U.S. Catholicism: Decline and Fall

  • Thread starter Thread starter Lamentabili
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
You lost me now. Help!
JR – poor attempt at a joke. I was drawing from the story in the gospels where St. Peter tries to walk on water. He’s OK when he looks on Christ. When his attention is drawn to the storm he begins to sink. I think people who become obsessed with statistics (Mass attendance etc.) is similar to St. Peter looking at the raging storm, instead of keeping his eyes on Christ. The storm may be real; but Christ is more real.

MonFrere
 
With all due respect to Fr. Corapi, because I do like him a lot as a person, I don’t always agree with him on certain points. One of those that we disagree on is what I perceive as a very negative vision of Catholics. I’m not sure I can actually explain it; but I’ll try.

Sometimes I feel that his vision of Catholics is pessimistic. I think that’s what I’m trying to say. And yet, I don’t think that he’s a pessimist. I’ve seen him in interviews, when he’s not preaching. He’s much more relaxed and his statements about humanity are very hopeful and he has a joy about him that does not always come across when he’s preaching. I’ve often wondered if his audience really gets what he has to offer. He’s not a touch cookie, as he appears in his preaching. He’s very gentle and very funny. He does believe in the posibilities for humanity. In other words, in his interviews he does not come across as one who believes that humanity is lost and doomed. He comes across as a man who truly believes that humanity is good at the core.

I too beleive that most Catholics are good people, for that matter, most human beings are good people. I have a lot of hope for humanity. I believe that we’re going through a very rough period in human history and that we’re not addressing the spiritual needs of people. But people do want to find God.

Perhaps this is why people run to all kinds of crazy fads within the Church and beyond the Church. As Paul and Augustine would say, the unknown God for whom they are looking is right in front of them; they can’t see him and we’re not doing what needs to be done to help them. I think we’re trying; but what we’re trying is not working. We Catholics have a bad habit, if you can call it a bad habit. We try to be too cautious all the time. Everything has to be planned, predictable, organized, and not much left to God. It’s almost as if we have to make sure that we’re in control all the time.

One of the qualities that drew me into the study of the mystics was their uncanny spontaneity. God pointed to something and they jumped over the cliff, totally confident in God’s care and providence. We have to learn to trust in God’s love and providence again. Maybe this is what modern man is looking for and we, Catholcis, are not providing it. We’re not providing good spirituality. What made the mystics holy was their ability to see God in all things, even when the rest of the world saw only the dark side. They saw sin, human weakness, even natural events as opportunities to discover God. They used them to preach and teach. But they did not preach and teach messages of gloom and doom. Instead, they preached how to find God.

One of the best works on this very topic was written by Teresa of Avila, The Way of Perfection. It’s very positive. She’s not focussing on human weakness. She assumes that we all know this and that we have experienced to some degree. She focusses on God’s invitation to man to be holy. She lays out a road map for man to follow in response to God’s call. Maybe that’s what we need to do for people today, what Teresa did for people in her time. We need to give people road maps to holiness.

These are just random thoughts of mine. They may be all wrong. But I don’t think so.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
I love Fr Corapi but I do agree with you…but I think he is speaking from his own perspective as a former drug addict…I am sure he reaches a lot of people that have weathered the same types of things he has, but my favorite is Fr Groeschel, who is always more upbeat

However, I think Fr Corapi comes to afflict the comfortable, and sometimes we need this too

I think he does missions very often and part of it might be a swift kick into touch type message…He often laughs about preaching with his car engine running, and this is what we see when we watch his videos…He is never afraid to speak about sin

However Fr Groeschel approaches things much as you do because his training and life experiences are very akin to yours

But if you were down in the trenches Fr Corapi would take a bullet for anyone in a heartbeat…he is a holy man
 
I’m not at all familar with Leon J. Podles, but from what I read on his website, he seems very critical of the Catholic Church and its leaders.

Here’s this gem :ehh: that Podles wrote:
John Paul II, for all his virtues, was a lousy judge of character. His so-called priest friends in the chancery in Cracow betrayed him to the secret police. John Paul II recommended the abuser Maciel as a guide to youth. John Paul II refused personal appeals from a cardinal to make a statement about an abuser. Should a person whose work in the Church is administration and failed so badly in key issues be canonized?
With regard to the “U.S. Catholicism: Decline and Fall” article, I am not sure what Podles’ point in writing it is.

