T
Tantum_ergo
Guest
It’s a pity that we have been (in the US) so infected by the idea that simplicity means cheap, ugly, and minimalist that we think something beautiful is ‘extravagant’ and ‘lavish’.
Catholicism is not ‘just’ simple. It is nuanced.
Yes, we are called to live ‘within our means’, but Joseph of Arimathea did not sell everything he had in order to ‘be simple and humble’. He used his wealth not only to help the poor through donations and providing work, he also used it to KEEP ON MAKING WEALTH so that he could keep on serving the poor.
And serving the poor doesn’t just mean feeding their bodies. Souls need to be fed too.
And finally, it is actually IMO disrespectful to the poor to insinuate or imply that ‘lavish cathedrals’ aren’t worthwhile to them, as though the poor are ONLY CONCERNED about having food. As though there is some big contest around, and any time somebody puts in a stained glass window in a church instead of cheap glass or even NO glass, that person is somehow 'taking food away from the poor by LAVISH non essential treatment!"
Catholicism is not ‘just’ simple. It is nuanced.
Yes, we are called to live ‘within our means’, but Joseph of Arimathea did not sell everything he had in order to ‘be simple and humble’. He used his wealth not only to help the poor through donations and providing work, he also used it to KEEP ON MAKING WEALTH so that he could keep on serving the poor.
And serving the poor doesn’t just mean feeding their bodies. Souls need to be fed too.
And finally, it is actually IMO disrespectful to the poor to insinuate or imply that ‘lavish cathedrals’ aren’t worthwhile to them, as though the poor are ONLY CONCERNED about having food. As though there is some big contest around, and any time somebody puts in a stained glass window in a church instead of cheap glass or even NO glass, that person is somehow 'taking food away from the poor by LAVISH non essential treatment!"