Showing posts with label Doctrine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doctrine. Show all posts

Friday, February 26, 2010

First Parish Event: Formation on Catholic Social Teaching and Lenten Campaign 2010


Friday (February 26, Seremban) A team from the Archdiocesan Office of Human Development (AOHD) were invited to give a formation on the Catholic Social Teachings and Lenten Campaign 2010. 200 participants from 3 language groups were in attendance. Apart from the parishioners of Visitation, Seremban, there were also several participants from the Negeri Sembilan District,i.e. Nilai, Port Dickson, and Mantin.

The participants were introduced to the work and projects of the AOHD. In the morning, they were also exposed to the main themes of Catholic Social Teaching. The afternoon session were dedicated to a briefing and explanation of this year's Lenten Campaign. The participants viewed a DVD production where various priests of the Archdiocese of Kuala Lumpur, explained the major themes of this year's Lenten Campaign, which is based on the various parts of the crucifixion.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Catholic Social Teaching

Love for widows and orphans, prisoners and the sick and needy
of every kind, is as essential to the Church as the ministry of
sacraments and preaching of the Gospel.
(Pope Benedict XVI, Deus Caritas Est, no.22)

What is Catholic Social Teaching?


Modern Catholic social teaching is the body of social principles and moral teaching that is articulated in the official documents of the Church issued since the late 19th century and dealing with the economic, political, and social order. This teaching is rooted in the Scriptures as well as in traditional philosophical and theological teachings of the Church.

Does this mean that Catholic Social Teaching was non-existent before the 19th century? The answer is No. Catholic Social Teaching is as old as the Church and even predates the Church (i.e. Hebrew Scriptures). However, it was only in the late 19th century that such teachings began to be articulated in a systematic way in the official documents of the Church.

Catholic social teaching has been called "our best kept secret," "our buried treasure," and "an essential part of Catholic faith."

"Far too many Catholics are not familiar with the basic content of Catholic social teaching. More fundamentally, many Catholics do not adequately understand that the social teaching of the Church is an essential part of Catholic faith. This poses a serious challenge for all Catholics, since it weakens our capacity to be a Church that is true to the demands of the Gospel. We need to do more to share the social mission and message of our Church."

Sharing Catholic Social Teaching: Challenges and Directions
U.S. Catholic Bishops

Basic Principles of Catholic Social Teaching

1.Human Dignity - The person is sacred, made in the image of God.

2. Common Good and Community - The human person is both sacred and social. We realize our dignity and rights in relationship with others, in community. How we organize our society -- in economics and politics, in law and policy -- directly affects human dignity and the capacity of individuals to grow in community.

3. Option for the Poor - The moral test of a society is how it treats its most vulnerable members. The option for the poor is an essential part of society's effort to achieve the common good. A healthy community can be achieved only if its members give special attention to those with special needs, to those who are poor and on the margins of society.

4. Rights and Responsibilities - Human dignity can be protected and a healthy community can be achieved only if human rights are protected and responsibilities are met. Every person has a fundamental right to life and a right to those things required for human decency – starting with food, shelter and clothing, employment, health care, and education. Corresponding to these rights are duties and responsibilities -- to one another, to our families, and to the larger society.

5.Role of Government and Subsidiarity - The state has a positive moral function. It is an instrument to promote human dignity, protect human rights, and build the common good. All people have a right and a responsibility to participate in political institutions so that government can achieve its proper goals. The principle of subsidiarity holds that the functions of government should be performed at the lowest level possible, as long as they can be performed adequately.

6. Economic Justice - The economy must serve people, not the other way around. All workers have a right to productive work, to decent and fair wages, and to safe working conditions. They also have a fundamental right to organize and join unions. People have a right to economic initiative and private property, but these rights have limits. No one is allowed to amass excessive wealth when others lack the basic necessities of life. Catholic teaching opposes collectivist and statist economic approaches and also rejects the notion that a free market automatically produces justice.

