I will take this from the Baltimore Catechism (old school catechism we used before the new catechism of the 90s and today).
"God made me to know Him, to love Him, and to serve Him in this world, and to be happy with Him for ever in heaven."
The idea of evangelization is part of this purpose in that we are called to share God whom we encounter in the person of Christ. But
this flows from this premise of knowing, loving, and serving him. So your answer was good. If the center of one persons faith is
evangelization, well it will eventually dry out because it is no source of life in itself. Rather evangelization flows from
encountering Christ and wanting others to encounter Him as well.
Oooo...I am glad I get to answer before Henry. There is something nice about being 9 hours ahead for once. Jesus Christ fulfills Judaism.
Judaism prepared the way for the full revelation of God in Jesus Christ. Make sense? God basically revealed himself in stages. Moses
sees something of God and receives the commandments and we also have the other prophets who give us part of who God is. Jesus Christ is God
and reveals God in his person, through his words and deeds. So we do not say Jesus came simply to reform Judaism. That is false. Judaism
prepared the way for the coming of Christ. I would not live with the reform idea. :)
I am glad you are questioning what your mom says because she is in a real way, reflecting the modern ideology that all truth is relative
and whatever truth we have is just for us. The diversity of religion does not mean they are all true. Rather we believe and it is true that
there is but ONE truth. All other religions have SOME truth in them but the fullness of truth we find only in the Catholic Church. It may
sound arrogant in todays world but that is the truth. Buddhism has a good sense of morality but they fail to understand that suffering it
not something you simply eliminate from your existence by living a certain way and eliminating desires but rather you encountering in
suffering Christ himself who suffers for us and with us and suffering becomes salvific. Ok totally different topic.
Hmm...maybe you should have listened to my second truth talk...haha. It is confusing but here is the thing, almost every religion claims to
be true and most reject other religions as false. So if you say all religions are true you are in contradiction because they mostly claim
they are true and others are false. But where the Church is different is that not only do we claim to be true but we, as you look through
the teachings of the Church and understand the beauty of it all, we are actually true.
Part of the way to see the Church as true, above and over all other faiths, is to see if it answers the deepest desires of the heart. Does
it satisfy your desire for happiness, for love, for truth, for peace, for beauty, for justice, for mercy and so on? Does it make sense? What
else can answer the questions of suffering and evil in the world without...copping out in a sense? This is also a matter of faith but I
think as you continue to look at your Catholic faith, you will see that it is not something that you were simply born into but a truth
that has been revealed and continues to be revealed to all people and will until the end of time.
If you want I can try to email this talk to you when I am back in Rome...I think it was pretty good when I gave it to a Young Adult
Group...
Ok Henry and Pat...all yours...correct me if necessary...haha
--
Colin
2 comments:
I'm glad you got to answer this one first too Colin!! hahaha.
No corrections from me, but I wanted to add that the modern "tolerant" (read "relativistic") culture really makes truth and those that would claim it to seem egotistical, arrogant, intolerant, and just plain evil. (Which brings to mind today's optional Gospel reading for the memorial of two saints: the world will hate you because it hated Jesus first and no servant is greater than the master, my words). But that's exactly what the Catholic Church claims, and personally, I think demonstrates it as well. And your reply to those claims are absolutely correct. If indeed all religions are the same and it's all just different ways to one God (the many paths up one mountain example) why be Catholic? I would rather be something that's suites my lifestyle or a lifestyle that I would think would be more "fun." I'm curious as to how people who see Catholicism/Christianity that way would reply to that exact question. For an awesome, seriously awesome talk about relativism, check out (who else...) Kreeft! (http://www.peterkreeft.com/audio/05_relativism.htm) there's a transcription on there already if you're like Pat and Colin who don't like to listen, but rather read :P
And yeah, good reply to your friend!! :) Our evangelization is not the purpose of our creation, but is because of the "overflow" of grace that God freely gives us. It's like when you have really happy news and you just can't help but call everyone you know and just tell them because you want to to share and for them to share in your joy. Yeah, totally agree with Colin, to be created just to evangelize would kinda suck and doesn't really work...BUT this does not make evangelization any less important. In fact, it profoundly says something about our personal relationships with God. And the fact that typical Protestants evangelize much more (speaking for lay people of course) than your typical Catholics says something.
next time you post something put a title on it otherwise it doesnt show up on my RSS feed!
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