Showing posts with label Catechism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catechism. Show all posts

Thursday, September 26, 2013

What Does Pope Francis Mean When He Says...?


            Recently, Pope Francis has been quoted saying some strange things.  Inside and outside the Catholic Church, questions abound as to what the Holy Pontiff could possibly mean.
            Since his election to the Papacy on March 13, 2013, Pope Francis has been turning heads with his outspoken remarks.  However, everything Pope Francis is saying about the Church is nothing new.  The subjects he refers to are only being brought to light in a very different way than that of his predecessors.

            “If someone is gay and searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?”  What Pope Francis means is: its wrong to judge others, it is a task reserved for God.  It is necessary to use a well-formed conscience to discern whether or not an action itself is sinful, but one must not judge the actual person.  Pope Francis also means that everybody is a sinner and everybody deserves to be treated with respect and dignity.

            “We must meet one another doing good. ‘But I don’t believe, Father, I am an atheist!’ But do good: we will meet one another there.”  The Catholic Church wills everyone to be saved and prays that all can come to know Jesus as his or her savior.  However, if people do not look to Jesus for redemption, arguing and fighting about it will not help.  The pope wants all people, regardless of beliefs to be united in their vocation to serve others.
           
Cardinal Timothy Dolan said, on the different but effective style of Pope Francis’s preaching:  “The way he’s doing it is so fresh and is so captivating, but he’s not really changing anything of the essence of the church.”

A CBS Interview with Cardinal Dolan on the message of Pope Francis:


Thursday, September 12, 2013

What is a Saint?


The Catholic Church teaches that a saint is anyone who is in heaven.  Whether by becoming one on earth or in purgatory, everyone must be a saint before entering heaven.  Typically though, saints today are seen as the ones acknowledged by the Roman Catholic Church.
            “…the Church recognized the power of the Spirit of holiness within her and sustains the hope of believers by proposing the saints to them as models and intercessors” (Catechism 828).  In the Catholic Church, saints are seen as individuals who can pray and intercede for people still on earth.
            Usually a person must be dead for at least five years before the road to sainthood is even begun.  The first step consists of the local bishops studying the candidate’s life and writings.  If there is enough evidence of heroic virtue, this information is then sent to the Vatican.  The Congregation for the Causes of Saints (a panel of theologians and cardinals at the Vatican) then takes a careful look at the candidate’s life and, if approved, the pope will then proclaim the candidate venerable, which means that they are a role model of the virtues exemplified by the Church.  Then, to be beatified, it must be proved that a candidate is responsible for a posthumous miracle.  Martyrs for the Faith can be beatified without a miracle.  The last step, canonization, occurs with a papal decree that the candidate was holy and is in heaven, interceding for us with God (this step must include another posthumous miracle attributed to the candidate in question).
            So, in all honesty, saints are humans.  They are people who have dealt with trials, temptations, doubts, and fear.  The main difference between saints and “regular people” is just in the way that they responded.

“Life holds only one tragedy, ultimately:  not to have been a saint.”
                                                                ~Charles Peguy

Click on the link to browse the list of saints: http://saints.catholic.org/saints/

References:
http://www.howstuffworks.com/question619.htm