7. Stewardship of God's Creation - The goods of the earth are gifts from God, and they are intended by God for the benefit of everyone. How we treat the environment is a measure of our stewardship, a sign of our respect for the Creator.

8. Promotion of Peace and Disarmament - Catholic teaching promotes peace as a positive, action-oriented concept. In the words of Pope John Paul II, "Peace is not just the absence of war. It involves mutual respect and confidence between peoples and nations. It involves collaboration and binding agreements.” Peace is the fruit of justice and is dependent upon right order among human beings.

9. Participation - All people have a right to participate in the economic, political, and cultural life of society.

10. Global Solidarity and Development - We are one human family. Our responsibilities to each other cross national, racial, economic and ideological differences. We are called to work globally for justice. Authentic development must be full human development. It must respect and promote personal, social, economic, and political rights, including the rights of nations and of peoples.

Visitation Parish Event
Tomorrow, February 26, we will be having our first Parish Event of 2010, a formation by the Archdiocesan Office of Human Development (AOHD) on the Social Teachings of the Church and the Lenten Campaign.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Solemnity of Mary Mother of God, January 1

The Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God is a liturgical feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary, celebrated by the Roman Catholic Church on 1 January, the Octave Day of Christmas.

Mother of God - Theotokos


Theotokos (Greek: Θεοτόκος, translit. Theotókos) is the Greek title of Mary, the mother of Jesus used especially in the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and Eastern Catholic Churches. Its literal English translations include God-bearer and the one who gives birth to God. Less literal translations include Mother of God. Roman Catholics, Anglicans, and some Protestants use the title Mother of God more often than Theotokos. The Council of Ephesus decreed in 431 that Mary is Theotokos because her son Jesus is one person who is both God and man, divine and human.

Theotokos specifically excludes the understanding of Mary as Mother of God in the eternal sense. Christians believe that God is the cause of all, with neither origin nor source, and is therefore "without a mother."

On the other hand, most Christians believe God the Son is begotten of God the Father "from all eternity", but is born "in time" of Mary. Theotokos thus refers to the Incarnation, when the Second Person of the Holy Trinity took on human nature in addition to his pre-existing divine nature, this being made possible through the cooperation of Mary.

Since mainstream Christians understand Jesus Christ as both fully God and fully human, they call Mary Theotokos to affirm the fullness of God's incarnation. The Council of Ephesus decreed, in opposition to those who denied Mary the title Theotokos ("the one who gives birth to God") but called her Christotokos ("the one who gives birth to Christ"), that Mary is Theotokos because her son Jesus is one person who is both God and man, divine and human. As Cyril of Alexandria wrote, "I am amazed that there are some who are entirely in doubt as to whether the holy Virgin should be called Theotokos or not. For if our Lord Jesus Christ is God, how is the holy Virgin who gave [Him] birth, not [Theotokos]?" (Epistle 1, to the monks of Egypt; PG 77:13B). Thus the significance of Theotokos lies more in what it says about Jesus than any declaration about Mary.

Within the Orthodox and Catholic doctrinal teaching on the economy of salvation, Mary's identity, role, and status as Theotokos is acknowledged as indispensable, and is for this reason formally defined as official dogma.

History of the Feast

The feast was celebrated in the east before the west, but by the 5th century it was celebrated in France and Spain on the Sunday before Christmas. In Rome, even before the 7th century, 1 January was used as a celebration of the Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In the 13th and 14th centuries, the Feast of the Circumcision of Christ had come to replace the Marian feast on 1 January. The celebration of the Feast of the Circumcision on 1 January was expanded to the entire Roman Catholic Church in 1570 when Pope Pius V promulgated the Roman Missal. In 1914, the feast of the "Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary" was established in Portugal, occurring on 11 October. In 1931, this feast was extended to the entire Roman Catholic Church by Pope Pius XI and maintained on 11 October. Following the Second Vatican Council in 1974, Pope Paul VI removed the Feast of the Circumcision of Christ from the liturgical calendar, and replaced it with the feast of the "Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God."[1] Traditionalist Catholics continue to celebrate this feast day with the old name "The Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary" on 11 October.[2]

