And the Spirit & the bride say, come.... Reveaaltion 22:17

And the Spirit & the bride say, come.... Reveaaltion 22:17
And the Spirit & the bride say, come...Revelation 22:17 - May We One Day Bow Down In The DUST At HIS FEET ...... {click on blog TITLE at top to refresh page}---QUESTION: ...when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth? LUKE 18:8

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Catholics can start "Purgatory" Now?

Much more then, being now justified by his blood,
(notice Paul doesn't say we are Justified by fire)
we shall be saved from wrath through him.
Romans 5:9
Below is an article from the Catholic website Aleteia, which tells Catholics they can start (the mythical) purgatory in the here & now.
I. There is NO such place as purgatory.
II. Below, they begin with a quote fro the contemplative mystic Merton.
III. They refer to this purgation, as they call it, as a way to be purified before God. Actually, Christ's  Justification (freely given) does that by His blood. As for Sanctification, God expects us to have Obedience to HIS Law--NOT a spiritual law of man's rules.
IV. The below article is steeped in Mysticism.
V. The purification by fire in the end, isn't to purify the sinner, but rather to once & for all purify the universe from sin (and the unrepentant sinners).

"God is a consuming Fire. He alone can refine us like gold, and separate us from the slag and dross of our selfish individualities to fuse us into this wholeness of perfect unity that will reflect His own Triune Life forever.   Thomas Merton, New Seeds of Contemplation.

John Paul II created a bit of a firestorm during a papal audience in 1999 when he stated during a catechesis on the Last Things, “Purgatory … is not a place, but a condition of existence.”
He continued, “Those who, after death, exist in a state of purification, are already in the love of Christ who removes from them the remnants of imperfection.” (General Audience, July 21, 1999)
Earlier, in Crossing the Threshold of Hope, John Paul II had written:
The “living flame of love,” of which St. John (of the Cross) speaks, is above all, a purifying fire. The mystical nights described by this great
doctor of the church on the basis of his own experience correspond, in a certain sense, to purgatory. God makes man pass through such an interior purgatory of his sensual and spiritual nature in order to bring him into union with Himself. Here we do not find ourselves before a mere tribunal. We present ourselves before the power of Love itself … It is Love that demands purification, before man can be made ready for that union with God which is his ultimate vocation and destiny.   Crossing the Threshold of Hope, 186-187
Pope Benedict XVI portray God’s love as fire, with a key theme being that the fire of God’s love burns that which it touches without destroying it explained this concept pointedly in the following words:
Jesus sets fire to the earth. Whoever comes close to Jesus, accordingly, must be prepared to be burned …It burns, yet this is not a destructive fire but one that makes things bright and pure and free and grand. Being a Christian, then, is daring to entrust oneself to this burning fire.   (God and the World, 222)
It could thus be said that purgation is the experience wherein one is immersed in the fire of the love of God, with the effect being that whatever is not of God, i.e., everything within us that is incongruent with his love, is burned away. As Catholics, we may readily accept that such purgation will happen to us after death. But what we don’t often consider is that the same love we will encounter after death is meant to cleanse us even now, while we are still alive. In fact, the degree to which we allow the fire of God’s love to purify us in this life will determine how much purgation we will need in the next!
So bring on the fire, right?
Well, it’s not quite that simple. Because purification involves the pain of suffering and death, most of us try our darnedest to avoid it.
What within us, exactly, must be purified unto death as we draw near to Christ? While St. Paul called it “the flesh,” Trappist monk Thomas Merton named it the “false self,” which he said is the illusory persona projected by the human ego that “wants to exist outside the reach of God’s will and God’s love … the self that exists only in my own egocentric desires.” (New Seeds of Contemplation, 35)."
Aleteia