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I've been thinking quite a bit lately about what would have happened to the world if the Disciples had simply refused to follow the Great Commission.

They would probably have excused themselves by saying "It simply is not our spiritual tradition. We are Jews of a particular sect and must keep to our ways." No one would have been persecuted. We would have simply died out as a movement in one generation.

This temptation to inaction using these same excuses has always been popular and is present today. Nothing new about that.

St. Paul in Ephesians 6:11 advises us to "Put on the whole armour of God that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil". When you hear unfair criticism against you or against what happens on Aug. 6 make sure that you have your armour on. Some will take second hand information and spread it all over the metropolia to discredit these efforts. Some may even come to the meeting with the intention of destroying the work before it can get off the ground.

Anyone who has ever done an obedient work for Christ and His Church knows exactly what I'm talking about. Be prepared.

Jesus warned us that no wise person ever begins a building without making adequate plans and no one who is wise and expects to survive goes into battle without a battle plan. Part of the battle plan is to realize that some of the criticism that you will face is going to be inaccurate and unfair. Some of the criticism is based upon fear and jealousy. Some will be honest and true but will still hurt.

Don't let the criticisms of others be the motivating factor to your obedience. St. Paul wrote: "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling." Some who will criticize are doing that and are trying to help you. Everyone, whether they know it or not, are working on their own salvation. It's just that they don't realize that by unfairly criticizing others they are striking a blow against it and not building toward heaven.

"Lay aside every weight of sin and press toward the mark of the high calling of Christ Jesus our Lord." We are not coming together to complain but to build. Just thank your critics and keep moving forward.

Dan L

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I would suggest the following article by Avery Cardinal Dulles on "True and False Reform":
First Things Article [firstthings.com]

In it he discusses how reform is a mixture of holding to those venerable truths which we have always held while also being open to new movements and ideas. A true reform will, in no way, act contrary to what the Church has always taught but will seek to say it such that the ears of our contemporaries will hear it the better.

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Quote
Originally posted by Mike J.:
A true reform will, in no way, act contrary to what the Church has always taught but will seek to say it such that the ears of our contemporaries will hear it the better.
Mike,

What are you trying to say? How do you relate your article to Dan's post?

Joe

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Joe,

I took as a general word of encouragement to press forward no matter what the obstacles but remain true to the ancient truths of the Church. It is a fine but clear line we must follow.

I know that Father Loya is receiving much criticism for his honest appeal for help. But he has expressed many times that movement is in support of our hierarchs who need encouragement to be brave in their leadership. None of us in this movement are interested in dismantling the Church but neither are we interested in whining and complaining off in the corner someplace. Changes desparately need to be made. The Holy Spirit is designing a movement clearing within the Church but free of the confines of "Standing" committees. Clearly we don't need simply to stand. We must move. Hence we are a movement.

Dan L

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Quote
Originally posted by J Thur:
Quote
Originally posted by Mike J.:
[b]A true reform will, in no way, act contrary to what the Church has always taught but will seek to say it such that the ears of our contemporaries will hear it the better.
Mike,

What are you trying to say? How do you relate your article to Dan's post?

Joe [/b]
I was just trying to say that there are people who will be critical of new movements and reform from multiple locations in the Church. Some people will think it's way out of hand or smacks of anti-clericalism. Others will think it's too rigid and needs to go further.

Cardinal Dulles' article points out items *everyone* should keep in mind about reform in general so that everyone knows better how to critique an idea. To just blow off a new movement because it seems "different" and scary somehow is not reason enough to stagnate with this re-formation of the Church. To decide that the "old ways" just don't cut it anymore is not reason enough to dismiss them out of hand.

I dare say most of the Church's history post-V2 has either been one extreme or a severe reaction against the extreme. We've seen liberal theology creep into various people and groups in the Church (consider Voice of the Faithful or Rainbow Sash) and we've seen other people flip out over it (SSPX and the Lefebrvist schism). In various ways, they're both wrong because they didn't have an eye for many of the things Dulles points out about "True Reform".

There is a bit of Chesterton to quote here:

"If you hear a thing being accused of being too tall and too short, too red and too green, too bad in one way and too bad also in the opposite way, then you may be sure that it is very good."