The feast is a celebration of Mary's motherhood of Jesus. The title “Mother of God” is a western derivation from the (Greek: Theotokos, the God-bearer). The term “Theotokos” was adopted at the Council of Ephesus as a way to assert the Divinity of Christ, from which it follows that what is predicated of Christ is predicated of God. So, if Mary is the mother of Jesus, she is the Mother of God. Therefore, the title “Mother of God” and the “Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God”, which celebrates her under this title, are at once Mariological and Christological.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Who are the Pentecostals?

Catholics often tend to group all other Christians together under the label of Protestants without fully appreciating the significant differences and nuances in theology and practice of one Protestant group from another. Here's an interesting article by Matthew Del Nevo, published in Terra Spiritus, an online magazine (September 23) that helps us understand a significant segment of Christians and demonstrates the major differences and similarities with other churches or ecclesial communities.

Pentecostals are always local congregations. Last year the Assemblies of God (AoG) – the biggest Pentecostal network – to the annoyance of various Protestant groups – rebranded themselves, Australian Christian Churches (ACC). The reason was because ‘Assemblies of God’ sounded weird and old-fashioned, which I think is quite true.

Catholics tend to know as little about Pentecostals as Pentecostals know about Catholics. Each has stereotyped views of the other, and stereotypes which, rather than being helpful, are largely mistaken. At the personal level, most Pentecostals will know some Catholics. Normally they will see Catholics as somewhat ‘unconverted’. But most Catholics, being good humoured and not fanatical, wouldn’t deny this either. Most Catholics would consider themselves, I imagine, ‘sufficiently converted’. Also, Pentecostals would be likely to regard being Catholic as like being Jewish, because Catholic is something you are born into – or so it would seem to them. Whereas, Pentecostalism is something you ascribe to; it is a choice. So, for instance, a Pentecostal doesn’t attend church by habit or custom (generally) or because of parentage, but because their experience is that church is the best thing happening on Sunday morning – perhaps the best thing that happens all week.

Catholics tend to think of Pentecostalism as emotive Protestantism. Most Catholics know a Pentecostal or two. In Sydney, Hillsong church has such a large congregation that it is said everyone in the entire city knows someone who attends services there. The mass media has a lot to do with shaping our misconceptions. While Catholicism is well represented in the press, and we even have our own newspapers like the Catholic Weekly, Pentecostalism – more particularly Hillsong, as the most visible sign of it in the Australian landscape – have been consistently under vitriolic attack, at least in Sydney. Only if you know something about Pentecostalism and then you read the newspaper attacks, do you know how wrong they are.

The fact is that Catholics have something in common with Pentecostals which Pentecostals don’t have in common with Protestants – and this has to do with spirituality. At the basis of Protestant churches is a ‘Confession of Faith’. These Confessions look like the ancient creeds and are modelled on them. However, whereas the ancient creeds are ‘symbols of faith’, and essentially circumscribe the limits of faith, the Protestant Confessions are dogmatic and ideological statements that particularise and specify faith with certainty. All the old Protestant Confessions of faith have an intentional anti-Catholic stance. Later Protestant Confessions are often pitched against other Protestant Confessions in imitation of the original Confessions that pitched themselves against the Catholic Church. By contrast to all this, Pentecostal churches are not Confessional. This is how their ‘non-denominationalism’ differs from Protestant non-denominational churches. They are not essentially confessional; instead, Pentecostal churches are Spirit-led rather than belief-based. Being ‘Spirit-led’, becomes not a fundamental ideology, but a guiding vision for the local congregation, put into the heart of the Senior Pastor by the touch of God. This way of saying it is itself ‘spiritual’. Today, Pentecostal academics speak in the plural of ‘Pentecostalisms’, but one thing this plurality shares is that Christianity is about real relationship with God, specifically with Jesus. By contrast, the Protestant focus is on right belief.

