K
Keith_Strohm
Guest
No, but tongues and the other charismata are a part of written and oral Tradition in the Church–not made up out of whole cloth.The Vatican has no authoritative views estbalished for UFOs, crop circles, or the Sedona Vortexes. That does not mean they can be unilaterally assimilated into Catholic practice because some folks find merit in them.
So, you don’t see how a manifestation of the Spirit mentioned in scripture has anything to do with manifestations of the Spirit ocurring in 2006? We should just observe this contemporary manifestation without any reference to the early Church in which this manifestation previously occured?Nonsense. The thread is about “tongues” in the Anglo-American charismatic movement. That the Corinthians of Paul’s time did or didn’t overdo it has nothing to with charismatics folks in the US in 2006 claiming God is speaking through them on a weekly basis.
That doesn’t make any sense.
Yet in the case of many Marian apparitions, the Church allowed (and sometimes even encouraged) pilgrimages and devotions before any definitive ruling was made.The Church requires positive evidence and authoritative evaluation of spiritual manifestations and miraculous occurances. If people in significant numbers are claiming that God is directly causing them to exhibit glossolalia, its not different than any other spiritual manifestation, and it is not unreasonable to expect the Church to formally investigate and judge the claim.
In any given parish in any given Diocese healings, prophetic words, and miraculous occurrences are happening. The Church (full on Vatican investigation) can’t investigate and rule on each and every one of them. They need to be discerned carefully by the pastor (and those to whom he has delegated some of his pastoral duties).
I’m not suggesting that we just accept somebody’s word that he has a gift of healing or prophecy–and I believe that is one of the issues with the Charismatic Movement. I’m not necessarily a fan of the CM.
They may not show up during Sunday mass, but chances are they are there in your parish. I know you are focusing on tongues here, but I also get the feeling that you reject the notion that charisms exist at all–that God chooses to use His people in miraculous ways to accomplish His work of Salvation.As for other “charisms”, if someone shows up at Sunday Mass and starts making prophecies or claims to be a miraculous healer, I’ll be on his case too.
However, church teaching is clear that charisms (like healing, propecy, encouragement, etc) *do *exist, *are *received at Baptism, and *are *an indispensible part of the Christian life. If you are baptized, God has given you charismata.
To deny that is to deny Church teaching.
I’m not necessarily in disagreement with you here. I have some reservations about the Charismatic Movement myself. I’m just not ready to throw out the charisms–including tongues–just because of my issues with a particular group.Frankly, I think the charismatic movement is a huge step backwards for the Church. What began some years ago as in the desire for some to exhibit more enthusiam in their devotion has developed into a ideologic movement within the Church drawing much of its guidance from Protestant Fundamentalism. Couple this with the wide-spread liturgical break-downs and fuzzy theology, and we have a recipe for disaster in the American Church.
Keith