C
catharina
Guest
Who better to make such an initiative of visiting in peace than one who grew up under Nazi conscription? God is so good. Blessed be God!
Thanks for sharing Catharina, it’s good to keep these things in our minds when we go to prayer.Who better to make such an initiative of visiting in peace than one who grew up under Nazi conscription? God is so good. Blessed be God!
It seems I may have misunderstood the tone of St. Francis when he counseled in this way, I haven’t read much of his writings nor have I studied him, I’ve only ready a biography and a few things here and there. Guess I shouldn’t give those kinds of opinions until I know more.The Pope made him soften his rule and Francis did. But then he suplemented his rule with letters such as this one.
This is one of his softer letters.
Observe, he does not put the man on the spot. He does not directly tell him to stop whining or how to run his friary. He simply tells him how to be holy.
It’s so interesting that Francis always refers to the superiors devotion to him (Francis). He knows that his brothers will do anyting for him.
As long as he asks them to do what Christ would ask, they will. In the long run, they will be fulfilling Christ’s command.
It’s almost like a mother who tells a child to eat one more bite of food just for mommy. In reality it’s for the child’s welfare. The child takes the bait and grows up to be healthy.
Here, the Brothers take the bait and become holy.
Francis is the perfect example of Christian evagelization. He reels them in by baiting them, not with hostility, but with encouragement and by reminding them of how much they love each other. The he slides the Lord in there without them realizing it.
This is why he is often perceived as being very gentle.
This theology, as you see in this letter is why the Church gave him the two titles:
This is the kind of evangelization that he would be doing today and what we are to be doing.
- The Mirror of Perfection
- The Saints’ saint.
Evangelizing through encouragement and through example.
JR
PS Even though the Pope ordered him to soften his rule and Francis obeyed. The Pope never said that he couldn’t counsel his Brothers according to his own mind. That’s how Francis got around the Pope’s “mitigation of the rule” since only a Pope could change the rule. Francis left all of these letters and commentaries around to be found. Sneaky little guy.![]()
There is nothing that pains me so much as to hear grumblers attack the Church and her ministers. Yet I doubt those who most need to read your post will see it.Here we have Catherine, Dominic and Francis all great reformers and all great lovers of every human being, capable of correcting error through kind actions and words and helping the Church to correct itself without calling out her faults in public. This is sanctity appropriate for today.
Lovely, chewchoo. Thanks.i read this yesterday in hebrews 12 - consider how jesus endured such opposition from sinners, in order that you may not grow weary and lose heart.
There is nothing wrong with stating the truth. St. Dominic and St. Ignatius were two great preachers and very straightforward. However, it was not their preaching that won them the crown of sanctity, it was their love of God and neighbor. They never hurt another when they preached. Ufortunately, we tend to hurt others instead of evangelize.JR, thank you so much. I needed this reminder of moderation in all things, including ZEAL. I have the most difficult time allowing any irreverence toward Church teachings to “stand” in threads. I do my very best to refrain from any personal attack but I do say clearly when I think statements made are really irreverent. Such statements open some kind of wound in me, a wound akin to pain at hearing God and His people mocked.
It is painful, because it is beneath contempt. The saints often experienced this kind of indignation. Mother Teresa has been criticized by many Catholics and other Christians, because she prayed with Muslims and Hindus. Her critics are missing the most important point, SHE PRAYED. She gave witness to prayer to the true God by praying among those who do not believe. These people are not dumb. They knew that she was praying from her Christian beliefs, not their own. They observed her piety and her intensity as she prayed.I’ve spent time today on a thread called “Why a dead language?” and hearing the NO Mass called a “Babel Mass” is downright painful.
Silence is not the behaviour of the Saints. However, education is. St. John Baptiste de La Salle, the great French educator, who founded the Christian Brothers always taught his Brothers to correct through education. St. Vincent and Louise also corrected through education, so did St. Alberto Hurtado, the great Chilean youth minister.when I’m exposed to words that mock holiness, I seem to be of the mind that to keep silence is to give agreement.
