Evaluation of the Charismatic Movement and Pentecostalism Phenomenon    
By Father John A. Hardon, S.J.
Before entering on the formal presentation, I think it will be useful to
 first clarity some possible sources of misunderstanding. The immediate 
focus of this study is Pentecostalism.   It is not directly concerned 
with the persons who call themselves Pentecostals or, as some prefer, 
Charismatic.
Moreover, the purpose here is to make an evaluation.  It is not to 
impart information about Pentecostalism, since such information is 
fairly presumed, with all the literature by and about the movement and, 
from many people, either personal experience or direct observation of 
the movement in action. 
Finally, though I seldom do this when speaking, in this case it may be 
useful to give a run-down of “references” about the speaker’s own 
qualifications in talking on the subject.
My professional work is teaching Comparative Religion.  A phenomenon 
like Pentecostalism, I know has for years been one of the characteristic
 features in other religious cultures, and not only in Protestantism or 
Roman Catholicism; in fact, not only in Christianity.
Since the first stirring of Pentecostalism in Catholic circles, I have 
been asked to give some appraisal of it to leaders in the Church who 
sought counsel on the question, e.g., Bishop Zaleski as chairman of the 
American Bishops Doctrinal Commission and recently the Jesuit Provincial
 of the Southern Province, in a three-day private conference in New 
Orleans.
For several years I have been counselling persons dedicated to 
Pentecostalism, mainly priests, religious, and seminarians.  And on Palm
 Sunday of this year I preached at the First Solemn Mass of a priest who
 is deeply involved in the movement.
My plan for today’s talk is to cover three areas of the subject, at uneven length, namely:
1.  The Historical Background of the Pentecostal Movement, up to the present.
2.  What are the principal elements of Pentecostalism, as viewed by Roman Catholics dedicated to the movement?
3.  An Evaluation in the form of a Critical Analysis of Pentecostalism as a phenomenon which has developed an Ideology.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
The essentials of the Pentecostalism we know today began with the 
Reformation in the sixteenth century as a complement to Biblicism.  The 
two together have formed an inseparable duality in historic 
Protestantism.
Where the Bible was canonized in the phrase, Sola Scriptura, as the sole
 repository of divine revelation; the indwelling Holy Spirit in the 
heart of every believer was invoked as the only criterion for 
interpreting the Scriptures or even for recognizing their canonicity.  
Thus Sola Scriptura became the basic principle of direction in the life 
of some Christians, in place of the professedly divine guidance by the 
Spirit residing in the papacy and the Catholic hierarchy.
Pentecostalism turned sectarian in the nineteenth century whom groups 
like the Irvingites, Shakers, and Mormons broke away from their parent 
bodies over what they said was indifference in the established 
Protestant churches to external manifestations of the presence in 
converted believers of the Holy Spirit.
What gave these sectarian groups theological rootage was the parallel 
rise of the Holiness movement among Methodists.  Experience of 
conversion and an awareness of the Spirit had always been prominent in 
Wesleyan thought.  With the advent of biblical criticism and the solvent
 of rationalism, many followers of Wesley fell back almost exclusively 
on personal experience as a sign of God’s saving presence.
When some of these Holiness groups affiliated with the Irvingiton and their counterparts, modern Pentecostalism was born.
Some would date the beginning with 1900, but more accurately, from 1900 
on the Pentecostal movement began its denominational period.  One after 
another, new congregations were formed or old ones changed to become 
Pentecostal in principle and policy.  By 1971 some 200 distinct 
denominations in America qualified as Pentecostals.  While the total is 
uncertain, ten million in the US is not too high a figure.  Outside 
North America, the largest contingent is in South America, where 
Pentecostal missionaries from the States have successfully evangelized 
in every country below the Rio Grande. Brazil alone has four million, of
 which 1.8 million are mainly converts who were originally baptized 
Catholics.
The most recent development in Pentecostalism was the ecumenical 
collaboration with Catholic groups in the United States, at first 
cautious, then bolder and now becoming a pattern that give rise to what 
some call “Catholic Pentecostalism,” but others prefer to say is “The 
Pentecostal Movement in the Catholic Church.”
From this point on, my concern will be uniquely with this latest 
development, seen through the eyes of its dedicated followers and 
described by men and women who believe they are, and wish to remain, 
loyal Catholics but honestly believe that a new dimension should be 
added to the concept of Catholicism before it was touched by the present
 outpouring of the Pentecostal grace of the Spirit.
