Gosh!Pope Francis endorses claim that US Christians are engaged in ‘ecumenism of hatred’ - CatholicCitizens.org
"they see American conservatism as an evil influence that must be defeated.”
I KNEW there was a reason I liked Mr Bergoglio!
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Gosh!Pope Francis endorses claim that US Christians are engaged in ‘ecumenism of hatred’ - CatholicCitizens.org
"they see American conservatism as an evil influence that must be defeated.”
From what I read here of the actual words used by the pope and by the extracts from the articles - as opposed to the headlines - he seems to me to be on the mark.Pope Francis endorses claim that US Christians are engaged in ‘ecumenism of hatred’ - CatholicCitizens.org
VATICAN CITY, September 26, 2019 (LifeSiteNews) ― In an address to Jesuits in Mozambique, Pope Francis recommended an infamous 2017 article that characterized the cooperation between U.S. Catholic and Evangelical social conservatives as an “ecumenism of hatred.”
In the same address, the Pope criticized a woman who professed joy that two young people had converted to Catholicism. And he suggested young priests who wear cassocks are expressing a form of “rigid clericalism” that conceals “moral problems.”
The Pope’s September 5 speech was published today, September 26, in La Civiltà Cattolica by Antonio Spadaro, SJ, one of the two co-authors of the 2017 article.
Responding to a question about Protestant sects that recommend their faith to Africans as a way to become rich, Francis said:
… We must distinguish carefully between the different groups who are identified as ‘Protestants.’ There are many with whom we can work very well, and who care about serious, open and positive ecumenism. But there are others who only try to proselytize and use a theological vision of prosperity ….This article, “Evangelical Fundamentalism and Catholic Integralism in the USA: A surprising Ecumenism”, first appeared in July 2017. It argues that American conservatives, including many Catholics, have been influenced by Protestant fundamentalism, and that Catholic and Evangelical voters who work together on social issues like the right to life and traditional marriage have transformed ecumenism into “an ecumenism of hatred.”
Two important articles in Civiltà Cattolica have been published in this regard. I recommend them to you. They were written by Father Spadaro and the Argentinean Presbyterian pastor, Marcelo Figueroa. The first article spoke of the “ecumenism of hatred.”
Spadaro and Figueroa wrote:
Appealing to the values of fundamentalism, a strange form of surprising ecumenism is developing between Evangelical fundamentalists and Catholic Integralists brought together by the same desire for religious influence in the political sphere.
Some who profess themselves to be Catholic express themselves in ways that until recently were unknown in their tradition and using tones much closer to Evangelicals. They are defined as value voters as far as attracting electoral mass support is concerned. There is a well-defined world of ecumenical convergence between sectors that are paradoxically competitors when it comes to confessional belonging. This meeting over shared objectives happens around such themes as abortion, same-sex marriage, religious education in schools and other matters generally considered moral or tied to values. Both Evangelical and Catholic Integralists condemn traditional ecumenism and yet promote an ecumenism of conflict that unites them in the nostalgic dream of a theocratic type of state.
However, the most dangerous prospect for this strange ecumenism is attributable to its xenophobic and Islamophobic vision that wants walls and purifying deportations. The word “ecumenism” transforms into a paradox, into an “ecumenism of hate.” Intolerance is a celestial mark of purism. Reductionism is the exegetical methodology. Ultra-literalism is its hermeneutical key.
American conservatives who noted that articles published in Civiltà Cattolica are vetted by the Holy See worried that these thoughts reflected the mind of Pope Francis and condemned the authors’ ignorance of the United States.
Phil Lawler of the Catholic Culture website called the essay “ignorant” and “intemperate.”
“The authors of the essay claim to embrace ecumenism, but they have nothing but disdain for the coalition formed by Catholics and Evangelical Protestants in the United States,” Lawler wrote.
“They scold American conservatives for seeing world events as a struggle of good against evil, yet they clearly convey the impression that they see American conservatism as an evil influence that must be defeated.”
Rod Dreher of American Conservative magazine wrote that the essay “reads like deaf men criticizing a chamber music performance.”