This author just seems too negative about the Catholic Church for me to listen to him.

Sure the Catholic Church in the United States has had and will have problems in the future, but wringing one’s hands and offering no solutions to any of them is not an answer.

I am not sure what direction Podles is going with the final two paragraphs; it seems like he admires conservative Protestantism more.

All I know is this type of negativity he is expressing is not constructive and neither helps the Catholic Church nor its members.
Bishops are careerists and balance their need to impress the Vatican with their orthodoxy against the reality that most of the members of the Catholic Church in the United States, including the members who supposedly transmit traditional teaching, do not accept that teaching. These are the people who pay the bills and give the Catholic Church the illusion that it has an influence in the public sphere.
Such a compromise with worldliness does not even maintain Catholic numbers.
If the Catholic Church is so meaningless, why bother with it? Why get up on Sunday morning to hear third-rate music and intellectual pablum? If you take the Gospel seriously, you are more to end up in a conservative Protestant church which, for all its limitations, has not surrendered, on some key issues that affect daily life, to the world.
🤷 Hardly a defense of the One True Faith, in my opinion.
 
I love Fr Corapi but I do agree with you…but I think he is speaking from his own perspective as a former drug addict…I am sure he reaches a lot of people that have weathered the same types of things he has, but my favorite is Fr Groeschel, who is always more upbeat

However, I think Fr Corapi comes to afflict the comfortable, and sometimes we need this too

I think he does missions very often and part of it might be a swift kick into touch type message…He often laughs about preaching with his car engine running, and this is what we see when we watch his videos…He is never afraid to speak about sin

However Fr Groeschel approaches things much as you do because his training and life experiences are very akin to yours

But if you were down in the trenches Fr Corapi would take a bullet for anyone in a heartbeat…he is a holy man
I agree 100% with everything that you have said about Fr. Corapi. I too believe that he’s a holy man and uses the “kick in the breaches method”. You’re right, Benedict and I do come from the Franciscan Schola, which is a little more tempered. I guess it’s a style that we inherited from our founder. Both styles have their place and time. There are many different kinds of people out there. For some, the gentle Franciscan method seems too soft and they walk away. They are looking for something that will rattle them a little. In comes a Fr. Corapi. For others, the Franciscan method of spirituality is just what they’re looking for: positive and gentle.

The important thing is not to overlook the gifts of the Holy Spirit. There are many gifts that he gives to the Church through different pastoral approaches and different spiritualities. We have to make these available to people.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
I agree 100% with everything that you have said about Fr. Corapi. I too believe that he’s a holy man and uses the “kick in the breaches method”. You’re right, Benedict and I do come from the Franciscan Schola, which is a little more tempered. I guess it’s a style that we inherited from our founder. Both styles have their place and time. There are many different kinds of people out there. For some, the gentle Franciscan method seems too soft and they walk away. They are looking for something that will rattle them a little. In comes a Fr. Corapi. For others, the Franciscan method of spirituality is just what they’re looking for: positive and gentle.

The important thing is not to overlook the gifts of the Holy Spirit. There are many gifts that he gives to the Church through different pastoral approaches and different spiritualities. We have to make these available to people.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
You know Fr Corapi had such a seamy side of life experience…He really saw evil up close and personal…He once said if you don’t believe in Satan you should see the world of drugs

He once saw a witch or a Satan worshiper come to curse a load of drugs, possibly cocaine…He wanted it to cause havoc and misery and to damn people…It was not to cure them of drugs, but to do as much damage with them as possible

I think when you have lived with the worst of humanity it leaves a mark on your psyche

He once helped a nun escape from a brothel

I think we should be glad he has the moral courage to fight back in the only way he knows how, and he is a macho person, so I suspect he would have been more like St Peter than St Francis…we all seem to click with a certain style of Saint, I guess that is why there are so many
 