Main Elements of Pentecostalism
Although American Catholic involvement in the Pentecostal movement is 
hardly five years old (this speech dates back to 1970-1971), a growing 
body of literature is accumulating.  Most of it is still descriptive or 
historical, but more than a score of monographs and half a dozen books 
are frankly theological.  Their authors seriously try to come to grips 
with what they call the Charismatic Renewal, and their studies are 
couched in formal, even technical language.
There is no doubt that those who are professed Catholics, and at the 
same time, committed to Pentecostalism, want to span both shores.  As 
they view the situation, it should be seen from two perspectives: 1) 
from the standpoint of Pentecostalism, defining what are its essential 
features; and 2) from the side of Catholicism, distinguishing what is 
different about Pentecostalism today, compared with other historical 
types of the same movement in former times.
Essentials Of Pentecostalism
Writers of a Catholic persuasion isolate certain elements of 
Pentecostalism and identify them as trans-confessional.  They are simply
 characteristic of this aspect of Christianity whenever it occurs, 
whether among Catholics or Protestants or, in fact, whether before the 
Reformation or since.
1) The primary postulate also gives Pentecostalism its name.  Just as on
 the first Pentecost in Jerusalem there was an extraordinary decent of 
the Holy Spirit and a marvellous effusion of spiritual gifts, so at 
different ages in the Church’s history a similar phenomenon occurs.  
It is generally occasioned by a grave crisis or need in the Church.  God
 raises certain charismatic persons to visit them with special graces 
and make them the heralds of His mission to the world.  Such were 
Benedict and Bruno, Francis and Dominic, Ignatius and Theresa of Avila.
The present age is such a period, certainly of grave crisis in 
Christianity, during which the Holy “Spirit has decided to enter history
 in a miraculous way, to raise up once again the leaders of renewal for 
the Church and, through the Church, for all mankind.
2) No less than on Pentecost Sunday, so now the descent of the Spirit 
becomes probably  perceptible. This perceptibility shows itself 
especially in three ways.
A) In a personally felt experience of the Spirit’s presence in the one 
who receives Him.  The qualities of this coming are variously described;
 they cover one or more of the following internal experiences: deep-felt
 peace of soul, joyousness of heart, shedding of worry and anxiety, 
strong conviction of belief, devotion to prayer, tranquillity of 
emotions, sense of spiritual well being, an ardent piety, and, in 
general, a feeling of intimacy with the divine which, it is said, had 
never or only for sporadic moments been experienced before.
B) Along with the internal phenomena, which themselves partake of the 
preternatural, are external manifestations that can be witnessed by 
others.  Such are speaking in strange tongues, in gift of prophecy, the 
power of healing, and, it would seem, all the gamut of charismata 
enumerated in the Acts of the Apostles and the letters of St. Paul.
C) Capping the two sets of phenomena, of internal experience and 
external manifestation, is the inspiration given by the Spirit to 
communicate these gifts to others.  Normally a Spirit filled person is 
the channel of this communication; he becomes a messenger of the Spirit 
to others and his zeal to act in this missionary role is part of the 
change that the divine visitation effects in him.
3) The basic condition required to receive the charismatic outpouring is
 openness of faith.  The only fundamental obstacle is diffidence or 
distrust of the Spirit to produce today what He had done in ages past.
If the foregoing are typical of Pentecostalism in every critical period 
of Christianity and the common heritage in Protestant as well as 
Catholic experience, certain features are typical of Pentecostalism 
today. 
1) Present day Charismatic experience is far wider than ever before.  
Where in former days only certain few people received the Pentecostal 
outpouring, it is now conferred on thousands, and the conferral has only
 started.  It is nothing less than a deluge of preternatural visitation.
2) Consistent with the large numbers is the fact that Pentecostalism, 
otherwise than ever before, affects the lettered and unlettered, those 
obviously pursuing holiness and the most ordinary people.  Indeed, one 
of the truly remarkable facts in that even quite unholy persons may now 
suddenly receive the Spirit, provided they open their hearts to Him in 
docile confidence and faith. 
3) Also, unlike in previous times, this is a movement.  It is not just a
 sporadic experience but a veritable dawn of a new era of the Spirit; 
such as Christianity had never known in age past.  It is destined, so it
 seems to sweep whole countries and cultures, and promises to effect 
changes in co-called institutional Christianity not less dramatic than 
occurred in Jerusalem when Peter preached his first sermon in response 
to the coming of the Holy Spirit. 
