Welcome to the Florida Catholic Online Edition
Click here to submit your prayer requests. Click here to learn more about the Forida Catholic's staff. Click here for information on how you may contact us. Click here to submit your photos for the Florida Catholic Web site. Click here to view and submit your classified ad. Click here for subscription information or to renew your existing subscription conveniently online. Click here for a list of frequently asked questions. Click here for a list of links to Catholic Web sites and information. Click here to search the Florida Catholic Web site.
May 13, 2008

Papal preacher: word of God obscured by ‘chatter’

VATICAN CITY (CNS) | The church today risks obscuring the word of God with too many useless words of its own, said the preacher of the papal household.

Capuchin Father Raniero Cantalamessa, in a Lenten meditation to Pope Benedict XVI and top Vatican officials Feb. 29, said preachers ought to focus more on the essential Gospel message and less on their own embellishments.

The “chatter” of the profane world has little to do with the church’s mission, Father Cantalamessa said.

“Too many human words, too many useless words, too many speeches, too many documents,” he said.

“In the age of mass communication, the church too risks sinking into the straw of useless words, pronounced just for the sake of saying them, written just because there are magazines and newspapers to fill,” he said.

Father Cantalamessa said preachers would do well to stick to the “simple and plain word of God” rather than filter it through “a thousand distinctions and clarifications and additions and explanations.”

These explanations may even be correct ones, but they end up weakening the impact of the Gospel in people’s hearts, he said.

He said preachers should also be careful not to allow their talks to be exploited for political or partisan purposes.

Where the preacher has no realistic chance of bringing his listeners to the point where he can say, “Convert and believe,” then it’s probably better just to witness the Gospel in silence, he said.

When writing sermons or similar talks, Father Cantalamessa said, preachers should leave room for divine stimulation. Rather than praying afterward, as if to ask God to bless their words, they should pray beforehand for inspiration, he said.

03/03/2008 11:42 AM ET Copyright (c) 2008 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

 

Return to Papal News Front Page

Advertisement
 
Archdiocese of Miami | Diocese of Orlando | Diocese of Palm Beach | Diocese of Pensacola - Tallahassee | Diocese of St. Petersburg | Diocese of Venice
Advertisement
Copyright © 2007 – 2008 (except stories and photos by CNS) | All Rights Reserved | The Florida Catholic, Inc. | 50 E. Robinson Street | Orlando, FL 32801 | (407) 373-0075