Father Corapi is an absolutist. His dotrinaire approach to preaching draws a clear distinction between light and darkness. He sees, as I do, that the many gray areas which now exist in our culture are but veiled darknesses wherein many are deceived. Also, Father Corapi recognizes that we face a real enemy, and he is not ashamed to name him Satan. This, in itself, alienates those who wish to relegate that personification of evil to the realm of mythology. I will always remember a certain caller to Father Groeschel’s program on EWTN who seemed outraged that Father Corapi was so definitive and open in his identification of the Devil, Satan, as being the genuine, extant enemy of mankind. Without hesitation, Father Groeschel concurred with Father Corapi and elaborated on the topic. It was wonderful to observe two great Catholic witnesses, two very different men, standing on the same solid doctrinal ground like true brothers in Christ.
 
I do believe the Church WILL SURVIVE in spite of the current decline we all see. Christ said that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against His church and that He will be with us always and that HE would send the Holy Spirit to guide us. I am also aware of just enough history to know that the Church has come through other tough times some, I think, may be tougher than now.

Christ also talked about the vine and its branches and the need for pruning to keep the vine healthy and growing. He also talked about the rejection His apostles would face and that not everyone would welcome Christ’s message of Christ being THE way, THE truth, and THE life and no one comes to the Father except through Christ.

It is hard for me to understand that some (many?) nice people may end in Hell because they reject Christ. The FIRST commandment Christ gave us is to LOVE GOD. The SECOND is to love neighbor. A human can be nice without LOVING GOD. Their fate is between them and Christ. I am called to follow Christ as best I can, to set the best example I can, and to do my best to encourage others to remain true to Christ, and to consider Him if they have not. I support Catholic Communications is several ways.

I think Father Corapi is a wonderful priest. I do not get the impression at all that he is pessimistic about Catholics. I think he is warning us, who will listen, to always be on guard and not allow ourselves to slip away by the lure of this materialistic word of greed, sex, and drugs. Self-centeredness is the opposite of the love that Christ would have us accept from Him and pass on to those in our lives. I think Father Corapi is calling us to not be complacent, to pay attention, and act out our faith in Christ in ways our personal talents allow us. That’s not waiting around for someone to do it.

I think DOShea at post #117 makes many excellent points. I do not disagree with his view in any material way. I personally think that those who try to blame Vatican II (DOSHEA does not) for the decline are trying to blame that which they want to reject. Rather, I think the materialistic lure of this post WW II modern world is just too great for many to want to accept the 2,000 year old (timeless) message of “I am THE way” Christ, the LIVING SON OF GOD, gave us.

Coming on the heels of two world wars in Europe, then the center of Christianity (if Christianity is our protector then why two world wars?), and the quantum leap in worldly pleasures – TV, cars, jet travel, the Pill, etc., - I think many were ready to try something different for their personal approach to life. I recall hearing about the “I, Me Generation” which is the opposite of loving service to others that Christ expects. New Age and New Thought are totally devoid of Christ and therefore are NOT THE WAY. But it was new and different and why not try it?

I think also that everything got very expensive quickly. The last car I bought cost 150% more than the first house I bought. In 40 years things got to be 10 times more expensive. Even Catholic school. So I wonder whether the relatively soft voice of today’s Church is in FEAR of losing the voluntary financial support it needs to stay open? It is so easy to strike back at a tough clear message by simply stopping to come to church and contributing to its support.

Opposite this fear of losing financial support stands Pope John Paul II, and now Pope Benedict XVI, and a number of individual Bishops, priests and religious. Yet, has anyone seen their encyclicals available in our parish churches with an offer to meet and discuss the Popes’ teachings? I also worry about the USCCB and the various votes that do not get near unanimous support. United we stand and divided we fall. Divide and conquer.

So, what to do? Conspire to commit right.

Find a priest, or several, and a Bishop, or several, and encourage them to lead us, to speak out for the clear way of Christ. My pastor, Father Michael O’Reilly, gave a wonderful homily today and clearly explained that if we truly believe that Christ does love us and that He has loved us FIRST, then we would find it much easier to respond and love others as we should and to avoid sin, and to be able to accept God’s forgiveness in Confession. He said it slowly, lovingly, sincerely, and was most persausive.

