All posts by CadyLy

Since we are talking about the Inquisition…

…here’s an excerpt from David Currie’s book, “Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic” :

It is well known that, during the Crusades, some Jews and Jewish communities were attacked by Christian soldiers. What is not so well known is that the Catholic bishops tried to stop these attacks. They preached and pleaded. It was a sin to do what those Christian soldiers did. Sometimes the bishops were able to stop the attacks; sometimes they were not. It was not the first time or the last time that the Church was ignored even though she was morally right. There was anti-Semitism, but it was not rooted in theology. The anti-Semitism was founded on historic, economic, and societal issues. Theology was used occasionally as an excuse.

The whole concept underlying the Spanish Inquisition is difficult for twentieth-century Americans to understand. Misinformation has not helped. It can be understood only in the context of a bitter eight-hundred-year war between Christians and Muslims. The temporary lulls during this long war were call the “cold war”. Spain was the entire Western front in the defense of Christian Europe. Militant Islam was on the march, and many times Islam was victorious. When victorious, Muslims could be brutal with the Christians. One of the major goals of the Spanish Inquisition was to prevent non-Christians from participating in government office. The government of predominantly Christian Spain was trying to assure the loyalty of its governmental workers before they might sorely need that loyalty under Muslim attack.

What is important for the present discussion, however, is often overlooked. The Spanish Inquisition did not apply to Jews. No non-Christian who publicly admitted his unbelief was supposed to be interrogated. That public act would disqualify him for government service, so that he could not harm the Christian government if it was attacked. The Inquisition’s purpose was to root out religious imposters in powerful positions. But because Catholic leaders, like the rest of us, can sin, the purposes and methods of the Inquisition were sometimes abused and misguided. The theology of Spanish Catholicism, however, was certainly not innately anti-Semitic (Currie 192-3).

TFI #63

63. What do we mean when we say that the Son is begotten from the Father?

Answer per “Fr. Ignatius”:  “begotten” is in contrast to “created,” and thus highlights the reality that the Son has always existed, and yet is not the Father.

TFI #61

61. Using the understanding of substance and accidents, explain what we mean when we say that the Father, Son and Spirit are consubstantial

They share the same substance, being, essence, etc.  They are all the same in that they are all God, and share the same “Godness.”

TFI #59

59. Be able to choose 2 other eras of liturgical development and describe them

Sub-Apostolic Era:  this was after the last apostle, John, died ~90 AD.  There were persecutions, so celebrations were held underground.  The Didache (~100-180 AD) was prayerful preparation for Mass prior to coming to the liturgy.  In this era, there was definition of concelebration practices, role of the bishop, unity of the bishop with the people.  There was the Liturgy of the Word, the offertory flowing into the Eucharistic Prayer, and the Liturgy of the Eucharist.  The faithful responded by saying “Amen.”  Communion was taken in hand and there was a collection taken for the poor.  Around 200 AD, Hippolytus wrote the first detailed Eucharistic prayer.  The language of the liturgy was Greek.  Latin became the standard language around 350 AD.  In the 600s, the liturgy became bilingual.

4th-6th Centuries:  this was the Golden Age of the Church.  There was a movement from having liturgy in homes to having liturgy in basilicas.  The local bishops produced libelli (“little books”).  There was a growth of daily Mass and we began to see liturgical vesture appear.  People began to be organized into dioceses.  The form of the Mass was greeting, psalm (Trisagion), enthronement of the Gospel book, opening prayer (invitation, supplication in silence, collect, amen), the proclamation of the Word (OT, Psalm, “Epistle”, Alleluia, Gospel, homily, general intercession, dismissal of the catechumen, presentation of the gifts given from home (after touching the sheep etc. the priest would wash his hands)), anaphora (introduction of the Sanctus, addition of intercessions), double movement (we pray to God and God sends his blessings back to us), breaking of the bread, Lord’s prayer, and communion.

To be continued….

TFI #58

58. Be able to describe the liturgy of the Apostolic era

It was a Saturday and Sunday celebration.  They attended both Synagogue/Temple and Christian celebrations.  There was the Liturgy of the Word with readings from the Law and the Prophets, Psalms and eventually the Gospels.  There was the Liturgy of the Eucharist with the breaking of the bread.  This was often done in context of a meal.

TFI #57

57. Be able to describe St. Augustine and one heresy he was instrumental in teaching against

St. Augustine was born in 354 in North Africa.  He was a teacher of rhetoric and lived a wild life, including having a mistress and a child.  His mother, St. Monica, prayed incessantly for his conversion.  Eventually, after investigating different heretical sects, he joined the Catholic church, becoming the Bishop of Hippo from 395-430.

One of the heresies St. Augustine fought against was Manicheanism, which is a variant of Gnosticism.  They believed that good and evil are divided, yet equal powers (a good symbol for this might be the yin/yang symbol).  They are always in tension.  However, if this were the case, God could not have created both good and evil without being divided within Himself.  God is one.  God has to be good (evil is merely the absence of good).  God’s creation has to be good.

TFI #56

56. Is Jesus two people, or suffering from multiple personality disorder?

No.  Jesus is one person with two wills, a divine Will and a human will.  He avoids conflict with His two wills in that His human will is completely subservient to His divine Will.  There is no confusion, division, change or separation between the natures of Christ, and their uniqueness was not abolished by their union.

TFI #55

55. What do we mean when we say that Christ is “consubstantial” with the Father?

Christ is of the same “stuff” as the Father.  He shares the same essence of being.  They *are* the same; they are one God, yet two persons.