4) As might be expected, the Spirit is now to affect not only 
individuals or scattered groups here and there.  His charismatic 
effusion will remake Christian society.  His gifts are to recreate and, 
where needed, create new communities of believers, bound together by the
 powerful ties of a common religious experience and sustained by such 
solidarity as only a mutually shared contact with the divine can 
produce. 
5) While there had been Pentecostal experiences in every stage of 
Christian history, generally they were characterized by public phenomena
 or at least their external manifestations were highlighted.  Modern 
Pentecostalism includes these phenomena, indeed, but, the stress is on 
the internal gifts received by the people.  Their deep inside conviction
 of mind and joy of heart are paramount.  These, are, of course, no less
 phenomenal than the physical gifts of tongues or prophecy or healing of
 disease.. They, too, partake of the miraculous.  But they are the 
interior gifts from the Spirit in the spirit, and as such, are the main 
focus of Pentecostalism in today’s world of doubt and desperation.
Critical Analysis
So far I have given what might be called an overview of Pentecostalism, 
with emphasis on that form which professed Catholics have not only 
adopted but which their leaders, priests, religious and the laity, are 
defining and defending in a spate of books and periodicals. 
I have witnessed the phenomena they described, read the literature they 
have written, spent hours in conference and consultation with those 
deeply committed to the movement, conferred at length with specialists 
in the psychological sciences who dealt professionally with “Catholic 
Pentecostals,” and I have carefully watched the consequences of the 
movement for several years.  My growing conclusion is that 
Pentecostalism in the Catholic Church is symptomatic of some grave needs
 among the faithful that should be met soon and by all effective means 
at our disposal.  But I also think that Pentecostalism as an ideology is
 not the answer to these needs.  In fact, it may be a serious obstacle, 
even a threat, to the authentic renewal in the Spirit inaugurated by the
 Second Vatican Council.
My reasons for this two fold judgment naturally suggest two sets of 
appraisal: one for considering Pentecostalism symptomatic and the other 
for believing it does not meet the felt needs of the Church today.
Pentecostalism As Symptomatic
It is not surprising that a phenomenon like Pentecostalism should have 
risen to the surface in Catholic circles just at this time.  The 
Church’s history has seen similar, if less widely publicized, phenomena 
before.
1) The widespread confusion in theology has simmered down to the 
faithful and created in the minds of many uncertainty about even such 
fundamentals as God’s existence, the divinity of Christ, and the Real 
Presence. 
Confusion seeks certitude, and certitude is sough in contact with God.  
When this contact is fostered and sustained by group prayers and joint 
witness to the ancient faith it answers to a deep felt human need.  
Pentecostalism in its group prayer situations tries to respond to this 
often desperate need. 
2) Among the critical causes of confusion, the Church’s authority is 
challenged and in some quarters openly denied.  This creates the 
corresponding need for some base of religious security which 
Pentecostalism offers to give in the interior peace born of union with 
the Spirit.
3) Due to many factors, many not defensible, practices of piety and 
devotion from regular Novenas, to statutes, rosaries and religious 
articles have been dropped or phased out of use in the lives of 
thousands of the faithful.  Pentecostalism serves to fill the devotional
 vacuum in a way that startles those who have, mistakenly, come to 
identify Christianity with theological cooperation or the bare minimum 
of external piety. 
4) Ours is in growing measure a prayerless culture.  This has made 
inroads in Catholicism. It is a commentary on our age that millions have
 substituted work for prayer; and how the balance needs to be 
redressed--with Pentecostalism offering one means of restoring the 
spirit of prayer.
5) In the same way, religion for too many had become listless routine, 
and prayer a lip service or almost vacuous attendance at the liturgy.  
Religion as experience, knowing God and not only about Him; feeling His 
presence in one’s innermost being--was thought either exotic, or 
psychotic, or presumptuous.  Pentecostalism promises to give what 
Christians in our dehumanized Western Society so strongly 
crave--intimacy with the Divine.
All of this, and more, is part of the background which helps explain why
 such a movement as the Charismatic came into being.  Its existence is 
both symptomatic and imperative that something be done--existence is 
both symptomatic and imperative that something be done--and done 
well--to satisfy the desire of millions of Christians for peace of mind,
 security of faith, devotion in prayer, and a felt realization of union 
with God.