“They have very little idea what they’re talking about,” he continued.
“Many American watchers of the Vatican know that Father Spadaro is very close to Francis, but many others — including me — did not know who Marcelo Figueroa, the co-author, is. Turns out he’s an Argentine Presbyterian and personal friend of Pope Francis hand-picked by the pontiff to launch an Argentine edition of the official Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano.”
In his speech to the African Jesuits, Francis next condemned both the prosperity gospel and proselytism:
The second (article in Civiltà Cattolica) was on the “theology of prosperity.” Reading them you will see that there are sects that cannot really be defined as Christian. They preach Christ, yes, but their message is not Christian. It has nothing to do with the preaching of a Lutheran or any other serious evangelical Christianity. These so-called “evangelicals” preach prosperity. They promise a Gospel that does not know poverty, but simply seeks to make proselytes. This is exactly what Jesus condemns in the Pharisees of his time. I’ve said it many times: proselytism is not Christian.The pontiff revealed that he was feeling bitter after meeting a woman who had introduced him to two young converts to Catholicism. One had been Hindu, the other Anglican. Francis said he had reproved the woman.
Pope Francis also took aim at clericalism, which he felt was embodied by young priests who wear traditional clerical garb.
“Clericalism has a direct consequence in rigidity,” he said.
“Have you never seen young priests all stiff in black cassocks and hats in the shape of the planet Saturn (the saturno) on their heads? Behind all the rigid clericalism there are serious problems.” he continued.
“I had to intervene recently in three dioceses with problems that expressed themselves in these forms of rigidity that concealed moral problems and imbalances.”
The pontiff also said an “exclusive moral fixation on the sixth commandment” (God’s prohibition against adultery, fornication and other sexual sins) was another dimension of clericalism.
“We focus on sex and then we do not give weight to social injustice, slander, gossip and lies,” he said.
“The Church today needs a profound conversion in this area.”
If this is the kind of thing being criticised by the pope, and in these articles, then I must say I think he and they are dead right.
Yes I think the penultimate paragraph sums it up, for me.It is precisely that - see, from the article he commended as representing his views on the matter (written by his advisers, including the Jesuit priest Spadaro):
Evangelical Fundamentalism and Catholic Integralism: A surprising ecumenism | La Civiltà Cattolica
Religion has had a more incisive role in electoral processes and government decisions over recent decades, especially in some US governments. It offers a moral role for identifying what is good and what is bad.
At times this mingling of politics, morals and religion has taken on a Manichaean language that divides reality between absolute Good and absolute Evil...
These stances are based on Christian-Evangelical fundamentalist principles dating from the beginning of the 20th Century that have been gradually radicalized. These have moved on from a rejection of all that is mundane – as politics was considered – to bringing a strong and determined religious-moral influence to bear on democratic processes and their results.
The term “evangelical fundamentalist” can today be assimilated to the “evangelical right” or “theoconservatism” and has its origins in the years 1910-1915. In that period a South Californian millionaire, Lyman Stewart, published the 12-volume work The Fundamentals...
His admirers include many politicians and even two recent presidents: Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.
The social-religious groups inspired by authors such as Stewart consider the United States to be a nation blessed by God. And they do not hesitate to base the economic growth of the country on a literal adherence to the Bible. Over more recent years this current of thought has been fed by the stigmatization of enemies who are often “demonized.”
The panorama of threats to their understanding of the American way of life have included modernist spirits, the black civil rights movement, the hippy movement, communism, feminist movements and so on. And now in our day there are the migrants and the Muslims. To maintain conflict levels, their biblical exegeses have evolved toward a decontextualized reading of the Old Testament texts about the conquering and defense of the “promised land,” rather than be guided by the incisive look, full of love, of Jesus in the Gospels...
Rushdoony’s doctrine maintains a theocratic necessity: submit the state to the Bible with a logic that is no different from the one that inspires Islamic fundamentalism. At heart, the narrative of terror shapes the world-views of jihadists and the new crusaders and is imbibed from wells that are not too far apart...
Appealing to the values of fundamentalism, a strange form of surprising ecumenism is developing between Evangelical fundamentalists and Catholic Integralists brought together by the same desire for religious influence in the political sphere.
