K
KathleenGee
Guest
Cursilista…
I had a Jewish friend who became a Protestant Christian in the evangelical sense. She was a broken person. One time she wanted to go to Mass with me.
But after Mass ended, she went into great shock because so much of the rituals meant something to her in her identity…she said…‘I am Jewish, and I will never stop being one.’ And all I can think of is her past orientation made her see the significance of Jesus at the altar replacing the sacrificial lamb…but some how…this common obstacle came to her…and her identity was threatened, not fulfilled…this was way back in 1973 or so.
I met her mother, and the family was well known in the metro area because the father was a locally famous commentator. But I picked up on the mother connecting with me…and I have found in my life that devout Jews sense something authentic in my Catholicism that reflects God. I don’t mean to point to myself.
But the sensitivity and relating to God is the same as the Jews. We see God as the center of our life. We revolve our lives around God in the daily rhythm of life. We own our humanity. We avoid scruples…or our priests will direct us out of them.
Likewise, the liturgical year…Christ Bearer…do a search some time on the Catholic Liturgical Year…it repeats it self every year…a circle…Hebrew Catholic has references to the Jewish calendar…I think they use both. Or synthesize both.
(I might add that the Jews who find fulfillment in Christ, one out of 8 become Catholic, the rest are Messianic Jews…but they have the same issues as Protestants not recognizing any central authority. That is strange because the Church tried both episcopal and conciliar models of administrating the early Church, but the Jewish episcopal turned out to be the better model for administrating the universal church.)
I had a Jewish friend who became a Protestant Christian in the evangelical sense. She was a broken person. One time she wanted to go to Mass with me.
But after Mass ended, she went into great shock because so much of the rituals meant something to her in her identity…she said…‘I am Jewish, and I will never stop being one.’ And all I can think of is her past orientation made her see the significance of Jesus at the altar replacing the sacrificial lamb…but some how…this common obstacle came to her…and her identity was threatened, not fulfilled…this was way back in 1973 or so.
I met her mother, and the family was well known in the metro area because the father was a locally famous commentator. But I picked up on the mother connecting with me…and I have found in my life that devout Jews sense something authentic in my Catholicism that reflects God. I don’t mean to point to myself.
But the sensitivity and relating to God is the same as the Jews. We see God as the center of our life. We revolve our lives around God in the daily rhythm of life. We own our humanity. We avoid scruples…or our priests will direct us out of them.
Likewise, the liturgical year…Christ Bearer…do a search some time on the Catholic Liturgical Year…it repeats it self every year…a circle…Hebrew Catholic has references to the Jewish calendar…I think they use both. Or synthesize both.
(I might add that the Jews who find fulfillment in Christ, one out of 8 become Catholic, the rest are Messianic Jews…but they have the same issues as Protestants not recognizing any central authority. That is strange because the Church tried both episcopal and conciliar models of administrating the early Church, but the Jewish episcopal turned out to be the better model for administrating the universal church.)