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"If you hear a thing being accused of being too tall and too short, too red and too green, too bad in one way and too bad also in the opposite way, then you may be sure that it is very good."
Isn't that the truth.

Attempting to start something in this Church can only lead to good, if for no other reason than the fact it generates ENERGY.

We can easily see what 'standing' has done. To stand still is to die. Our ancestors in their own way were movers and shakers. They built churches, schools, choirs, communities. I don't believe they would have wanted us to just 'maintain' what they created here in this country. I know they wouldn't have wanted us to stand in place for 40 years!

I've heard more about Aug. 6th than I've ever heard filter out from any type of evangelization committee. Sorry folks. Its the truth.

We've had offices of evangelization or whatever for years now. Nothing is happening. Numbers are dropping. Churches are empty. Why criticize anyone who wants to turn that around?

I would hope Fr. Loya takes this criticism as a positive sign that he is doing what he is called to do.

Keep moving forward!

Sam

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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Dan Lauffer:
I've been thinking quite a bit lately about what would have happened to the world if the Disciples had simply refused to follow the Great Commission.

They would probably have excused themselves by saying "It simply is not our spiritual tradition. We are Jews of a particular sect and must keep to our ways." No one would have been persecuted. We would have simply died out as a movement in one generation.


Dan,

It's pretty clear in the Bible what the early church was thinking.

I suggest these for your reading:

1) 1 Corinthians 11:2: ". . . keep the traditions, as I delivered {them} to you."

2) 2 Thessalonians 2:15: ". . . hold the traditions which you have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle."

3) 2 Thessalonians 3:6: "Now we command you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you withdraw yourselves from every brother that walks disorderly, and not after the tradition which he received of us."

For the vast majority of our existence our church held true to those words. I am surprised that you would disagree.

Unless I am misunderstanding you, you write a lot of posts stating that our church doesn't believe in change and believes in inaction.

Are you unaware that our liturgy and customs have changed since our Ruthenian ancestors came to America at the beginning of last century? I know that you'll call it whining, but what has all of that change brought us? Show me the results.

One example is the change from Old Church Slavonic to vernacular. I know from previous posts that you think that we have always worshipped in the vernacular, but we haven't. Nobody was speaking Old Church Slavonic in Eastern Europe even two hundred years ago. That changed last century in this country and others.

Once upon a time there were a majority of the laity who had actually attended a vespers service, that's not so today.

Then there's communion rails, church architecture, confessional booths, turning our backs on our Slavic heritage etc. I could go on.

The reality is that all of the change of last century has failed miserably.

I applaud any effort to evangelize and grow our church and I hope that you are successful, yet I have to question your grasp of the history of the Greek Catholic Church. Holding to our traditions and evangelizing and sharing them to others is the path to growth, wouldn't you agree?

Michael Cerularius

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Michael,

I find your posts very painful to read. There seems to be a complete disconnect between what I wrote and how you understood it. I will assume you worship in a dreadful place and wonder why you aren't putting forth an effort to change it. Your accusations seem totally irrational.

Just one simple question, though I could ask many but have little hope that your response would make much sense: "Tell me why Sts. Methodius and Cyril did not settle for Greek in the Slavic lands?" If you can answer that you will know the answers to all of your questions and your charges against me will disappear.

Dan L

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Quote
Originally posted by Michael Cerularius:


1) 1 Corinthians 11:2: ". . . keep the traditions, as I delivered {them} to you."

2) 2 Thessalonians 2:15: ". . . hold the traditions which you have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle."

3) 2 Thessalonians 3:6: "Now we command you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you withdraw yourselves from every brother that walks disorderly, and not after the tradition which he received of us."

Holding to our traditions and evangelizing and sharing them to others is the path to growth, wouldn't you agree?

Michael Cerularius
Whatever about our good friend Dan, I certainly agree with that Michael!

Nick

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Originally posted by sam:
Quote
"If you hear a thing being accused of being too tall and too short, too red and too green, too bad in one way and too bad also in the opposite way, then you may be sure that it is very good."
Isn't that the truth.

Attempting to start something in this Church can only lead to good, if for no other reason than the fact it generates ENERGY.

We can easily see what 'standing' has done. To stand still is to die. Our ancestors in their own way were movers and shakers. They built churches, schools, choirs, communities. I don't believe they would have wanted us to just 'maintain' what they created here in this country. I know they wouldn't have wanted us to stand in place for 40 years!