Some who profess themselves to be Catholic express themselves in ways that until recently were unknown in their tradition and using tones much closer to Evangelicals. They are defined as value voters as far as attracting electoral mass support is concerned. There is a well-defined world of ecumenical convergence between sectors that are paradoxically competitors when it comes to confessional belonging. This meeting over shared objectives happens around such themes as abortion, same-sex marriage, religious education in schools and other matters generally considered moral or tied to values. Both Evangelical and Catholic Integralists condemn traditional ecumenism and yet promote an ecumenism of conflict that unites them in the nostalgic dream of a theocratic type of state.
Clearly there is an enormous difference between these concepts and the ecumenism employed by Pope Francis with various Christian bodies and other religious confessions. His is an ecumenism that moves under the urge of inclusion, peace, encounter and bridges. This presence of opposing ecumenisms – and their contrasting perceptions of the faith and visions of the world where religions have irreconcilable roles – is perhaps the least known and most dramatic aspect of the spread of Integralist fundamentalism. Here we can understand why the pontiff is so committed to working against “walls” and any kind of “war of religion.”
The religious element should never be confused with the political one. Confusing spiritual power with temporal power means subjecting one to the other. An evident aspect of Pope Francis’ geopolitics rests in not giving theological room to the power to impose oneself or to find an internal or external enemy to fight. There is a need to flee the temptation to project divinity on political power that then uses it for its own ends. Francis empties from within the narrative of sectarian millenarianism and dominionism that is preparing the apocalypse and the “final clash.”[2] Underlining mercy as a fundamental attribute of God expresses this radically Christian need.
Francis wants to break the organic link between culture, politics, institution and Church. Spirituality cannot tie itself to governments or military pacts for it is at the service of all men and women. Religions cannot consider some people as sworn enemies nor others as eternal friends. Religion should not become the guarantor of the dominant classes. Yet it is this very dynamic with a spurious theological flavor that tries to impose its own law and logic in the political sphere.
There is a shocking rhetoric used, for example, by the writers of Church Militant, a successful US-based digital platform that is openly in favor of a political ultraconservatism and uses Christian symbols to impose itself.
They would brand him a "snowflake".If Jesus returned, but they didn't realize that it was him, they would turn him away for being a "hippy socialist SJW".
Wealthy?It sure does. They should stop focusing on some false teachings and leading people astray. Too many don't know truth from lies, right from wrong. They wouldn't know Jesus if he came down and started healing folks and making everyone wealthy, happy, and establishing world peace.
So many deceived, such a shame.
I recall an experience I had the only time I went to a Catholic church in Houston. The pews were littered with leaflets excoriating abortion, written by or for by some character called Donaghue, who was head of something called the Catholic League, I think. The language was highly intemperate and the general tone was, well, poisonous - there is no other word - stirring up hatred against supporters of abortion. I quickly left the church and never darkened its doors again.
As usual the Pope is spot on, far right political beliefs are not in line with the teachings of Jesus
This thread is about politics, not religion, I think.Following the guidance of Vat II, Francis is a pastoral leader of the Church, not a dogmatic head. He is the first pope to be faithful to this pastoral Council.
Donohue tends to be quite an outspoken hot-head at times, so I can understand your frustration. However, Pro-Life means that-- pro life-- and that which is inside a pregnant mother is not a turnip-- it's a human child.From what I read here of the actual words used by the pope and by the extracts from the articles - as opposed to the headlines - he seems to me to be on the mark.
I recall an experience I had the only time I went to a Catholic church in Houston. The pews were littered with leaflets excoriating abortion, written by or for by some character called Donaghue, who was head of something called the Catholic League, I think. The language was highly intemperate and the general tone was, well, poisonous - there is no other word - stirring up hatred against supporters of abortion. I quickly left the church and never darkened its doors again.
I remain to this day appalled that the parish priest allowed this sort of thing in his church. I cannot imagine it here in the UK, nor can I imagine a horrible organisation like the Catholic League being given any sort of endorsement by the church hierarchy.