I sense in America that the 40 year experiment of trying something other than Christ may be coming to an end because folks see that life doesn’t work well without Christ. We have a near nationwide program of “Catholics Coming Home” and, in the past month, there have been many powerful ads on major TV stations. Hope springs eternal. Christ is with us always. The gates of Hell shall not prevail.
 
Father Corapi is an absolutist. His dotrinaire approach to preaching draws a clear distinction between light and darkness. He sees, as I do, that the many gray areas which now exist in our culture are but veiled darknesses wherein many are deceived. Also, Father Corapi recognizes that we face a real enemy, and he is not ashamed to name him Satan. This, in itself, alienates those who wish to relegate that personification of evil to the realm of mythology. I will always remember a certain caller to Father Groeschel’s program on EWTN who seemed outraged that Father Corapi was so definitive and open in his identification of the Devil, Satan, as being the genuine, extant enemy of mankind. Without hesitation, Father Groeschel concurred with Father Corapi and elaborated on the topic. It was wonderful to observe two great Catholic witnesses, two very different men, standing on the same solid doctrinal ground like true brothers in Christ.
The point that you’re making is very important. There may be different in styles because we come from different spiritual traditions. But different spiritual traditions does not mean two sets of truths. That would be insane and chaotic.

As many have said, Fr. Corapi comes from a very different background and he uses his experience. This is good. I think the difference between Fr. Corapi and the Franciscans has to do not with doctrine, we are united on that. The difference has to to with founders.

Someone mentioned that Fr. Corapi was masculine as opposed to St. Francis. I’m not sure if that is an accurate portrayal of the two men. I would say that the difference between the two men is that they are products of their times. The same is true of the difference between the Franciscan family and the SOLT family. The SOLT is a very young society. Their mission is very similar to that of the Franciscans, but their style is much more 20th century. Their founder is a very different kind of person. He was not as charismatic as a Francis, Benedict, Teresa of Avila, Teresa of Calcutta or Vincent de Paul, just a few examples.

This has served them well, I’m referring to the SOLT. Each member of the Society has more room to use his or her style. This is not the case with communities who have had very charismatic founders. These communities have been shaped to follow the Gospel in the footsteps of their founders.

So when you see a Franciscan, such as the Missionaries of the Eternal Word or a Fr. Benedict and others, they have that genteel manner of speaking the same truths that a Fr. Corapi preaches in a more energetic manner. That genteel manner comes down from the founder. These men have a commission to be like the founder, speak like him, act like him, do things his way and try as hard as they can not to divert too much from his style and his vision.

But you are very right, if you put a Franciscan (any one of us) and Fr. Corapi in the same room, we’re going to tell you the same things about sin and virtue. We’ll just say it differently. There is a brotherhood among us that is based on faith. We share the one faith.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
I think DOShea at post #117 makes many excellent points. I do not disagree with his view in any material way. I personally think that those who try to blame Vatican II (DOSHEA does not) for the decline are trying to blame that which they want to reject. Rather, I think the materialistic lure of this post WW II modern world is just too great for many to want to accept the 2,000 year old (timeless) message of “I am THE way” Christ, the LIVING SON OF GOD, gave us.

I liked everything that you wrote. But I isolated this paragraph because it really tells a mouthful of truth. I just finished writing a reflection for our novices on the origins of the Franciscan family. As I was writing it, I realized that there is so much happening today that is not new, even though it may seem that way to us.

I’ll just share a piece of what I wrote just to share.

*Francis’ conversion is very important in Church history, because he was the very first mendicant to remain faithful to the Church and around him grew a family of mendicants that has been faithful to the Church for 800 years. The mendicant movement of his time took a turn toward heresy. They were very aware that the Church was in deep moral trouble. The mendicants were also aware of the corruption inside the Church. Abuse of power was rampant. Sexual abuse, contrary to popular media, is not new. It was all over the Church, especially among secular priests. Many monasteries had fallen under the influence of the aristocracy and the monks were subject to their whims, because they fed the monasteries. The papacy and the monarchs were strange bedfellows. The faith was under attack by the Muslims from all sides. But the same Muslims also threatened the economy and political infrastructure of the European monarchies. So the popes and the kings struck up deals to fight together. These deals cost the Church dearly.

