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Alethiaphile
Guest
I understand what you’re saying, Dan, but I don’t like the idea of picking and choosing among different “spiritualities”. I’m not saying there isn’t room for some diversity in rites and practices, but it seems to me Christ talked about one basic “way” to salvation. When I have been in an Eastern Catholic community, I feel like part of an “elite” in the Catholic Church as a whole, some sort of secret society almost. I don’t like that feeling. The “communion” I am supposed to be in with western Catholics seems like an artificial, unreal thing. And I certainly don’t feel in communion with the Orthodox.All I would say is “the grass is always greener on the other side.” The more we study any Church, in the ideal, the better it will look. In “real life,” though, the ideal is never present. That’s original sin in action. Wherever there are people, there is sin and division.
As far as “sumblimity” (if that’s a word), yes, certain spiritualities in the Catholic Church can seem rather analytical, calculating, etc. If you find that to be the case, there are plenty of other spiritualities that are mysterious, awesome, etc. The main point is that God, in the Church, has provided us with the freedom to pursue our own spirituality. With so much history and so many members, there is an amazing variety in the Catholic Church.
Dan
An Orthodox writer, Fr. Thomas Hopko, made what seems to me to be an excellent point, which is related to what I’m saying. He says that there is really no reason for practices like fasting and venerating icons and prostrations, etc. unless you think those are good things that are good for every Christian, not just a select group. I mean, for example, either fasting is an essential component of the “way” or it isn’t.