If this is the kind of thing being criticised by the pope, and in these articles, then I must say I think he and they are dead right.
I don't disagree, but I do think that this is an example of the pot calling the kettle black.Pope Francis endorses claim that US Christians are engaged in ‘ecumenism of hatred’ - CatholicCitizens.org
VATICAN CITY, September 26, 2019 (LifeSiteNews) ― In an address to Jesuits in Mozambique, Pope Francis recommended an infamous 2017 article that characterized the cooperation between U.S. Catholic and Evangelical social conservatives as an “ecumenism of hatred.”
In the same address, the Pope criticized a woman who professed joy that two young people had converted to Catholicism. And he suggested young priests who wear cassocks are expressing a form of “rigid clericalism” that conceals “moral problems.”
The Pope’s September 5 speech was published today, September 26, in La Civiltà Cattolica by Antonio Spadaro, SJ, one of the two co-authors of the 2017 article.
Responding to a question about Protestant sects that recommend their faith to Africans as a way to become rich, Francis said:
… We must distinguish carefully between the different groups who are identified as ‘Protestants.’ There are many with whom we can work very well, and who care about serious, open and positive ecumenism. But there are others who only try to proselytize and use a theological vision of prosperity ….This article, “Evangelical Fundamentalism and Catholic Integralism in the USA: A surprising Ecumenism”, first appeared in July 2017. It argues that American conservatives, including many Catholics, have been influenced by Protestant fundamentalism, and that Catholic and Evangelical voters who work together on social issues like the right to life and traditional marriage have transformed ecumenism into “an ecumenism of hatred.”
Two important articles in Civiltà Cattolica have been published in this regard. I recommend them to you. They were written by Father Spadaro and the Argentinean Presbyterian pastor, Marcelo Figueroa. The first article spoke of the “ecumenism of hatred.”
Spadaro and Figueroa wrote:
Appealing to the values of fundamentalism, a strange form of surprising ecumenism is developing between Evangelical fundamentalists and Catholic Integralists brought together by the same desire for religious influence in the political sphere.
Some who profess themselves to be Catholic express themselves in ways that until recently were unknown in their tradition and using tones much closer to Evangelicals. They are defined as value voters as far as attracting electoral mass support is concerned. There is a well-defined world of ecumenical convergence between sectors that are paradoxically competitors when it comes to confessional belonging. This meeting over shared objectives happens around such themes as abortion, same-sex marriage, religious education in schools and other matters generally considered moral or tied to values. Both Evangelical and Catholic Integralists condemn traditional ecumenism and yet promote an ecumenism of conflict that unites them in the nostalgic dream of a theocratic type of state.
However, the most dangerous prospect for this strange ecumenism is attributable to its xenophobic and Islamophobic vision that wants walls and purifying deportations. The word “ecumenism” transforms into a paradox, into an “ecumenism of hate.” Intolerance is a celestial mark of purism. Reductionism is the exegetical methodology. Ultra-literalism is its hermeneutical key.
American conservatives who noted that articles published in Civiltà Cattolica are vetted by the Holy See worried that these thoughts reflected the mind of Pope Francis and condemned the authors’ ignorance of the United States.
Phil Lawler of the Catholic Culture website called the essay “ignorant” and “intemperate.”
“The authors of the essay claim to embrace ecumenism, but they have nothing but disdain for the coalition formed by Catholics and Evangelical Protestants in the United States,” Lawler wrote.
“They scold American conservatives for seeing world events as a struggle of good against evil, yet they clearly convey the impression that they see American conservatism as an evil influence that must be defeated.”
Rod Dreher of American Conservative magazine wrote that the essay “reads like deaf men criticizing a chamber music performance.”
“They have very little idea what they’re talking about,” he continued.
“Many American watchers of the Vatican know that Father Spadaro is very close to Francis, but many others — including me — did not know who Marcelo Figueroa, the co-author, is. Turns out he’s an Argentine Presbyterian and personal friend of Pope Francis hand-picked by the pontiff to launch an Argentine edition of the official Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano.”
