Breaking In The Habit

  • Home
  • Newsletter
    • Posts
    • Sign Up
  • Social
    • YouTube
      • Breaking In The Habit
    • Podcast
      • Everyday Liminality
      • Gospel Meditations
      • Minor Characters
    • TikTok
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
  • Vocations
  • Press Kit
  • Books
  • Donate
    • One-Time
    • Monthly

Catholic Church=Liberal Marxism?

I hear it all the time: Pope Francis is a Marxist. He advocates for just wages, fair working conditions, maternity leave, greater responsibilities for the super rich, and even a need for wealth distribution and people cast him off as being a communist and ruining the Church.

There’s just one problem: all of the things I mentioned are actually points that Pope Saint John Paul II made in his own encyclical letters. And Benedict XVI. And most of the popes before them for the past 130 years.

The thing is, there are a lot of commonalities between Catholic Social Teaching and Socialism/Communism. For the last 130 years, we have condemned rampant capitalism as a means of abusing people and helping only the super rich. There is an inherent dignity to human life that must be safeguarded in the workplace, and one’s work should ultimately be life-giving and directed toward the common good.

But we have also had our fair share of criticisms against socialism as well. The insistence on communal rights over private rights, especially when it comes to seizing private property, is a major problem. Government assistance should not be so overbearing that it leaves people dependent and unwilling to work. Such systems suffocate the authentic human development of the human person.

In both Socialism and Capitalism, the Church finds reasons for applause as well as reasons for criticism. They are both equally flawed in that their ultimate goal is material: the acquisition of wealth and power. Catholics must resist this goal and instead see that there is something far more important at stake: the dignity of the human person. For us, the economy must serve the needs of humanity, not the other way around.

In this video, I show that Pope Francis is far from a Marxist and far from a Capitalist. He is a Catholic, in line with the history of Social Doctrine of the Church.

 3 Comments

 Posted on September 10, 2020 by CaseyOFM

 Catholicism In Focus, Justice

     Benedict XVI, Catholic social teaching, dignity of the worker, John Paul II, Leo XIII, pope francis, Rerum Novarum, workers' rights

Arrival: The Greatest Movie You Never Saw

Click here to listen

https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/everydayliminality/5.6._Arrival.m4a

Most movies are underwhelming to me. Remakes. Weak adaptations. Shallow concepts. Cheap CGI. The movie industry realizes that people are far more likely to spend money on what is familiar than what is innovative, and so it often chooses not to take a risk. Let’s just do Rocky 34 instead of coming up with something new!

Arrival is an exception to this trend. One YouTube video essay that I like called it the “response to bad movies” and I can’t agree more. It is unlike most movies you will ever see, captivating and beautiful, challenging the viewer’s expectations by turning the world on it’s side (even the shape and position of the alien space ships, long and upright, undermine our expectations!) The movie messes with time and language to create something that is in one sense overwhelming complex and confusing while watching, and yet elegantly simple at its core. Like the picture of a puzzle, unclear and allusive when just a pile of pieces, it is not until the final piece is put into place that the individual pieces have any meaning… but without those individual pieces, there would be no whole.

If you haven’t seen it yet, I cannot recommend it enough to you. At this point in time, Arrival is my favorite movie. I’ve seen it half-a-dozen times (twice in theatres, in fact) and it never ceases to move me. I get chills even thinking about it now. Because so much of the movie rests on how the movie ends, it might be good to watch it first before listening to the podcast, but that’s up to you. Just know that we hold nothing back in this episode, and spoilers are plentiful!

 4 Comments

 Posted on September 9, 2020 by CaseyOFM

 podcast

     Amy Adams, arrival movie, Br. Tito, Catholicism, cinema, cinema review, Everyday Liminality, Fr. Casey Cole, Franciscan

Do I HAVE to Work?

I hope that all of you had a restful Labor Day (those who were able to take a break from your labors) and are happy to be back at work today. For some, I know, the idea of work and happiness are diametrically opposed, and many would prefer that every day was a day off.

As fun as that would be at first, I’m not so sure many of us would last long before we grew entirely restless. As strange as it sounds, work is actually a good thing that we need. In this week’s video, I discuss the Catholic view of work and why it is so important to our human existence.

 1 Comment

 Posted on September 8, 2020 by CaseyOFM

 Video

New Series: Kerygma

For years, I’ve produced the “Catholicism in Focus” series as a way to catechize. I focus on the teachings of the Church and try to get beneath a surface level understanding of faith. My hope is that it has brought many people closer to an adult faith.

But it seems that I have missed a step along the way. Catechesis is great, and necessary, but many people are not ready for a series like that. They haven’t met Jesus, haven’t laid the foundation of faith, have no reason to care about catechesis. They need evangelization.

And so I thought, what if I made a “Catholicism In Focus” style series focused more on the essence of the faith? Not the teachings, per se, but the reason for the teachings, the faith. For me, there are questions that every Christian should be able to answer, questions upon everything rests, that I think go untested. Can people actually explain Christianity to another? Can they give a testimony of faith? Can they share the kerygma?

In this series, simply called “Kerygma,” I hope to explore these sorts of questions and to offer easily attainable and shareable answers. But as I say in this first video, my goal is not so much to give the answer for people to memorize as it is to get people thinking for themselves how they would answer. If put on the spot, how would you answer?

In this first video, I begin with the question of Christianity in general. What is it at its core?

 5 Comments

 Posted on September 7, 2020 by CaseyOFM

 Kerygma

     Christianity, faith, Kerygma

Saint You Should Know: Augustine of Hippo

When you think someone who is a saint and doctor of the Church, you probably think of someone who lived a long, holy life, who was groomed from a young age in the teachings of the Church, who never held heretical beliefs or committed terrible sins.

You probably don’t think of someone who spent 33 years as a heretic, had a child out of wedlock, and who’s most famous prayer is “Lord, make me chaste—just not yet.”

And yet, that is our St. Augustine, one of the most important theologians and leaders in Church history. He lived a tumultuous early life, but ended up saving the Church from two major controversies, and is certainly a saint you should know.

 2 Comments

 Posted on September 3, 2020 by CaseyOFM

 Catholicism In Focus, Theology, Video

     Augustine of Hippo, St. Augustine

« 1 … 29 30 31 32 33 … 171 »

Breaking In The Habit

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Podcast
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Breaking In The Habit
    • Join 4,881 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Breaking In The Habit
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...