S
St_Francis
Guest
That’s not a curse—that’s terrificI think you are hitting on an important issue. One of the great things about the Roman Catholic Church is the fact that we have perhaps the richest academic tradition as any religious or non-religious tradition in the world. Our Tradition, which includes the Sacraments, hospitals, schools, religious vocations and so on, has produced some of the best thinkers and prayers the world has ever know and done so for a very long time. It is both as you seem to be pointing to a blessing and in some way a curse.
The curse part is that one could study this most beautiful Tradition’s academic and spiritual deposits for an entire life time and only scratch the surface.
I still don’t think that Catholicism is so complicated that you need a PhD in order to figure out if your pastor is preaching Catholicism or something else. (I have had pastors like that—they *do *exist!.)But the good news is that when we study our wonderful religion it almost always raises one’s mind and heart to God. Just like the parable of the land owner who goes out and hires people to work in his field and pays the one who worked all day the same as the one who worked only an hour; it doesn’t matter when or where you start to study our religion, just start and it will pay.
I didn’t say that they were dense or unintelligible. I said they were ambiguous and hard to understand in light of tradition, and that if someone who doesn’t even know tradition read them, they would not get Catholic teaching out of them.I don’t think the documents of V2 are unnecessarily dense or unintelligible.
No, I think that is a misunderstanding. There is writing clearly about things which are hard to understand, and there is writing ambiguously. The two are different, and there is no excuse for bad writing from people who are supposed to be teaching and who have as much education as those at the Council had.I think they reflect the fact that being Catholic is not easy.
To me, there is a certain basic amount that a Catholic needs to start off with, but no one will ever fully understand these mysteries you cite, and most of that understanding will come through prayer and meditation.It should be a challenge to understand our faith because we are ultimately trying to understand the mystery of all that it means that Jesus came as equally human and divine, He was born of a Virgin, He died and was raised again. This kind of learning takes lots of study and lots of prayer.
OK, could you please start talking plain English instead of saying things like “taught outside a relational environment” and “catechetical leader”?One of the other things that I think is wonderful about our tradition is that it is best studied in groups. Catholicism is the most relational religion in the world. That is because our Church is Incarnational and Trinitarian.
What that means is that our Church, being Incarnational reflects that Jesus came as a person with a real body and Jesus is mediated through our bodies’ senses and our minds. But we are also Trinitarian which means that things are best done in relationship. Our Church reflects these two principles in all we do, including catechesis and evangelization.
The teaching of the Church is not something that really can be taught or understood in isolation or outside of a relational environment. We need each other to help us understand the meaning. That’s what priests, catechetical leaders, professors and your parish are for. Our parishes are much more than places to receive the Sacraments as important and central as that is. They are also places of learning and questions.
We cannot learn Catholicism in isolation. That is good news, because it reflects the fact that God is Love and love is what is shared at our parishes.
The problem is that the ambiguity of the V2 documents has filtered down to the poor laity —who are supposed to be taught—either totally wrong or else watered down to a slender shadow of Catholic truth. My children learned the Baltimore Catechism, and they knew more than some of their CCD teachers—I’m not bragging here, just stating a fact—and way, way more than almost all the students in their CCD classes. And I saw the books they were using in those classes, and could easily see the reason for that. There’s so little Catholic substance in the catechetical materials because potential relational aspects of the catechumens’ temporal lives were over-emphasized.