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J_Peterson
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What exactly do you find hateful about Fr. James Martin’s writing? He’s the complete opposite from what I’ve read. I’m a bit of a fan of his.But enough about Father Martin’s twitter and Facebook feed.
What exactly do you find hateful about Fr. James Martin’s writing? He’s the complete opposite from what I’ve read. I’m a bit of a fan of his.But enough about Father Martin’s twitter and Facebook feed.
From the articles ( only a few) that I read, that is what people are taking issue with. And yes, it is a very serious thing and not a word to be bandied about lightlyMODERATOR NOTICE
Also do not make accusations of heresy. It is a very serious accusation (especially aimed at a cleric or theologian) and will be considered uncharitable here and you may receive infractions or suspensions for doing so.
Me, too.What exactly do you find hateful about Fr. James Martin’s writing? He’s the complete opposite from what I’ve read. I’m a bit of a fan of his.
He’s done all those things he complains about to anybody who’s to the right of New Ways Ministry. I didn’t call it hateful, but apparently he does.What exactly do you find hateful about Fr. James Martin’s writing? He’s the complete opposite from what I’ve read. I’m a bit of a fan of his.
Quote:First of all, lol ThinkProgress link.
Second, Bishop Barron had a better article on this: wordonfire.org/resources/article/ross-douthat-and-the-catholic-academy/4967/
Great article. I liked this part:*This fear that the Catholic Church is under siege from within has been a common refrain from conservative prelates and commentators. The rising angst from the right is both inevitable, given his unsparing challenges to the ecclesiastical status quo, and wildly disproportionate. Pope Francis is not tossing Church doctrine into the Tiber River, and he shares similarities with his predecessors, including their concern with economic inequality and climate change.
Francis is no secular liberal. Progressives who expect him to refashion the Church in their image are as delusional as reactionaries on the right who think he is not Catholic enough.
But a pope who openly frets about “small-minded rules” in the Church and who challenges the hierarchy not to reduce the “freshness and fragrance” of the Gospel to a “disjointed multitude of doctrines” does present a stark contrast to Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI.
This posture is a welcome change for many faithful and deeply unnerving for others. After the heady and hopeful days of engagement with the modern world ushered in by the reforming Second Vatican Council (1962-1965), the Church retrenched. In its worst forms, a siege mentality took hold, privileged clericalism festered, and self-appointed watchdogs of orthodoxy demonized Catholics who were deemed insufficiently pro-life. Confident hardliners who assumed they had a monopoly on defining Catholic identity are now losing their bearings.
Under the headline, “The Plot to Change Catholicism,” New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, a conservative Catholic, blasted what he called the pope’s “ostentatious humility” and described Francis as the “chief plotter” at the synod.
“The entire situation abounds with ironies,” Douthat wrote. “Aging progressive are seizing a moment they thought had slipped away, trying to outmaneuver younger conservatives who recently thought they owned the Catholic future.”
A number of Francis’s signature priorities — desire for open debate, discernment amid complexity, putting people at the center of a pastoral theology — conflict with the cold legalism that becomes the default setting of many who view themselves as the “real” Catholics defending the faith. By rekindling the embers of Vatican II, which defined the Church as “the people of God” (as opposed to just the hierarchy) and emphasized decentralization of power and collegiality as models of Church governance, Francis is demonstrating that in many ways, his vision of reform is as much about the journey as it is the destination.
In the end, reformers and hardliners could both declare victory after the synod.
cruxnow.com/church/2015/10/29/in-helping-the-church-stretch-francis-is-securing-its-future/*
“Thinke not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.” Matthew 10:34Great article. I liked this part:
Francis is trying to wake up Church leaders, tucked peacefully under the comfortable blankets of doctrine, to the more difficult task Jesus embodied. The pope wants a Church that walks into uncertainty, seeks out those on the peripheries, heals wounds, and encounters people. In his blunt speech to bishops at the end of the synod, he said the meeting had “laid bare the closed hearts which frequently hide even behind the Church’s teachings or good intentions.” He added that “the true defenders of doctrine are not those who uphold its letter, but its spirit; not ideas, but people.
By elites do you mean people who are theologians and are studied in Church doctrine?Check this out from Fr Alexander Lucie-Smith
I back Ross Douthat: elites don’t own Catholicism
catholicherald.co.uk/commentandblogs/2015/10/29/i-back-ross-douthat-eiltes-dont-own-catholicism/#.VjJglfUWPHs.twitter
I mean thin-skinned militant ideologues who are threatened by people who are smarter and more ethical then they are.By elites do you mean people who are theologians and are studied in Church doctrine?
That’s my understanding as well. After Douthat’s original column (which did not call anyone a heretic) the liberals piled, a couple dozen prominent professors, theologians &c signed a letter to the editor at NYT.From the articles ( only a few) that I read, that is what people are taking issue with. And yes, it is a very serious thing and not a word to be bandied about lightly
It’s almost like “Tolerance”, “Mercy”, and “Meeting people where they are” only go one way.That’s my understanding as well. After Douthat’s original column (which did not call anyone a heretic) the liberals piled, a couple dozen prominent professors, theologians &c signed a letter to the editor at NYT.
In the subsequent Twitter storm Doubutthat thweeted “Own you heresy” I think addressing himself to Card. Faggioli ?].
Btw, the NYT’s liberal Maureen Dowd often writes on matters Catholic and I don’t recall Fr Martin or anyone lese calling her out for not being a trained theologian.
I’m not sure what people are reading. But some clarifications are needed I think.Btw, the NYT’s liberal Maureen Dowd often writes on matters Catholic and I don’t recall Fr Martin or anyone lese calling her out for not being a trained theologian.
I really enjoyed reading this article by Father Alexander Lucie-Smith.Check this out from Fr Alexander Lucie-Smith
I back Ross Douthat: elites don’t own Catholicism
catholicherald.co.uk/commentandblogs/2015/10/29/i-back-ross-douthat-eiltes-dont-own-catholicism/#.VjJglfUWPHs.twitter
I do wonder if calling people “haters” would equal calling them a “fool”.I just had that cut and pasted ready to post here. This is a very good reminder for everybody:
No, it is a personal attack but the meaning is a lot different. There are very many people over the centuries who were haters towards certain things but were definitely not fools.I do wonder if calling people “haters” would equal calling them a “fool”.