|
Click here to go to our international website
Click above to visit our Young Adults website
Church Leaders on
|
Charismatic Renewal - General An often asked question in the Forums concerns the legitimacy of the Charismatic Renewal and the phenomena associated with it. In the interests of full disclosure let me start by saying that I have never been, nor am I now, a member of this movement. The Church has never lacked charisms to build it up, both ordinary and extraordinary. However, it is the widespread experience of the Holy Spirit's presence within Catholics and the manifestation of extraordinary charisms such as prophecy, speaking in tongues and healing, outside of those of evident great sanctity, which has characterized the Charismatic Renewal. This needs to be explained to understand what it means when the Church says that the Charismatic Renewal is an authentic movement of the Spirit in our times. Ecclesiastical Acknowledgements The Charismatic Renewal as a movement within the Catholic Church has been acknowledged by two Popes, Paul VI and John Paul II. Speaking to the International Conference on the Catholic Charismatic Renewal on May 19, 1975, Pope Paul VI encouraged the attendees in their renewal efforts and especially to remain anchored in the Church. This authentic desire to situate yourselves in the Church is the authentic sign of the action of the Holy Spirit ... How could this 'spiritual renewal' not be a chance for the Church and the world? And how, in this case could one not take all the means to ensure that it remains so... Pope John Paul II, for his part, has been more explicit. Speaking to a group of international leaders of the Renewal on December 11, 1979, he said, I am convinced that this movement is a very important component of the entire renewal of the Church. Noting that since age 11 he had said a daily prayer to the Holy Spirit he added, This was my own spiritual initiation, so I can understand all these charisms. They are all part of the richness of the Lord. I am convinced that this movement is a sign of his action. For his part, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, has added his voice to the Pope's in acknowledging the good occurring in the Charismatic Renewal and providing some cautions. In a forward to a book by Cardinal Suenens, at that time the Pope's delegate to the Charismatic Renewal, the Prefect comments on the Post-Conciliar period stating, At the heart of a world imbued with a rationalistic skepticism, a new experience of the Holy Spirit suddenly burst forth. And, since then, that experience has assumed a breadth of a worldwide Renewal movement. What the New Testament tells us about the charisms - which were seen as visible signs of the coming of the Spirit - is not just ancient history, over and done with, for it is once again becoming extremely topical. Speaking of the book's subject, renewal and the powers of darkness, he says, What is the relation between personal experience and the common faith of the Church? Both factors are important: a dogmatic faith unsupported by personal experience remains empty; mere personal experience unrelated to the faith of the Church remains blind. Finally, he urges those who read the book to pay special attention to the author's double plea, ... to those responsible for the ecclesiastical ministry - from parish priests to bishops - not to let the Renewal pass them by but to welcome it fully; and on the other (hand) ... to the members of the Renewal to cherish and maintain their link with the whole Church and with the charisms of their pastors. [Renewal and the Powers of Darkness, Leo Cardinal Suenens (Ann Arbor: Servant Books, 1983)]
Charismatic
Graces Whether these charisms be very remarkable or more simple and widely diffused, they are to be received with thanksgiving and consolation since they are fitting and useful for the needs of the Church. Extraordinary gifts are not to be rashly desired nor is it from them that the fruits of apostolic labors are to be presumptuously expected. Those who have charge over the Church should judge the genuineness and proper use of these gifts, through their office, not indeed to extinguish the Spirit but to test all things and hold fast to what is good (cf. 1 Thes. 5:12, 19- 21). [Lumen Gentium 12]
The Church clearly
wishes to follow a middle course, between a rationalistic skepticism and a blind
credulity in alleged workings of the Holy Spirit. In the past the Church had
condemned what it called Pentecostalism, understood as the total dependence,
even theologically, on the presence and manifestation of charisms. Such a
dependence is blind, for it fails to allow itself to be guided by the full
content of the faith and the judgement of the Church's teaching authority. It is
total when such "gifts" displace the means of grace in the life of the
Christian, such as the sacraments. On the other hand, the Church cannot condemn
charisms, since they are part of the patrimony of our apostolic faith. What we
have seen in our time is the appearance of the Charismatic Renewal, an apparent
outpouring of the extraordinary charisms. This doesn't mean that one has to be a
charismatic, that charismatics are better Catholics, or that every alleged
charism is authentic. Yet, as the Council noted, the Church must respect the
workings of God, discerning the authentic from the inauthentic.
All such authentic
charisms, therefore, are at the service of the Body of Christ, the Church (1 Cor
12, 14). As gifts of the Holy Spirit, they are supernatural graces beyond the
power of human striving and human nature (e.g. miracle working), though some may
build upon the natural talents of the recipient (e.g. teaching). St. Paul
contrasts these charismata with "the greater gifts" of Faith, Hope and Charity
(1 Cor. 13), which he says have lasting value. These "theological virtues" unite
the person's mind and will to God. As a consequence, the Church teaches that
Faith, Hope and Charity are necessary for salvation but the charismata are not.
St. Paul's experience at Corinth demonstrated rather early in the Church how
susceptible these charisms are to exaggeration. In another context, he would
even warn the Corinthians that the devil can appear as an angel of light (1 Cor
11:14). Similarly, both St. Peter and St. John (1 Pet 5:8-9; 1 John 4:1) warn us
of this danger. Thus the Church on the one hand recognizes that the Holy Spirit moves where He will, and so she does not want to oppose His working, and on the other, that the Church must discern the authenticity of each charism, lest it be a deception of the evil one. For this reason to say that the Charismatic Renewal is approved by the Church is not a blanket approval of every alleged charismatic gift or every charismatic group or individual within the Church. The discernment of the Holy Spirit's action is an ongoing necessity within the Church and within the Charismatic Renewal.
Discernment
of Charisms Practically speaking, therefore, the many instances of extraordinary charisms within the Charismatic Renewal will never come under the official scrutiny of the Church. Priests and Catholic laity associated with the Renewal will most likely have to discern each instance themselves, according to the theological criteria of Catholic theology and prudence. It is easier to dismiss a phenomenon as NOT from God than it is to determine its other possible sources (human or divine spirit). A basic question prayerfully asked must be "is this particular event a credible example of the action of the Spirit of God - a Spirit incapable of any lie or sin and which can only lead people (even non-Catholics) to a deeper Catholic faith and unity?" This should do much to protect us from the roaring lion (1 Peter 5:8), even if it cannot produce the judgement that something is certainly from God - a fact which only the Holy See can ultimately state. Answered by Colin B. Donovan, STL
Apologetics -
Doctrine -
Canon Law -
Eastern Churches -
General -
History -
Liturgy -
Moral
|