Often, after a victory over the Saracens, as they were called, the monarchs did not want to return control to the Church, but wanted to submit the clergy, especially the bishops. The ordination of many bishops was illicit. Often, they were members of royal houses that put pressure on the papacy to ordain them. These ordinations were valid, because they were ordained by valid bishops and popes. But historians question whether they were legal, since some of them were under duress.

The long and the short of it was that the mendicants, also known as penitents, began to speak against the Church. They often took the position that the bishops and the pope were not to be obeyed, because they were sinners. In a strange kind of way, they set themselves up as arbiters of what was right and wrong in the Church. They created what we would call a parallel Magisterium or a teaching authority all their own.

What made Francis very unique was that he saw all the weaknesses in the Church, but he was able to see that the grace of God does not depend on the holiness of men and is not impaired by the sinfulness of men. God’s grace is part of his omnipotence. Therefore, God would be found within the Church and her teachings. Francis insisted on obedience to the local bishops and the papacy, regardless of how sinful they were. He also insisted on preaching the Gospel, rather than wasting time in debates against sinful clerics. This made him very attractive to the people of his time. It was refreshing to see a mendicant penitent who was not into the negatives, but preached conversion and repentance to all, not just to the clergy, as other penitential mendicants did.

He was also very refreshing, because he never said that he was right. He always relied on scripture, the Incarnation and the Trinity. These realities could not be wrong. If one built his life around these truths, then one would be converted to Jesus and would bring others along with him. In this way, he reformed the Church of his time and he did it from the bottom up. His efforts gave birth to three new families in the Church: friars, nuns and seculars, the three Franciscan orders. From among these families there cam great saints who rose to positions of great influence in the Church. Many even became popes*.

These evils were attacks from the evil one against the Church. But they are not new. If we take away the dates, one would almost say that it sounds like modern history. The point is that the Church has been fighting sin and the evil one since its birth. She will continue to do so. And each time that she engages, she will come out victorious. Then follows the next battle. I believe that there will never be a resting place until Christ comes again.

Therefore, we should not despair, panic or believe that we will not come out of this. We will. But we will engage in another battle similar to the same. There are only so many tricks that the devil can use. Let’s remember, evil is not gifted with wisdom. Therefore, he does not have the power to be very creative. It’s always the same old attacks with a new coat of paint. These attacks from the evil one did not begin at Vatican II, nor will they end by deleting Vatican II from history.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
What about just get behind someone like Fr Corapi let him lead us and play the team game without the - I don’t agree with everything he says or hes too tough or whatever. United we stand divided we fall.

What do they say-
There’s no me or I in a team.

When I played sport as a kid you played by the coaches decisions whether you agreed with them or not.
 
BR. JR., you said, “I believe that there will never be a resting place until Christ comes again”. There is so much truth wrapped in that statement. It depicts the human condition and the constant struggle between good and evil very beautifully, and very simply. My question to you, BR. JR., is this: Can we find refuge from this strife by attending mass, or can evil even penetrate this holy sanctuary?
 
What about just get behind someone like Fr Corapi let him lead us and play the team game without the - I don’t agree with everything he says or hes too tough or whatever. United we stand divided we fall.

What do they say-
There’s no me or I in a team.

When I played sport as a kid you played by the coaches decisions whether you agreed with them or not.
I disagree about “wether you agreed with them or not”. This thinking has led to the down fall of the Catholic Church!

What happens if they are in favor of Liturgical innovations to the Mass? or stand by Fr. Jenkins of Notre Dame, or Fr. Phleger? Would you stand by them?

Does St. Catherine of Siena come to mind?
 
The point that you’re making is very important. There may be different in styles because we come from different spiritual traditions. But different spiritual traditions does not mean two sets of truths. That would be insane and chaotic.

As many have said, Fr. Corapi comes from a very different background and he uses his experience. This is good. I think the difference between Fr. Corapi and the Franciscans has to do not with doctrine, we are united on that. The difference has to to with founders.