Pentecostalism, as a mistaken Ideology
The question that still remains, however, is whether the Pentecostal 
movement is a valid answer to these recognized needs.  Notice I do not 
say that individuals who have entered the movement cannot find many of 
their spiritual needs who have entered the movement cannot find many of 
their spiritual needs satisfied.  Nor am I saying that group prayer is 
not helpful for many people; nor, least of all, that the Holy Spirit has
 been inactive during these trying times to confer precisely an 
abundance of His sevenfold gifts on those who humbly and in faith invoke
 His sanctifying name.  
What I must affirm is that Pentecostalism is not a mere movement, it is,
 as the ending “ism” indicates, an ideology.  And as such it is creating
 more problems objectively than it solves subjectively.  In other words,
 even when it gives symptomatic relief to some people, it produces a 
rash of new, and graver, issues touching on the Catholic faith and its 
authentic expression by the faithful.
1) The fundamental problem it creates is the absolute conviction of 
devoted Pentecostals that they have actually received a charismatic 
visitation of the Holy Spirit.
I am not here referring to such external phenomena as the gift of 
tongues, but of the deeply inward certitude that a person has been the 
object of a preternatural infusion, with stress on the infusion of 
preternatural insights, i.e., in the cognitive order. 
This is an astounding assertion, and the only thing un-remarkable about 
it is that so many Pentecostals are now firmly convinced they have been 
so enlighten.
Their books and monographs, lectures and testimonials simply assume to 
be incontestable and beyond refutation that they have been specially 
illumined by a charism which, they say, is available to others who are 
equally disposed to receive it.
But repeated affirmation is not enough, and even the strongest 
subjective conviction is not proof, where a person claims to have been 
the recipient of such extraordinary gifts; notably of spiritual 
knowledge as God conferred in apostolic times, or gave to His great 
mystics in different times.
The dilemma this raises can be easily stated:
Either the Pentecostal experience really confers preternatural insight 
(at least among its leaders) .  Or, the experience is quite natural, 
while certainly allowing for the normal operations of divine grace.  
Everything which the Pentecostal leadership says suggest that they 
consider the experience, and I quote their terms; “preternatural, 
special, mystical, charismatic, extraordinary.”
2.  It is irrelevant to discourse about the charismata in the New 
Testament, or theologize about the gifts of the Holy Spirit.  No 
believing Christian denies either the charism or the gifts.  The 
question at stake is not of faith, about of fact.
Are the so-called charismata truly charismatic?  If they are, then we 
stand in the presence of a cosmic miracle, more stupendous in 
proportion--by reason of sheer numbers--than anything the Church has 
seen, I would say, even in apostolic times.
But if the experiences are not authentically charismatic, then, again, 
we stand in the presence of a growing multitude of persons who believe 
themselves charismatically led by the Holy Spirit.  They will make 
drastic decisions, institute revolutionary changes, or act in a host of 
other ways--firmly convinced they are responding to a special divine 
impulse whereas in reality they are acting in response to quite 
ordinary, and certainly less infallible, motions of the human spirit.
3.  At this point we could begin a completely separate analysis, namely,
 of the accumulating evidence that the impulses which the Pentecostal 
leaders consider charismatic are suspiciously very human.  Their 
humanity, to use a mild word, is becoming increasingly clear from the 
attitudes being assumed towards established principles and practices in 
Catholicism.  
Logically, it may be inferred, the Holy Spirit would not contradict 
Himself.  We expect Him to support what Catholic Christianity believes 
is the fruit of His abiding presence in the Church of which He is the 
animating principle of ecclesiastical life.
What do we find?  In the published statements, and therefore not the 
casual remarks of those who are guiding the destiny of the Pentecostal 
movement among Catholics, are too many disconcerting positions to be 
lightly dismissed by anyone who wants to make an objective appraisal of 
what is happening.
I limit myself to only a few crucial issues, each of which I am sure, 
will soon have a cluster of consequences in the practical order:
a) The Papacy.  If there is one doctrine of Catholic Christianity that 
is challenged today it is the Roman Primacy.  Yet in hundreds of pages 
of professional writing about the charismatic gifts, we find a studied 
silence--no doubt to avoid offense to other Pentecostals--about the 
papacy; and a corresponding silence about a more loyal attachment to the
 Holy See.  It is painful to record but should be said that the pioneer 
of American Pentecostalism among Catholics and its publicly take issue 
with Pope Paul V1 On Humane Vitae
b) The Priesthood and Episcopate.  Running as a thread through 
apologists for Catholic Pentecostalism is an almost instinctive 
contraposition of, and I quote, “charismatic” and “hierarchical, “ or 
“spiritual” and “institutional”.  While some commentators state the dual
 aspects in the Church and even stress the importance of harmony between
 the two, others have begun to opt for a theological position quite at 
variance with historic Catholicism.  They suggest that in the New 
Testament there was essentially only one sacrament for conferring the 
gifts of the Spirit.  Baptism gave a Christian all the essentials of 
what later on the “institutional church” developed into separate 
functions, namely the diaconate, priesthood and episcopate.
