Monday, November 25, 2019

Reshaping Catholicism

I just don't see how people can so thoroughly reshaped Catholicism, especially the spiritual tradition. It is not even ideas that I'm talking about: it is attitude, especially toward sin, devotion, the commandments. We should want to free everyone from slavery to sin--including, if not especially, the 6th and 9th commandments.

There are four commandments that Satan has had his way with recently: the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 9th. What can we do? I mean, first of all, in the Church. If the Church doesn't have Her act together, how can we help the world find the way?

Can you imagine anyone saying the following without being accused of hating. These are the words of St Francis.
But all those men and women who are not doing penance and do not receive the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ and live in vices and sin and yield to evil concupiscence and to the wicked desires of the flesh, and do not observe what they have promised to the Lord, and are slaves to the world, in their bodies, by carnal desires and the anxieties and cares of this life (cf. Jn 8:41).
These are blind, because they do not see the true light, our Lord Jesus Christ; they do not have spiritual wisdom because they do not have the Son of God who is the true wisdom of the Father. Concerning them, it is said, “Their skill was swallowed up” (Ps 107:27) and “cursed are those who turn away from your commands” (Ps 119:21). They see and acknowledge; they know and do bad things and knowingly destroy their own souls.See, you who are blind, deceived by your enemies, the world, the flesh and the devil, for it is pleasant to the body to commit sin and it is bitter to make it serve God because all vices and sins come out and “proceed from the heart of man” as the Lord says in the gospel (cf. Mt 7:21). And you have nothing in this world and in the next, and you thought you would possess the vanities of this world for a long time. 
But you have been deceived, for the day and the hour will come to which you give no thought and which you do not know and of which you are ignorant. The body grows infirm, death approaches, and so it dies a bitter death, and no matter where or when or how man dies, in the guilt of sin, without penance or satisfaction, though he can make satisfaction but does not do it. 
The devil snatches the soul from his body with such anguish and tribulation that no one can know it except he who endures it, and all the talents and power and “knowledge and wisdom” (2 Chr 1:17) which they thought they had will be taken away from them (cf. Lk 8:18; Mk 4:25), and they leave their goods to relatives and friends who take and divide them and say afterwards, “Cursed be his soul because he could have given us more; he could have acquired more than he did.” The worms eat up the body and so they have lost body and soul during this short earthly life and will go into the inferno where they will suffer torture without end. (Taken from the rule of the Secular Franciscan Order.)
If we can't talk this way anymore does that mean that the great spiritual masters of the Catholic faith for the last 1900 years who did talk this way were wrong? Or has our "situation" changed so much that such language can never have the salutary effect it is intended to?

I have to say I don't think so, but I also have to say I don't know how to negotiate our current evangelical need when so much of this language is considered insensitive.

I'm just wondering.  

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