I've heard more about Aug. 6th than I've ever heard filter out from any type of evangelization committee. Sorry folks. Its the truth.

We've had offices of evangelization or whatever for years now. Nothing is happening. Numbers are dropping. Churches are empty. Why criticize anyone who wants to turn that around?

I would hope Fr. Loya takes this criticism as a positive sign that he is doing what he is called to do.

Keep moving forward!

Sam
Right you are, Sam. I'm not a priest so I can write what I d.... well please without serious repercussions. The point is, I love the mission and the beauty and the promise of the Church immensley. I desire to fulfill the Lord's calling upon my life with all my heart. Yet this Church is dying and many of us know why.

Standing Committees are designed not to move. We only need a handful of them. We have at least four to five times too many standing committees. Their very existence is clogging up or better "quenching" the Spirit. If we can't get them eliminated we can doing something that may be even better. We can ignore them. In fact if we don't ignore them we are doomed.

Whoever heard of a serious national Church with only 20,000 members when only a couple of decades ago we had many times that?

It used to be said of GM that "As GM goes so goes the nation." Now their stocks have been reduced to junk. The record we've established with standing committees is worse than GM's. GM needs a major shake up and even then its future is problematic. What do you think we need?

Father and Bishop John are facing opposition. If they will have courage they will give the Church a glorious gift and the Church will in turn give a glorious gift to the world. If they lose heart... I think you know.

Dan L

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Nicholas,

It's sort of like asking if one agrees with mom and apple pie. Of course I agree with those Scriptures. Of course I'm concerned about proper liturgy. But I am not a liturgist. If someone has serious issues about the new translation (I miss the admonission "The doors, the doors, with wisdom be attentive") then let them come forth and speak them. Maybe come and suggest that at the August 6 meeting.

What is not acceptable is complaining endlessly about something the complainers have no intention to do anything about.

BTW I understand that Bishop Pataki is well beyond mandatory retirement age. Why is he not retired?

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Originally posted by Dan Lauffer:

BTW I understand that Bishop Pataki is well beyond mandatory retirement age. Why is he not retired?
Speaking of complaints.... wink

Did you know that he is the oldest serving Catholic diocesan bishop in the United States? What a survivor! You have to hand it to him.

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Originally posted by Dan Lauffer:
Michael,

I find your posts very painful to read. There seems to be a complete disconnect between what I wrote and how you understood it. I will assume you worship in a dreadful place and wonder why you aren't putting forth an effort to change it. Your accusations seem totally irrational.

Just one simple question, though I could ask many but have little hope that your response would make much sense: "Tell me why Sts. Methodius and Cyril did not settle for Greek in the Slavic lands?" If you can answer that you will know the answers to all of your questions and your charges against me will disappear.

Dan L
Dan,

It's not surprising that all of the stuff I wrote about tradition would be painful for you to read.

Sts. Cyril and Methodius going from Greek to Slavonic resulted in millions of souls accepting Christianity. Show me the success of going from Church Slavonic to the vernacular.

Like a true modernist you want me to judge the intentions and not the results. When you can't defend the results you resort to name calling (whiners, complainers, wishing people shut up etc.)

You must have a cloudy web cam on me. In the past you have accused me of such things such as not reading the new translation that was handed to the clergy and now you think I worship at a dreadful place.

Neither is true. But one fact is that we have a fundamental difference in how we look at theology. I choose not to isolate myself to my own age and become ignorant of my spiritual heritage and roots. I dont't think that the Church ended in Acts 28 and did not reappear until the 20th century or so (give or take depending on what questions I get asked).

And finally I'll repeat what was in my so called "painful and irrational post".

Holding to our traditions and evangelizing and sharing them to others is the path to growth, wouldn't you agree?


Michael Cerularius

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Are you coming Aug. 6?

Dan L

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Originally posted by Dan Lauffer:
Are you coming Aug. 6?

Dan L
was this post for me?

if it was here is my response:

My wife is due with our second child towards the end of July. (that could mean tomorrow or early August). Depending on what happens with that I will make every effort to get there from the Cleveland area.

I'm sure you're eager to meet me. wink

Michael Cerularius

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