In his Letter to the Ephesians, the Apostle says that "with Christ we must reach adulthood, mature humanity. ... Paul wants Christians to have 'responsible' faith, 'adult' faith. The phrase 'adult faith' has become a common slogan over recent decades. It is often understood as the attitude of those who no longer listen to the Church and her pastors, but autonomously choose what they wish to believe and not to believe: a sort of 'do-it- yourself' faith. This is also presented as the 'courage' to go against the Magisterium of the Church. The truth, however, is that it requires no courage because one is always certain of garnering public sympathy.
"What does require courage", he added, "is to adhere to the faith of the Church even if this contradicts the blueprint of the modern world. It is the 'non-conformity' of faith that Paul calls 'adult faith'. What he considers childlike is to charge after all the winds and currents of the age".
The Holy Father went on: "Part of adult faith, for example, is commitment to the inviolability of human life from the very first moment, thus radically opposing the principle of violence by defending the most helpless human creatures. Part of adult faith is recognising lifelong marriage between a man and a woman, as ordained by God and re-established by Christ. Adult faith does not allow itself to be blown here and there by the slightest breeze".
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Adult education
When we hear someone refer to an "adult faith" or use the term "thinking Catholic," we instinctively reach for our catechetical revolvers, for as often as not what follows is a soft-pedaling of embarrassing doctrines on birth control, abortion, and marriage. In his vespers homily for the Solemnity of Ss. Peter and Paul, Pope Benedict explains an authentic adult faith:
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13 comments:
My comment: wow.
Fr. Dale at Jewish
does this signal the minimalization of marriage tribunals?
Anon,
I would think not, but rather that the Holy Father is stressing that it takes work and sacrifice to make a marriage successful in our current culture; ie it takes an adult approach. Something that can be sorely lacking in some couples.
You missed the soft-pedaling of embarrassing doctrines on capital punishment, war, torture and the idolatry of materialism to name a few.
What a pope, eh?
Bob:
You should not feel embarrassed in understanding and sharing the authentic Catholic teaching on Capital Punishment (squarely in line with both natural law and Catholic authority); war (decisions of just war val non are to be made at the political leader level); torture (abortion is torture and is a grave sin, use of coercive techniques to protect the public are in line with natural law and Catholic authority); materialism (we must vigorously confront the worse aspects of materialism – abortion and radical environmentalism (particularly those spouting global warming nonsense)).
- Proud Catholic
The center cannot hold.
Our differences are irreconcilable.
May God have mercy on us.
"What so ever you do to the least of my brothers, that you do unto Me."
Proud Catholic,
It is always enlightening to watch Catholic faith blow in the slight breeze of Republican/Conservative orthodoxy. The gymnastics you all go through to reconcile your politics with the Church and the Gospels is amazing.
Bob,
Your constant recourse to partisan politics is getting tiresome.
Take it someplace else.
That's a great sermon. Thanks for posting it Rich.
rev. schnip: i would guess that most marriage trib cases take place AFTER the civil divorce and the civil re-marriage...i'm suggesting that let's MINIMALIZE the almost automatic availability of what is perceived as catholic divorce and instead emphasize heavy duty professional counseling before the civil termination of the marriage. in other words, let's send our men to counseling schools as a preventive measure, rather than canon law schools.
point taken
I've been reading Fr. Walter Ciszek's book, He Leadeth Me, and have been struck by his faith while spending more than 2 decades detained in Russian prisons and labor camps. As I said today at http://acts17verse28.blogspot.com/2009/07/would-my-faith-survive.html, it has made me wonder about my own faith, and to wonder if I do enough to nourish it so that it will survive trials.
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