Someone mentioned that Fr. Corapi was masculine as opposed to St. Francis. I’m not sure if that is an accurate portrayal of the two men. I would say that the difference between the two men is that they are products of their times. The same is true of the difference between the Franciscan family and the SOLT family. The SOLT is a very young society. Their mission is very similar to that of the Franciscans, but their style is much more 20th century. Their founder is a very different kind of person. He was not as charismatic as a Francis, Benedict, Teresa of Avila, Teresa of Calcutta or Vincent de Paul, just a few examples.

This has served them well, I’m referring to the SOLT. Each member of the Society has more room to use his or her style. This is not the case with communities who have had very charismatic founders. These communities have been shaped to follow the Gospel in the footsteps of their founders.

So when you see a Franciscan, such as the Missionaries of the Eternal Word or a Fr. Benedict and others, they have that genteel manner of speaking the same truths that a Fr. Corapi preaches in a more energetic manner. That genteel manner comes down from the founder. These men have a commission to be like the founder, speak like him, act like him, do things his way and try as hard as they can not to divert too much from his style and his vision.

But you are very right, if you put a Franciscan (any one of us) and Fr. Corapi in the same room, we’re going to tell you the same things about sin and virtue. We’ll just say it differently. There is a brotherhood among us that is based on faith. We share the one faith.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
I said macho Br JR…I see Fr Corpai as a sportsman…he hunts. he boxed, he was a Green Beret…He has the characteristics of someone who was sort of a physical type of guy…someone men would seek out for a Friday night boxing match type evening, or to go hunting with

I don’t see Fr Groeschel, or you, or St Francis, doing this type of thing…I would be more inclined to think you would go to a museum ,or an art gallery, or a botanical garden

I am not trying to say either style is wrong just different…
 
Br JR when you speak of going back to find our way,and balance what exactly do you mean

I don’t think you are speaking of doing everything as it was done pre-Vatican II…Can you elaborate a bit on what it is we need to recapture that we have lost…How would it be implemented? I realize you are not the Pope, but I think you might have a direction we need to retrace in mind
 
I disagree about “wether you agreed with them or not”. This thinking has led to the down fall of the Catholic Church!

What happens if they are in favor of Liturgical innovations to the Mass? or stand by Fr. Jenkins of Notre Dame, or Fr. Phleger? Would you stand by them?

Does St. Catherine of Siena come to mind?
People who don’t play the team game finish up in the comentary box they just blabber on while no one really listens and just plays the game.
 
People who don’t play the team game finish up in the comentary box they just blabber on while no one really listens and just plays the game.
Mother Angelica was not a team player! She dug her heels in against Cardnial Mahoney and the liberals, progressives, modernists and feminists! She led the way for those who minds were being polluted by modernists Bishops and Priests.

She stood up for Tradition!!! While others did not!
 
It is interesting to note that Father Flanagan, Founder of SOLT, received the mystical catalyst for his calling during a meeting in Detroit with Venerable Solanus Casey, a Franciscan. He inspired Father Flanagan by quoting Simeon, “Now you can dismiss your servent, Lord, according to your words, for my eyes have seen the gift that you you have promised, there before all people.” There may be variety, but there is always intersection, this is what distinguishes what is true from what is heretical.
 
Mother Angelica was not a team player! She dug her heels in against Cardnial Mahoney and the liberals, progressives, modernists and feminists! She led the way for those who minds were being polluted by modernists Bishops and Priests.

She stood up for Tradition!!! While others did not!
This thread has morphed into a discussion on STYLES OF LEADERSHIP. I think one “style” is that of being a team player. Mother Angelica has done a wonderful job of assembling a team of Catholic clergy and laity to speak to the fullness that’s found in the Catholic faith. Not only religiously; but culturally as well.

IMO - what we find in the Church today is the refusal for many to be team players. Far too many people form their own personal view of what is the “right way” – and any who doesn’t believe exactly according to that way is deficient. How can anyone assemble a team this way? We are ALL DEFICIENT and a real leader will bring out our best and not our worst – witness Jesus and his chosen disciples! If anyone was a team player it was Jesus. Jesus has more faith in us than we have of ourselves. This is wonderfully reflected in this quote by Mother Theresa.
I know God will not give me anything I can’t handle. I just wish that He didn’t trust me so much. Mother Teresa
You decide to become part of God’s team and He will make you honor you mightily; maybe even more than you would wish.