Those who attack the Jews do not understand the covenant. The relationship between Israel and the Church is undebatable. God makes the Covenant with Israel. Jesus is hidden in the Covenant until his Incarnation. On the cross and Easter Sunday, what was hidden in the Covenant, is revealed by the Paschal Mystery. There are not two covenants, but one. In its old form, the Messiah is inferred and promised, but concealed. In its new form, that which was promised and concealed is delivered and revealed.Ditto re the “popular” attacks on Judaism and the Jewish people, always It seems I must speak up. We owe our Faith to God’s promises to the Jews. Who can doubt it?
Very well said, especially the final sentence - and I thank you.There is nothing wrong with stating the truth. St. Dominic and St. Ignatius were two great preachers and very straightforward. However, it was not their preaching that won them the crown of sanctity, it was their love of God and neighbor. They never hurt another when they preached. Ufortunately, we tend to hurt others instead of evangelize.
It is painful, because it is beneath contempt. The saints often experienced this kind of indignation. Mother Teresa has been criticized by many Catholics and other Christians, because she prayed with Muslims and Hindus. Her critics are missing the most important point, SHE PRAYED. She gave witness to prayer to the true God by praying among those who do not believe. These people are not dumb. They knew that she was praying from her Christian beliefs, not their own. They observed her piety and her intensity as she prayed.
Those who want to push the Tridentine liturgy or the NO in Latin and have to stoop to call the liturgy in the language of the people by such an unworthy name, are far from understanding what the Eucharist really means. The Eucharist is the ultimate sacrifice of love. Saints do not defend love through hateful or hurtful words. Whether the mass is celebrated in Latin or Yiddish, it is still the same Liturgy.
Silence is not the behaviour of the Saints. However, education is. St. John Baptiste de La Salle, the great French educator, who founded the Christian Brothers always taught his Brothers to correct through education. St. Vincent and Louise also corrected through education, so did St. Alberto Hurtado, the great Chilean youth minister.
Those who attack the Jews do not understand the covenant. The relationship between Israel and the Church is undebatable. God makes the Covenant with Israel. Jesus is hidden in the Covenant until his Incarnation. On the cross and Easter Sunday, what was hidden in the Covenant, is revealed by the Paschal Mystery. There are not two covenants, but one. In its old form, the Messiah is inferred and promised, but concealed. In its new form, that which was promised and concealed is delivered and revealed.
This is why Pope John Paul II called the Jews our older brothers and sisters in the faith. If they are our brothers and sisters, then they are part of our family. If that is the case, they are not completely separated from us, but something of the Church does exist in Judaism. How can they be our older brothers and sisters in the faith, share in the same covenant and not be part of the Mystical Body? The Mystical Body has Christ as its head, he who was hidden in the Covenant and who fulfills the Covenant.
This is the faith of the saints. This is the mystical vision that John Paul II had of the Church, which most people do not understand, because they are too focussed on altar girls and the fact that he did not stop the changes in liturgy to their liking, instead of learning from the man how to pray for the Church and how to see the Church through the eyes of prayer, not the media.
JR![]()
Dissent Poisons
"There is no such thing as being a good Catholic and being disobedient to the Holy Father. There is no such thing as being a good Catholic and being a dissident when it comes to faith and morals. There is no such thing as dissent from authentic and authoritative Church teaching. No such thing. Those who do that separate themselves from Christ and His body. They become dead members of the body of Christ.
I’ll tell you something, I used to contest with these people. I used to debate with them. I used to engage in apologetics with them. I don’t do it anymore and I’m going to tell you something. For the most part, I am more qualified to do it than you are, than most of you. I’ve got a doctorate, I’ve got five degrees in Theology and Philosophy. I know the material, but I don’t do it because it is an exercise in futility and I don’t want to drive myself ‘nuts,’ in plain English, and it doesn’t work.
