As I am typing this now, I am on my old computer rather than the school-issued one I just paid a hundred bucks for but isn't working correctly. I have been having a lot of technical issues with both of these damned machines the past couple of days, and to be honest, I have spent a lot of time cussing out the Chinese, Bill Gates, the city of Baltimore, my useless landlord, and my former employer for all being issues in my dilemma. Part of what I have had to do is set up my thermal printer yet again to get it to work right, and in the past 48 hours I am starting to think that "going off the grid" is not a bad idea. Technology is a mixed blessing - it is integral to life now, but it is also the biggest pain in the butt to deal with too. If that was not enough, the toilet in our bathroom here at the house also has backed up again, which meant snaking it out, plunging it, etc. - that is becoming a ritual every two weeks now. That is the consequence of having a cheap landlord with a sketchy history who wants to play handyman to cut corners, and then blame his tenants. It has made me about reach my limits in all honesty.
Despite all of these stupid technology issues, all is not bad though. I have been working on my Genesis study, which is almost done once I add the question sections to it and also finalize the table of contents and the bibliography. I have about 21 more chapters to add questions to, and should complete that by the end of this week provided there are no more technology glitches involved. Fortunately, I have that saved on a flash drive, so it is preserved regardless, but it has still been painful. It is one of two books I want to complete this year, and once they are done and in bound printed volumes, then I can sit back and relax a tic until I start a new project. The good news about Genesis and the cookbook is that the bulk of the work has been completed, and all I have to do is mainly formatting. However, formatting is not as easy as it looks, especially when technology is not cooperating well. I know, I know - I perhaps should be less flustered and more grateful, and truly I am the latter, but it still is a challenge trying to get things done. Now that the preliminaries are out of the way, let me get to a few thoughts for this week.
The first thought I have has to do with a research project I may have for a future article here. As you know, Pentecostal/Charismatic history has been an interest of mine for well over 30 years now, and when people delve into that, one tends to look at predecessor movements that foreshadowed a given movement. In the case of Pentecostalism, it was primarily the Catholic Apostolic Church (also called "Irvingite") movement of the 1830s that is seen as its most notable precedent, but charismatic phenomena have been a part of Christian history since the earliest days. Yesterday, my replacement copy of an important book arrived that shed some light on some of this, and the book was Sergey A. Ivanov's Holy Fools in Byzantium and Beyond (New York: Oxford, 2006). This important book was published originally in Russia in 1994, and then translated into English by Simon Franklin later before its release. I had a copy of this before in Hagerstown but lost it with so much else, but thankfully I was able to obtain another for a fairly decent price last week on Ebay. The book deals specifically with a certain group of Eastern and Western saints called in Slavonic Yurodivi, or "fools for Christ," and the thing that sets these individuals apart was eccentric - and by normal standards, downright psychotic - behaviors that are seen as gifts rather than illnesses. Many of them did some odd things, including walking around naked in the winter, sleeping on heaps of dung, and throwing rocks at people they understood as corrupt. Yet, they also were holy people who lived exemplary lives, and thus why they are saints. Many of these individuals also were possessed with spiritual gifts of some sort that could be comparable to Pentecostal phenomena, and that includes speaking in tongues. Indeed, Ivanov records such an instance of this in the book that I will get into at some point, and what is interesting about it is that it is not the typical glossolalic utterances one associates with Pentecostalism - rather, it was in a language unknown to the speaker but understood by the listeners as their native tongue. Oddly, this was the way this particular gift and manifestation was originally understood by the early Pentecostals too, and at least one legacy Pentecostal denomination - the Apostolic Faith Mission in Portland, OR - still understands tongues in this way, as did a number of Wesleyan/Holiness antecedents to Pentecostalism. It is also of note that at least one noted Assemblies of God author, Ralph W. Harris, actually wrote a whole book on this specific manifestation of speaking in tongues back in 1973 entitled Spoken By the Spirit, and it is a catalog of various events where languages unknown to the speaker were evidenced by native speakers of those same languages - it also emphasizes that tongues may have an evangelical dimension as well. The valuable insight Harris has was surprisingly affordable at the time of its original publication - it sold for $1.25 then. I was able to print it for a lot less - free! - thanks to availability at the Flower Pentecostal Research Center in Springfield, MO, where my good friend Dr. Darren Rogers is a curator. I shared this information to just make a couple of clarifying observations about my own position now on all this.