Being a team player is what will make you the most effective agent for the Kingdom of God. What Mother Angelica did with EWTN is a tremendous testimony to team effort. What this team could do as separate individuals can’t be compared to what they did as a team.

Michelangelo’s famous painting on the Sistine Chapel has the damned going to hell individually – but those going to heaven and helping each other reach heavenward. That is a great lesson in theology.

MonFrere
 
I said macho Br JR…I see Fr Corpai as a sportsman…he hunts. he boxed, he was a Green Beret…He has the characteristics of someone who was sort of a physical type of guy…someone men would seek out for a Friday night boxing match type evening, or to go hunting with

I don’t see Fr Groeschel, or you, or St Francis, doing this type of thing…I would be more inclined to think you would go to a museum ,or an art gallery, or a botanical garden

I am not trying to say either style is wrong just different…
While I agree with the spirit of the idea (that there are different styles) I don’t think the characterization really works in specifics. Fr. Corapi is not only a macho guy, but he’s a scholar with 2 PhD’s and he is cultured to appreciate museums and gardens, etc.
On the flipside, St. Francis was a very tough and masculine man. He has been portrayed as a wussy in some artwork and writings by liberals, but it is totally inaccurate and an offense against St. Francis. We can recall that he went head-to-head with the Islamic Sultan Malik-al-Kamil – and a slip-up would have cost him his life. His discipline was quite rigorous and demanding on himself – far more than many so-called manly men could handle. We can look at Padre Pio and Bl. Solanus Casey (his biography gives details on the very manly Franciscan life lived before VII) as modern day examples.
At the same time, I don’t argue or doubt for a minute that there has been much wimpyness in the way St. Francis has been interpreted and that is an unjust portrayal.
 
This thread has morphed into a discussion on STYLES OF LEADERSHIP. I think one “style” is that of being a team player. Mother Angelica has done a wonderful job of assembling a team of Catholic clergy and laity to speak to the fullness that’s found in the Catholic faith. Not only religiously; but culturally as well.

IMO - what we find in the Church today is the refusal for many to be team players. Far too many people form their own personal view of what is the “right way” – and any who doesn’t believe exactly according to that way is deficient. How can anyone assemble a team this way? We are ALL DEFICIENT and a real leader will bring out our best and not our worst – witness Jesus and his chosen disciples! If anyone was a team player it was Jesus. Jesus has more faith in us than we have of ourselves. This is wonderfully reflected in this quote by Mother Theresa.

You decide to become part of God’s team and He will make you honor you mightily; maybe even more than you would wish.

Being a team player is what will make you the most effective agent for the Kingdom of God. What Mother Angelica did with EWTN is a tremendous testimony to team effort. What this team could do as separate individuals can’t be compared to what they did as a team.

Michelangelo’s famous painting on the Sistine Chapel has the damned going to hell individually – but those going to heaven and helping each other reach heavenward. That is a great lesson in theology.

MonFrere
Mother Angelica went the tide when she founded EWTN! Read her Biography by Raymond Ayrroro. She locked horns with her Bishop and Cardnial Mahoney!
She brought back Trdaitional Habit and founded her Order. She was also digusted by a play at World Youth Day that led her to bring back what was being lost in the Church. Traditionalism and Reverence.

“Different Styles of Leadship” has led to the “U.S. Catholicism: Decline and Fall”. Mother Angelica has helped alot of people to see and identify the problems.

How many Bishops and Priests use “Team Player” and “Obidence” to suit their own views and at the same time see the lay people in the pews fall away.

The U.S. Bishops and Priests have to get back to Tradition, teaching and defining sin in their homilies. Say Reverent Masses free from Liturgical innovations. Defend Church dogma and teaching issues in the media. Get the Catholic Schools back in gear and in line.

Most importantly, LISTEN AND OBEY ROME AND THE HOLY FATHER!!!

How many Bishops and Priests threaten oidence and are not team players when The Holy Father and Rome give directives???
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top