While Protestantism is belief-based, Pentecostals by contrast will discover their beliefs through their experience of God. For Protestants, belief comes first and foremost; for Pentecostals, belief is discovered. So, for example, on the touchiest of issues, the Bible; while both Protestants and Pentecostals will say they are ‘Bible-based’, this is true in completely different and incompatible ways. Pentecostals approach the Bible in the Holy Spirit, expecting God to speak to them and lead them and show them, expecting revelation and encouragement and guidance. Not unlike Catholic lectio divina. And most Pentecostals will read the Bible like this devotedly and daily. Protestants, by contrast, although they claim to be ‘Bible-based’ always approach the Bible within the parameters of the Confession of Faith of their church. They will find their Confession of Faith confirmed and elaborated in the Bible, but not contradicted. What is happening is that though they are ostensibly ‘Bible-based’, they are reading their Bible in the first place in terms of their Confession of Faith. Protestant Biblicism remains fundamentally ideological in stance. Theology is deployed to deal with anything that contradicts the Confession of Faith – and this marks the ideological basis of Protestant theology, by and large. So, for instance, in the conservative Reformed tradition, ‘justification by faith alone’ as taught by Paul in Romans is regarded as the key to the whole Bible and thus Romans is the most important book. The fact that James says faith alone doesn’t justify us, but that we need works (James 2:24), is either played down, as not an important letter, or as relatively true in particular circumstances, but never in any way that could mitigate the fundamental truth that we are justified by faith alone – and Protestants of this stamp will be able to tell you exactly what ‘justified by faith alone’ means, if you are not sure. Pentecostals, on the other hand, talk about real relationship with God. This relationship is an experience not a doctrine. The Bible will not confirm their beliefs but point them into real relationship with God and set them up for that experience.

I have been publishing articles on Pentecostalism – and am soon to complete a book on the subject – in which I argue, put bluntly, that Pentecostalism is as different from Protestantism as Protestantism is from Catholicism. I believe this to be true. I hope an effect of my writing (whether direct or indirect, it doesn’t matter) will be to loosen Pentecostalism from the throes of Protestantism, particularly in North America which is such an influential sector on both scores (of Evangelicalism and Pentecostalism).

There in North America, Evangelical Theology dominates the Pentecostal mentality. This is not such a bad thing in some respects as the church should always be evangelistic (mission oriented), but the dominance of Evangelical Theology, of the Calvinistic Reformed variety primarily, squashes and flattens the truth of Pentecostalism; the truth that it is Spirit-led before it is belief-based. This Evangelicalism can be dangerous to Pentecostalism as a movement of the Spirit, because it leads to an ideological style of Christianity and a theology dominated by academic Professors of Theology, rather than a community of people with a Spirit-led leader. Of course, there are dangers in charismatic leadership, as we know all too well. If Pentecostalisms can theologically and philosophically free themselves from Protestant Evangelicalism, this can only enable them the better to move in the Spirit, which is what Pentecostalism does best and what Pentecostalism is fundamentally about. Pentecostals are never fundamentalists, unless you call the Holy Spirit itself ‘fundamentalist’, which would be an absurd thing to say. Pentecostals are spiritual realists who take the real presence of the Holy Spirit in their lives and churches with absolute seriousness, and not, therefore, as a nice idea but as an experience.