c) Catholic Apostolate.  The heaviest artillery of Pentecostals in the 
Catholic camp is levelled at the “ineffectual, irrelevant and 
dispirited” form of Christianity prevalent in the Church.  Accordingly, 
under the impulse of the Spirit, radical changes are demanded in the 
Church’s apostolate.  Old forms of trying to reach the people, 
especially the young, should be abandoned.  This applies particularly to
 Catholic education.  “In spite of the immense expenditure of money and 
human effort being put into parochial schools, “Pentecostals are saying,
 “how often do we not hear complaint that a pitifully small proportion 
of the students emerge as deeply convinced and committed Christians?  We
 can therefore well use some new life in the Church.  “Concretely this 
means to enter other kinds of work for the faithful, and not retain 
Catholic parochial schools--as more than one teaching order, influenced 
by Pentecostalism, has already decided to carry into effect.  
d) The New Spirituality.  Given the posture of Pentecostalism as a 
phenomenal downpour of charismatic grace, it is only natural that the 
human contribution to the divine effusion is minimized.  Actually 
defendants of the movement are careful to explain that a new kind of 
spirituality was born with Pentecostalism.
As heretofore taught, persons aspiring to sanctity were told that 
recollection had to be worked at and cultivated.  It meant painstaking 
effort to keep oneself in the presence of God and consciously fostering,
 perhaps through years of practice, prayerful awareness of God.  The 
charismatic movement is actually a discovery that all of this 
propaedeutics is unnecessary. In view of its importance, it is worth 
quoting the new spiritual doctrine in full:
There is a subtle but very significant difference between what the 
presence of God means in the spiritual doctrine that has long been usual
 in novitiates, seminaries, and the like, and what it means for those 
who have shared the Pentecostal experience.
The difference can be put bluntly in the following terms: The former put
 the accent on the practice, whereas the latter put it on the presence. 
 That is to say, the former regard the constant awareness of God’s 
presence as a goal to be striven for, but difficult to attain; hence 
they exert themselves in recalling over and over that God is here, and 
in frequently renewing their intention to turn their thoughts to Him.  
The latter, on the contrary, seem to start with the experiential 
awareness of God’s presence as the root which enlivens and gives its 
characteristic notes to all their prayer, love and spirituality. 
It is not too much to call this “instant mysticism”.  And if some 
charismatic do not succeed as well (or as soon) as others in this sudden
 experience of God which dispenses with the labourious process of 
cultivating recollection, it must be put down to a lack of sufficient 
docility to the Spirit or, more simply, to the fact that the Holy Spirit
 remains master of His gifts and breathes when (and where He wills).
But the essential dictum stands: those who charismatically experience 
God, and they are now numbered in thousands, came by the phenomenon 
without having to go through the hard school of mental and ascetical 
discipline still taught by an outmoded spirituality.
e) Aggressive Defensiveness.  Having postulated what they call the 
“Pentecostal Spirituality,” its proponents defend it not only against 
present-day critics of such “cheap grace,” but they anticipate unspoken 
objections from the masters of mystical theology.  Among their silent 
critics, whom they criticize, is St. John of the Cross.
As elsewhere, so here is offered a contraposition, the classical 
doctrine on the charism (or extraordinary gifts of the Spirit) and the 
new doctrine of Pentecostalism.  Again direct quotation will bring out 
the full confrontation:
On the practical level, the classical doctrine on the charism has been formed chiefly by St. John of the Cross.
The stand that he takes is predominantly negative: i.e., a warning 
against the harm that comes from rejoicing excessively in the possession
 of such gifts.  The one who does so, he says, leaves himself open to 
deception, either by the devil or by his own imagination: in relying on 
these charism, he  loses some of the merit of faith; and finally, he is 
tempted to vainglory.
Similarly when St. John discusses supernatural communications that come 
by way of visions or words, particularly those that are perceived by the
 imagination or the bodily senses, he is mainly concerned to warn 
against the dangers of deception and excessive attachment.  He condemns 
the practice of seeking to obtain information from God through persons 
favoured with such communications. Even when God answers the queries 
that are thus addressed to Him, He does so out of condescension for our 
weakness, and not because he is pleased to be thus questioned.