In his speech to the African Jesuits, Francis next condemned both the prosperity gospel and proselytism:
The second (article in Civiltà Cattolica) was on the “theology of prosperity.” Reading them you will see that there are sects that cannot really be defined as Christian. They preach Christ, yes, but their message is not Christian. It has nothing to do with the preaching of a Lutheran or any other serious evangelical Christianity. These so-called “evangelicals” preach prosperity. They promise a Gospel that does not know poverty, but simply seeks to make proselytes. This is exactly what Jesus condemns in the Pharisees of his time. I’ve said it many times: proselytism is not Christian.The pontiff revealed that he was feeling bitter after meeting a woman who had introduced him to two young converts to Catholicism. One had been Hindu, the other Anglican. Francis said he had reproved the woman.
Pope Francis also took aim at clericalism, which he felt was embodied by young priests who wear traditional clerical garb.
“Clericalism has a direct consequence in rigidity,” he said.
“Have you never seen young priests all stiff in black cassocks and hats in the shape of the planet Saturn (the saturno) on their heads? Behind all the rigid clericalism there are serious problems.” he continued.
“I had to intervene recently in three dioceses with problems that expressed themselves in these forms of rigidity that concealed moral problems and imbalances.”
The pontiff also said an “exclusive moral fixation on the sixth commandment” (God’s prohibition against adultery, fornication and other sexual sins) was another dimension of clericalism.
“We focus on sex and then we do not give weight to social injustice, slander, gossip and lies,” he said.
“The Church today needs a profound conversion in this area.”
All churches have numerous interpretations, and they also have numerous of applications of those interpretations. Trouble is, if one is brought up in one tradition they may conclude that the ones they are not taught are nonsensical.I am not "far right" but I never saw the Catholic Church as anything but
a church paying lip service to some parts of the Gospels - and making
up the rest of their doctrines.
When I was a regular attender of my (now ex-) wife's Catholic church, during the run-up to the legalization of same-sex marriage, one Sunday, the homily was delivered by a guest priest. I gather that this was his thing: going from church to church delivering the same homily.From what I read here of the actual words used by the pope and by the extracts from the articles - as opposed to the headlines - he seems to me to be on the mark.
I recall an experience I had the only time I went to a Catholic church in Houston. The pews were littered with leaflets excoriating abortion, written by or for by some character called Donaghue, who was head of something called the Catholic League, I think. The language was highly intemperate and the general tone was, well, poisonous - there is no other word - stirring up hatred against supporters of abortion. I quickly left the church and never darkened its doors again.
I remain to this day appalled that the parish priest allowed this sort of thing in his church. I cannot imagine it here in the UK, nor can I imagine a horrible organisation like the Catholic League being given any sort of endorsement by the church hierarchy.
If this is the kind of thing being criticised by the pope, and in these articles, then I must say I think he and they are dead right.
If only they extended the same respect to the pregnant person.Donohue tends to be quite an outspoken hot-head at times, so I can understand your frustration. However, Pro-Life means that-- pro life-- and that which is inside a pregnant mother is not a turnip-- it's a human child.
All churches have numerous interpretations, and they also have numerous of applications of those interpretations. Trouble is, if one is brought up in one tradition they may conclude that the ones they are not taught are nonsensical.
Maybe actually study Catholic theology, and there are numerous books that can help you along that line. I was brought up in an anti-Catholic fundamentalist Protestant church, and then I did the studying over years and found out that what I was being told by my old denomination was fraught with bigotry and misundertandings. To accuse the CC as just "paying lip service to some parts of the Gospels..." is really a terribly misguided slam.
I had thought quite a few of his recent predecessors had been quite serious about their pastoral duties too, though. Or do you mean he deliberately avoids being dogmatic? I suppose that's right, thinking about it.Following the guidance of Vat II, Francis is a pastoral leader of the Church, not a dogmatic head. He is the first pope to be faithful to this pastoral Council.
I don't disagree, but I do think that this is an example of the pot calling the kettle black.
I had thought quite a few of his recent predecessors had been quite serious about their pastoral duties too, though. Or do you mean he deliberately avoids being dogmatic? I suppose that's right, thinking about it.