C
CollegeCatholic
Guest
I’m tired of seeing BMW’s and Cadillacs in the parking lots of Catholic Churches.* (*not to be taken literally)
I’m tired of the Church being pushed around by the US Government. (Catholic Charities required to include birth control in their medical coverage)
I’m tired of God’s “material blessings” being at the forefront of homilies and Social Justice being moved into the background. I’m tired of the divide between inner-city parishes and suburbian parishes, Spanish parishes and English parishes.
While an entire theology has been developed around wealth/power/poverty in South America, the most powerful, richest nation in the world has little concern with the implications of the Gospel message on the “average-Joe/Jane” American. The average annual income in the US is $45,000 while the average income of East Timor (90% Catholic) is $400.
While we hold on to and justify our $50,000 SUV’s and mini-mansions, the figure of Christ is naked, cold, hungry, and sitting in jail. While we are clenching our extra tax dollars we are failing to stand for truth by clinging to our tax exempt status.
Why are we allowing politicians to say they are Catholic at home but atheist in office? Why do we feed this perverted, consumer/capitalist version of Christmas? Easter? Why do we buy several thousand dollar diamond rings when they have no basis in Church tradition? How can we call ourselves good Catholics when our Faith is only expressed in works of CONVENIENT love?
We are at a point in this country where the standard of living is so high that we feel like we are suffering financially to be there. Even the “modest livers” among us own such “essentials” as microwaves, carpeting, hot water heaters, cable tv, broadband internet, big screen tv’s, preprocessed/packaged foods, cd and dvd collections, cars with a value > $20,000, etc…
Even for those of us who DO “give,” are we the rich men with gold or the women with the copper pennies? Do we feel like we are giving copper pennies because our standard of living is putting us in debt?
Who on the forums recognizes how consumed we are by materialism/consumerism? Who doesn’t agree? Who sees “devout” Catholics fighting social programs that help the poor? (not including birth control and abortion type initiatives)
We need to do a better job of representing “Christian economics” and educating the Church in America. If I meet another hardcore, antiwelfare Republican “devout” Catholic I am going to puke. (I am non-Partisan) We are supposed to be a voice of truth and yet I see us “blaming the victim,” calling people lazy, and developing spending habits that are practically indiscernable from the rest of secular society.
We need to stop being American and start being Jesus to the world. An American life is no more valuable than a Mexican life (or Iraqi life) and as such we need to stop turning our back on the poor of the world (including many of our own parishoners) and start answering Christ’s command to love our neighbor as ourself and thus, love Christ by loving the least of these.
(This is all a major generalization done by me, an economically liberal, ideal minded College student who has been studying Blessed Teresa and Liberation Theology for the last year. Mind you, I am a moderate in terms of Liberation Theology and also MAJORLY support pacifism but also recognize the RARE possibility for just war. I am VERY opposed to capital punishment (in the first-world context) and consider you to be in grave sin if you support it, regardless of who did what (yes, even terrorism.))
What do you all have to say?
(I see this as a defense of “true” Catholic faith as apposed to what I see in general in the Church in America. If this is not ok in “Apologetics” please move it!)
I’m tired of the Church being pushed around by the US Government. (Catholic Charities required to include birth control in their medical coverage)
I’m tired of God’s “material blessings” being at the forefront of homilies and Social Justice being moved into the background. I’m tired of the divide between inner-city parishes and suburbian parishes, Spanish parishes and English parishes.
While an entire theology has been developed around wealth/power/poverty in South America, the most powerful, richest nation in the world has little concern with the implications of the Gospel message on the “average-Joe/Jane” American. The average annual income in the US is $45,000 while the average income of East Timor (90% Catholic) is $400.
While we hold on to and justify our $50,000 SUV’s and mini-mansions, the figure of Christ is naked, cold, hungry, and sitting in jail. While we are clenching our extra tax dollars we are failing to stand for truth by clinging to our tax exempt status.
Why are we allowing politicians to say they are Catholic at home but atheist in office? Why do we feed this perverted, consumer/capitalist version of Christmas? Easter? Why do we buy several thousand dollar diamond rings when they have no basis in Church tradition? How can we call ourselves good Catholics when our Faith is only expressed in works of CONVENIENT love?
We are at a point in this country where the standard of living is so high that we feel like we are suffering financially to be there. Even the “modest livers” among us own such “essentials” as microwaves, carpeting, hot water heaters, cable tv, broadband internet, big screen tv’s, preprocessed/packaged foods, cd and dvd collections, cars with a value > $20,000, etc…
Even for those of us who DO “give,” are we the rich men with gold or the women with the copper pennies? Do we feel like we are giving copper pennies because our standard of living is putting us in debt?
Who on the forums recognizes how consumed we are by materialism/consumerism? Who doesn’t agree? Who sees “devout” Catholics fighting social programs that help the poor? (not including birth control and abortion type initiatives)
We need to do a better job of representing “Christian economics” and educating the Church in America. If I meet another hardcore, antiwelfare Republican “devout” Catholic I am going to puke. (I am non-Partisan) We are supposed to be a voice of truth and yet I see us “blaming the victim,” calling people lazy, and developing spending habits that are practically indiscernable from the rest of secular society.
We need to stop being American and start being Jesus to the world. An American life is no more valuable than a Mexican life (or Iraqi life) and as such we need to stop turning our back on the poor of the world (including many of our own parishoners) and start answering Christ’s command to love our neighbor as ourself and thus, love Christ by loving the least of these.
(This is all a major generalization done by me, an economically liberal, ideal minded College student who has been studying Blessed Teresa and Liberation Theology for the last year. Mind you, I am a moderate in terms of Liberation Theology and also MAJORLY support pacifism but also recognize the RARE possibility for just war. I am VERY opposed to capital punishment (in the first-world context) and consider you to be in grave sin if you support it, regardless of who did what (yes, even terrorism.))
What do you all have to say?
(I see this as a defense of “true” Catholic faith as apposed to what I see in general in the Church in America. If this is not ok in “Apologetics” please move it!)