While I have referred to Pentecostalism as a movement of the Spirit, it is different to the Catholic charismatic movement. The Catholic charismatic movement presupposes that the person involved is well churched to begin with. To someone off the street, charismatic Catholicism would seem pretty weird and (to put it positively) ‘super-spiritual’. Pentecostalism, by contrast, is marked by its secularity. It is not super-spiritual, its spirituality is very normal. So, for instance, at a Catholic charismatic meeting someone you have never met may prophecy over you and the person sitting next to you may suddenly stand up and start singing for no apparent reason right in the middle of proceedings, or to pray aloud; whereas at a Pentecostal meeting you are more likely to hear something encouraging and empowering for someone living a hum-drum existence. One of the things Pentecostal churches pride themselves on, and in fact stand upon, is the fact that Joe Blow can come in off the street on a Sunday morning and find it fun, energising and exciting, and not be put-off by any weird ‘religious’ antics. Pentecostals have a very matter-of-fact sense of the miraculous and supernatural, one which actually gels with popular culture and ordinary life. They don’t theologise a lot about it, but their churches lean wholly on it. An outcome of Pentecostal secularity is that it keeps the church leadership grounded, and prevents it from becoming charismatic in that cultic sense that we get in religious cults and often in politics. But the downside is that it can lead to (and does in fact lead to) a celebrity culture within the churches. Although, that said, the celebrity preachers and leaders, like any secular celebrities, need ‘star quality’ and need to sustain that star quality in everyone’s eyes, particularly, presumably, God’s.

Another marker of the secularity of Pentecostalism is popularity. Secularity thrives on popularity and ‘demand’ and spreads to every corner of the globe on this basis. Pentecostalism has only really taken off in a big way since the early 1970s; before this it had much narrower focus and more cultic characteristics. But in a few decades global Pentecostal numbers are double the entirety of the Protestant world, including every shade of Protestantism, and including global Anglicanism. If to this number you added the entire Orthodox world, including every shade of Orthodoxy, the Pentecostal numbers are still slightly greater. These stupendous numbers have been achieved only since the 1970s. Take one extra-ordinary example. The ‘Christ for All Nations’ ministry led by Reinhard Bonnke in various parts of Africa, including Muslim countries, has brought nearly 100 million people into local Pentecostal churches since the year 2000. His witnessing ministry alone has shaken whole nations and is of historic proportions; but I’ve never seen one mention of it in a newspaper here.

Only Catholics outnumber Pentecostals. But in the 1990s, in one decade, 44 million people left the Catholic Church in Brazil, numerically the world’s most Catholic country. Not all, but the vast majority of these joined Pentecostal churches. They wouldn’t have joined typical belief-based Protestant churches, because a Catholic comes from an apostolic church, not a belief-based church. I believe that a shift like this – from Catholic to Pentecostal – can only happen if in Pentecostal churches there is something already there – a consonance – that Catholic people recognise, appreciate, and can appropriate. And this would be the emphasis on spiritual experience and the strong emphasis on the real presence of the Holy Spirit – indeed the exciting and palpable presence of the Holy Spirit in worship. It would be my guess that this is what would attract Catholics in Latin America. Pentecostal churches are making big inroads into secular Europe too. While in England church-going Catholics now outnumber Church of England attendees, the second biggest Sunday congregation in the British Isles is Hillsong London, which only started in 2001 and attracts such crowds to its services in the Dominion Theatre on the corner of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road in W1 that there are queues to get in and crowds left outside after the venue has reached capacity. This signals vitality as well as popularity. The biggest congregation in Britain are the African Pentecostals, which is another story. According to The Times, the growth in Catholic numbers at church has mainly to do with migration, while by contrast the growth in Pentecostal numbers has to do with Christian evangelism. Yes, even cynical, secular, stay-at-home Brits are actually deciding to go to church on a Sunday morning.

I will have to leave these thoughts here. They may raise many questions in my reader. Does Pentecostalism pose a crisis for Catholicism? What should be the proper stance of the Catholic Church toward Pentecostalism? Indeed what is the stance of Catholic Church towards Protestantism? My comments point to the fact that it needs to be a different kind of dialogue with Pentecostals than with Protestants. The reality is that Catholic-Pentecostal dialogue is going on in Rome and is very fruitful.