If I were to be classified, it would be as "post-Pentecostal" because I am a former Pentecostal who became Catholic almost 30 years ago, and in all honesty I have not attended a Pentecostal or Charismatic congregation regularly since 1995, although I have been to a few revivals and conferences here and there. I say "post-Pentecostal" because I do still believe in the gifts of the Holy Spirit, and I even practice some of them myself, but I am not by any stretch a Pentecostal anymore, viewing myself instead as a fairly conservative and somewhat traditional Catholic who just happens to take the supernatural seriously. And, to be honest, there is no conflict with my acquired Catholic identity either, as in Catholic history there are instances of saints who could do some supernatural things which could be identified as "Pentecostal" to some degree. I am also very influenced by the 1830s CAC movement as well, and have adopted a lot of what I saw in researching it into my own faith where it doesn't conflict with Magisterial teaching. Given also my background in Convergence as well, I believe there is a way to incorporate revivalism and a more spontaneous aspect of Christianity with traditional Catholic practice, and a big part of what I have been doing in recent years is to try to formulate a model to make that reality - Catholics actually do have a type of revival meeting during the year called a "parish mission," and there is potential with that as some people involved in Catholic Charismatic Renewal may have been a catalyst for those being a regular aspect of parish life too. And, this is where the more long-term idea is coming in - I want to eventually be able to formulate something that can be a model for both Charismatic and traditional Catholic practice without compromising either (especially the latter), and I feel it is possible, and even integral, to the health of the Church. There are problems to sort out though which require more in-depth examination, and I wanted to deal with a couple I see now.
One of the problems is worship. I am of the opinion that reverent, traditional liturgical worship and practice is more than sufficient for one's religious practice, so there are not any "improvements" necessary there. Also, the trajectory of many Pentecostal/Charismatic churches in recent years has been almost chaotic, with dark sanctuaries, loud rock music in the name of "worship," and also some weird and sometimes unbiblical theology associated with the more hypercharismatic wings of those movements - things such as esoteric New Thought-influenced "word of faith" stuff as well as the potentially abusive aspects of the modern "Apostolic Reformation" movement which itself is a variation of the controversial Discipleship/Shepherding Movement (and its Fundamentalist counterparts like Bill Gothard). For more on that from a nuanced yet sound perspective, I would recommend apologist Melissa Dougherty's book Happy Lies, as well as her extensive and very informative YouTube videos, as this girl has really done her homework and I would highly recommend her work. Those concerns, as well as my own survival of an abusive Foursquare church years ago, are why I think how I do, as I want to preserve the potentially good and Biblical in a movement but also know how to discard unhealthy garbage that has attached itself to Pentecostalism, particularly in the past 30 or so years. And that leads to my second observation.
Recent issues in the Roman Catholic Church have also gotten me thinking too - I have seen some disturbing social trends, including the recent controversy with Leo and the SSPX, and I am frankly concerned for the official Church as a whole. While many Catholic parishes are sound in their teachings and are faithful to the Magisterium, I worry that theological and political liberalism is tainting our faith after seeing it firsthand at the Jesuit school I worked at. Evangelization is either being jettisoned or even redefined as "social justice" by some influential Catholic figures, and it also seems like the heresy of "liberation theology" is on the rise again. I am in the discernment process now of seeing whether or not I want to stay Roman Catholic or not, at least as far as the official Vatican Church is concerned. I am still faithfully Catholic, and that won't change, but the Catholic faith I have is historic and sound, and I am not changing it because of what Popes Leo or Francis said in an unofficial capacity. For me right now, the SSPX is on the correct side of that debate, and Leo is wrong in what he is doing - for those that think every Pope's actions must be accepted without criticism (I am growing sick of that too, as it seems like the "Christian Zionist" crowd has a similar view of Israel - both of these are wrong), I challenge you to read Magisterial documents, read Scripture, and do your own "deep dive" into what authentic Catholicism is and then measure Leo's and Francis's papacies against that. Where the current and former Popes have been right, we can accept - where they erred, we can reject. For those who think every fart out of Leo's backside is divinely-inspired, let me say something to you - the Pope is still a human being, and even a representative of Christ on earth can fall short due to human limitations. As a Catholic, it is integral this fact is understood, because it will save you a lot of heartbreak later. Anyway, at some point I will have more to say on this, but you get the idea for now.
I have went on and on this morning about some sundry things, but you get an idea of my mindset recently. Also, before I wrap up today, I need to ask your prayers for my own personal situation, as I have some decisions to make as well as needing some divine guidance. Thanks again, and will see you next time.