Hey, could you double-space your paragraphs, and maybe make them shorter? It sure would help those of us older folks with bad eyes
The truth is that the Church is actually growing in the U.S. and most of the world. It is for sure in decline among Western European cultures. I think a lot of that has to do with the Church’s inability to capture the hearts and imaginations of people who have lost a sense of sacrifice or suffering. Rich white Western Europeans, including Canadians and Americans have trouble making sense of Jesus on the cross. We have also lost the sense of the transcendent.
I would agree with you here. Too many of us have bought into the naturalistic materialistic Enlightenment ideas which allow us to conceive of ourselves as the only prime movers, with no obligations to a God Whose existence we doubt or ignore.
I think another issue at hand is that very much of the Western European Church has been co-opted by Evangelical Fundamentalists. Many Catholics have more in common with Focus on the Family then they do with Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Protestantism *is *the root of the so-called Enlightenment (I’ve heard it called the Endarkenment…).
We struggle with the sacramental world view. Most Catholics today don’t have even a basic understanding of what a sacramental world view would look like. Scrupulous attendance at Mass and Reconciliation is hardly a guarantee of the reception of grace. As a matter of fact, scrupulosity can be a bar against grace.
Scrupulosity is not in and of itself a bar against grace, just the wrong view of the sacraments. And I would argue that scrupulous attendance of both sacraments would result in reception of grace; even imperfect contrition suffices for the entry of grace.
I seem to recall Bishop Sheen saying that people receiving the sacraments would either turn away from their sin or from the sacraments, so I can’t really agree with what you are saying here.
Somehow our Church has become overly identified with conservatism. Being conservative is obviously not a bad thing. However, when it is accompanied with a disregard for the liberal arts it turns legalistic and lacks the pastoral heart. I am convinced that the suspicion that many people have toward Catholic Social Teaching is rooted in this shift to the Evangelical Fundamentalism.
For me, the suspicion I have towards those who claim to practice Catholic social teaching is rooted in what I have seen of them–they are much more socialistic than they are Catholic. They are much more interested in the worldly benefits of being socially just than they are in helping the poor.
This is not to say that all Catholics who help the poor strike me that way. I know several (only several because I live in the Bible Belt and don’t know all that many altogether) Catholics who are very involved in helping the poor in many different ways; I am here speaking only of those Catholics who consider themselves “involved in social justice” as opposed to helping those in need. It’s very hard to describe the difference, but to me, one of the prime indicators is that the p&sj folks want to change the system, to somehow acquire “justice,” and are not focused on helping *individual people *in need. They also concentrate on material aid to the exclusion of the spiritual, and use techniques which I see as being manipulative.
So many people are motivated by Kantian Morality. “Just give me the right answer and I’ll do what you tell me to do”. There is scant little ability to engage in the interior dimension in our lives today.
One of the things that I have noticed since returning to the Church about 15 years ago is that serious Catholics tend not to be really overt about it. I have been in a roomful of Catholics and felt that none were serious Catholics, but then upon getting to know them better, I find that many of them are really serious about their faith. They really want to progress in the spiritual life.
A lot of times the reason however, they lack the resources to progress, and then in discouragement, they ask the most basic question they can: What should I do?
I would also say that few Catholics today are sufficiently catechized at any point in their lives. This is a problem that I believe should be taken up by the hierarchy and seriously considered.
This is tragic. The sacramental and mystical dimension of Catholicism is one of our greatest gifts we have to offer the world. Fortunately the sacramental vision is alive and well in Africa, Asia and especially Latin America; all places where the Church is growing in leaps and bounds. This is also why immigration into this country is truly a gift. We are repopulating our country with Catholic families that understand the salvific nature of suffering and sacrifice.
The Church is doing well in Africa, but protestant missionaries and secularism are making headway in South America. Many of those who immigrate here do not participate in the sacraments and have no connection to the church where they live. This is related to what I said above about the lack of catechesis above.
Now of course there is the other side of the argument. It is true; there is a very active secular social justice group in our Church too. This group has also lost its ability to be transformed by suffering and sacrafice. For them, the Church has become a spiritless social service agency that is over identified with liberalism.
Precisely. And how can the Church deal with people who are just using their apparent Catholicism as a cloak?
Our problem is how do we hold both?
What do you mean by this?
I still defend CCHD however. My experience with CCHD has been one of transformation; a transformation that is marked by Jesus on the Cross. Through my work with CCHD, I have come to understand what it means to suffer and to sacrifice through my encounters with the people whose lives have been touched by the efforts of CCHD. CCHD is well founded in the Sacred Heart of Jesus. The mission of CCHD is carried out by talented and passionate people who love God. I have heard it said that “sometimes the road to hell can be paved by good intentions”. This is true. But equally true is the idea that good intentions can also pave the way to salvation through Jesus Christ. I think the latter journey is true for many of those treading down the road that CCHD takes.
Could you describe in a very general way what the nature of your experience with CCHD was? As far as I can tell, it is simply a sort of clearinghouse for grants.