Now, if I have to defend the faith, I’ll do that, but I do not engage in debates with people, especially with people who have lost the faith. There’s an axiom in metaphysics, ‘Things are received in the mode of the receiver.’ I say this over and over again. You get what you’re ready to get, you receive what you’re ready to receive."
Carole
Thank you. Very interesting perspective from Father C.Hi Catharina,
Here is part of an article I read from Fr. Corapi on this topic and it was very helpful to me. Maybe something will speak to you also.
Carole
Hi Catharina,
Here is part of an article I read from Fr. Corapi on this topic and it was very helpful to me. Maybe something will speak to you also.
Thank you so much for this. I love Fr. Corapi, I owe him more than I can repay for his role in my conversion to the Church, he was a vital link in that beautiful chain of events.Dissent Poisons
I agree with him to an extent, that we will never change the minds of those who are intent on believing what they want to believe. Until they are open to the Holy Spirit’s leading and not their own agendas, whatever side of the extreme they reside in, they cannot receive from Him any truth.
I do think however, that what some of these people state publicly here on CAF deserves to be addressed by those who can handle the grueling dialog, only for the sake of those who come to these threads wanting to learn the true faith of the Catholic Church, as the Magisterium teaches, and these poor souls need to understand that the dissenters are not the only voice in the Church, nor are they the true voice, their dissent places them outside of her truth.
I understand Catharina’s weariness, I have had to take a break from it as well, I don’t have the emotional stamina to do this battle of ideas without coming to exhaustion, but a little rest is good for the soul, then back to the battle.
This goes to Chewchoo’s post as well, Christ has gone through this opposition himself so we may fight the good fight and not lose hope.
So, we all have our parts to play in this great drama that goes on in time, the Saints have given us beautiful models of how to proceed in our missions, whatever God has called each of us to do.
Thank you for your post, I love your spiritand I love anything from Fr. Corapi.
![]()
The one thing that was a real draw for me to the Catholic Church was the beauty of it’s diversity, but all under one roof so to speak.I was just reading a post on the Liturgy thread. Some posters were condemning the upcoming Religious Education Congress in LA. Some people were attempting to discourage others from attending the congress. Everyone involved in discouraging others had a different reason. Some didn’t like the topics for discussion and other openly posted their negative feelings toward Cardinal Mahoney and so forth all in the name of tradition and fidelity to the Church.
As I was reading I was reminded of this thread. And I asked myself, how a saint would respond in such a situation.
…
This is the sanctity that the Church needs today, where differences are celebrated, errors are corrected through persuasion and preaching by those who have the qualifications to preach and the advantages of one group are celebrated by another, as Dominic did when his rule was declined and the exception was made for Francis.
Here we have Catherine, Dominic and Francis all great reformers and all great lovers of every human being, capable of correcting error through kind actions and words and helping the Church to correct itself without calling out her faults in public. This is sanctity appropriate for today.
JR![]()
Hopefully, all popes pray. But those who knew John Paul II say that he prayed 7-8 hours per day. This is over and above the mass and the Divine Office which all clerics must pray five times a day.stmaria said:I
Could you give some concrete examples of why Pope John Paul is called a “mystic”.
These thoughts should make us all take inventory of our own souls and whether we truly ‘get it’. I for one, am very far from fulfilling this mandate of Christ’s, as is I’m sure most of us who call ourselves Christian and Catholic, which is partly why the world is in such sad shape.In fact, as long as these other situations exist, how can we even speak of being reverent in front of the Blessed Sacrament? How does what we wear or not wear, pray in TLM or NO, sing Kumbaya or Gregorian Chant, etc compare with the need for saints on the streets of our cities? It is an affront to Christ to appear before him with all of the proper externals, if we have not attended to any of these sins and done anything to remedy them.
The greatest act of reverence that we can do for God is to love him in our brothers and sisters.
Then we shall stand before him and be worthy. Why can’t people get the example of someone like Mother Teresa or Alberto Hurtado.
Sainthood today is to embrace Christ in the Garden and wipe his face of the blood that he sweats caused by fear and pain.
JR![]()