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== From e-mail and Facebook == | == From e-mail and Facebook == | ||
=== Choosing the right good === | === Choosing the right good === | ||
Jason from Ohio who lives in Orlando said that I said: "The will of God for me is built into me, because God created me to be me." | Jason from Ohio who lives in Orlando said that I said: "The will of God for me is built into me, because God created me to be me." |
Revision as of 15:26, 3 September 2010
Sitz im leben
Ordinary Time: Following Jesus
August 27
- Clock problem
- Mario from Facebook yesterday: "How would one begin to dialogue with our Orthodox brothers and sisters in regards to the filioque?"
- Memorial of Saint Monica (331-387 AD).
- Feast of St. Augustine (354-430 AD), father and doctor of the Church.
- The heart is the seat of wisdom. It is our heart that keeps our minds on track. Another name for the show: "Cor ad cor loquitur"--"Heart to Heart."
From e-mail and Facebook
Choosing the right good
Jason from Ohio who lives in Orlando said that I said: "The will of God for me is built into me, because God created me to be me."
Coping with wayward family members
Cindy from Facebook: One of her daughters has become a Lutheran; the other daughter, who is Catholic, has decided to cut off communication with her Lutheran sister. What can Cindy do to bring her Lutheran daughter back to the Church?
- I've had a lot of experience with the 12-step programs. The first step tells us that we are powerless over other people (see 2 Cor 12:10): "When [I know that] I am weak, then I am strong." Your children have a God and a Savior, and it's not you. You are of course correct that Lutheranism is a sadly diminished form of Catholicism, but if you could nag your daughter into coming home, you would not be talking to me--she would be back already.
- Let go and let God.
- Say the Serenity Prayer.
- Pray to St. Monica (today's saint).
- Pray in reparation for your own sins, then pray in reparation for the sins of your family.
- Pray the Infallible Prayer, "Thy will, not mine, be done."
- Recognize that "unsolicited advice is criticism." If we could nag people into good behavior, we wouldn't need a Savior.
- Pray that God will place someone else in their lives to convert them. Don't doubt God's power to save them, despite the deficiencies of the Lutheran tradition. We are not saved by our Church membership but by the love of God poured into our hearts through the death and resurrection of Jesus. He died to save them; He knows how to save them. Pray with St. Faustina, "Jesus, I trust in you."
Monogenism
Kevin from Buffalo: What are your thoughts on this article, particularly the points about monogenism?
- It dogmatizes science and relativizes dogma:
- "Subsequent research into genomics, however, has settled this question against Pius. It's not that scientists cannot trace human ancestry back far enough to an Adam and Eve; it's that in principle, the level of genetic variation present in the species today rules out a founding population with fewer than several thousand individuals."
Where did that "founding population" come from? A miracle of mass mutation?
Etcetera
- Other unanswered questions.
Last Week's Show
- Marybeth from Henrietta: "Has a friend who says that she believes in reincarnation. Marybeth said, 'Catholics don't believe in reincarnation.' Her friend replied, 'I do and I'm Catholic.' How do you answer?"
- Her friend is a "Catholic but."
- FACEBOOK NO. 1. Jason. Florida. At the risk of sounding impatient, it seems to me that to grow in faith and become closer to God, you have to step out of the boat and try to walk on the water. By staying in the boat, you go nowhere and learn nothing. But I also believe it is important to learn to be content with the gifts and blessings you have received. To me, this implies staying in the boat. These two noble choices seem to contrast with one another. Am I just missing something here? Can you please explain how I can reconcile the two? Thanks.
- Mary from Rochester. Has a teenaged disabled son who received Baptism but no other Sacraments. Would it be advisable for her to have him Confirmed, have First Communion, etc.?
- John. Buffalo. Just finished a book, 'History of Anti-Christ.' by a gentleman with the last name of Huchede and was wondering if Father could expand on it.
- Carol. Hamburg. Has a son who lives out of town (43) who has leukemia reoccurring. He's going through new types of Chemo, but it's taking it's toll. He's in a state of depression, and she doesn't know how to help him from long distance.
- Joan. Buffalo. Happy Birthday to you Father Marty! You share a birthday w/ my eldest son. God Bless!
- Nancy from Buffalo: "What is the best way to go to Jesus through the Immaculate Heart of Mary?"
- Hobbit: I learned a lesson. Don't post anything to facebook else Father broadcasts it to the world. ;^)
- MXM: "Everything you say will be taken down and used against you." :-P
The Treasury of Extra Questions
We have had many questions that either come too late in the show or that need research to answer. We often say, "Tune in next week and we'll deal with that in more depth"--but we haven't always kept our promise. The purpose of this page is to make a list of those questions for future reference. If we run low on callers or current questions, we can always dip into this reservoir to keep the conversation going.
Exegesis
- What do you think of [this essay], particularly its assertion that dogma is more certain than Scripture study?
Purgatory
- Justin from e-mail: I know that you also share a love for C.S. Lewis' writing and that you might have some light to shed on this subject. I've been reading his book, A Grief Observed, and he brings up the idea of the dead feeling the pains of separation, as the living do, and that this might be one of their purgatorial sufferings. He explains that this bereavement is an integral part of our experience of love, and that death is just another phase, not a truncation, of that experience/process. Was wondering what you think about this? I was fascinated with his intellectual reasoning, as I usually am.
Children of lesbians in Catholic school?
- Peter from Buffalo: How do you feel about the [Catholic school that allowed the child of two lesbians to enroll in it?]
Pitch for the Magnificat
- Matt from Colorado (e-mail): I love the show on podcast and also the Magnificat. I got a subscription to it and go through the Mass readings and prayers within it daily. I love it and hope you can pass along all about it to your listeners. If I won the lottery, I would buy a subscription for everyone I know and donate more subscriptions to churches everywhere. I first picked it up in the Adoration Chapel at my Church. It was laying there and I was really knocked off my feet by it. I ran home and subscribed immediately. I can totally tell the difference in my spirituality and closeness to God. I feel myself really craving getting to the Eucharist as often as I can. Great, great reading and very interesting too. I love the integration of the lives/stories of the Saints and Blesseds. I bought my Mom a subscription too.
The meaning of fiction
Matt from Colorado asked about (e-mail about The Shack). Second thoughts: interpreting fiction.