverty see us. To them, being a fluent English speaker is a bloody status symbol (and sometimes an arrogant one at that)! I can’t count how many times I’ve seen in our stupid telenovelas (soap operas) were the rich families are portrayed to be fluent in English or mixing English words and phrases with a socialite flair, ugh…

And now you want to throw Latin into the mess? You want to make the Church here look more elitist?
 
The Catholic Church was founded by Jesus Christ two thousand years ago. It is greater than any particular country or culture. It isn’t up to the Church to adapt to a group of people - quite the opposite.
 
Actually the individual culture of any country is not greater than the Church Jesus Christ founded. If the Philippines can customize the liturgy to their own particular preferences then every other country and culture should be able to do the same.
I don’t think they’re asking for anything more than what the Vatican allows for any other country. Also, changes are needed to keep the fight to keep people in the Church. As I mentioned in my previous post, there is an increasing pressure from anti-Catholic groups not only to destroy the reputation of the Church, but to lure all the members out and into their groups. Should we just do nothing and let them? At the cost of their chance to salvation?
If the priority is the preferences of the people then the focus is no longer on God and the Church will break into thousands of individual denominations. Look at the example of Martin Luther and history of Protestantism for an idea of what can happen.
The problem with Martin Luther is the core of what he taught is different from what the Church teaches. No one is trying to change that.
 
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