If there is anywhere that Pentecostal spirituality seem to conflict with
 the classical it is here. Then follow pages of a strong defence of the 
new positive approach to charismatic experience, admitting that where 
conflict exists between this and the teaching of such mystics as John of
 the Cross, the main reason is obvious.  Men like John and women like 
Theresa of Avila lived in a former age, when charism were rare and then 
given only to individuals.  In our age they are literally an inundation 
and their recipients are countless multitudes.
f) Religious Communities.  Not surprisingly, the Pentecostal movement 
has made some of its deepest effects of religious communities, of men, 
but especially of women.
All problems facing the Church at large affected the lives of those who,
 by prior commitment, dedicated themselves to the pursuit of holiness.
When the charismatic experience offered them release from anxiety and 
the hope of a strong sense of God’s presence----in spite of the turmoil 
all around----religious took to the movement on a scale that no one 
actually knows.  But all estimates indicated that the number is large.
We are still on our final analysis and our approach has been to point up
 the ideology of Pentecostal leadership, to see whether (and if) it is 
at variance with historic Catholicism.
A recently, privately-bound study of a religious who took to 
Pentecostalism reveals many things about convents and cloisters that is 
common knowledge among the initiated but still unknown among the 
faithful at large.
Thematic to this study is the firm belief that the betenoire of 
religious life is structure and institutionalism; that openness to the 
Spirit along Pentecostal lines gives best promise for religious in the 
future.  A few sample statements indicated the general tenor:
We must remember that in order to choose religious life, you must be a misfit.
The danger is that a sacred institution tends to isolate man so he can 
stand back and deal with God.  The institution tends to come between man
 and God.
Religious life is a human institution which God merely tolerates.  God’s
 pleasure is the one thing necessary, and God’s good pleasure is man’s 
total openness.  It is in this openness that we find our true identity, 
but this takes courage.
Total openness takes faith.  Awareness of our true identity implies a 
life of faith.  But faith implies doubt.  You can’t have faith without 
doubt.  Doubt and faith are two sides of the same thing.  We don’t pray 
right because we evade doubt.  And we evade it by regularity and by 
activism.  It is in these two ways...by which we justify the 
self-perpetuation of our institutions. 
While other factors have also been operative, it was sentiments like 
these that contributed to the growing tide in some communities with 
impatience at the slowness of the institutional Church to up-date 
religious life, make it truly open to the Spirit, and experience the 
rich depth of internal peace and joy that seemed to be lacking in 
“structured community routine.”
It is not a coincidence that some spokesmen for the charismatic approach
 to a life of the evangelical counsels have been most critical of such 
symbols of institutionalism as the Sacred Congregation for Religious.  
It is not surprising that some who feel that Rome is archaic or out of 
touch with the times should also be most enthusiastic about 
Pentecostalism.  
Epilogue:
There are those who say we should just allow the Pentecostal movement to
 go and then see what happens.  But that is not in the best tradition of
 Christian prudence.  If, as I personally believe, latter-day 
Pentecostalism is in the same essential stream with Gnosticism, 
Montanism, and Illuminism, we do not pass moral judgment on people but 
prudential judgment on an ideology if we say all that I have said in 
this lecture.
There are gave needs in the Church today--of which the gravest is the 
urgent recovery of prayer across the spectrum of Catholic living--among 
bishops, priests, religious and the laity.  But if prayer and the 
experience of God’s presence are so ungently needed, we must use the 
means that centuries of Christian wisdom have shown are securely 
effective to satisfy this need. Pentecostalism is not one of these 
means. 
The Catholic Monitor commenter Aqua  had this to say to the Vox Cantoris website:   Aqua  said…   Fred, your topic here reminds me of a dust-up, a few days ago, on Vox  Cantoris.  He asserted that it is our duty as Christians to wear masks  to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass if the government tells us we must, or  they will close our Churches. My response to him was that I find  it inconceivable that an orthodox Catholic, such as himself, would ever  submit to unjust dictates from secular government over how we approach  Our Lord in Holy Mass.  My response to him was that the Mass belongs to  Catholics and we decide, within the bounds of Tradition, and in accord  with the Word of Jesus, how we conduct ourselves in Holy Mass.  Only one  authority prevails over Mass and that is our God and the Sacred  Tradition given by Him to guide us in all times and places. Understand,  there  is nothing inherently wrong with wearing a mask to Mass.  But  there is EVERYTHING wrong with wearing a symbol...
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