Tips for a happier life (from da pope!)

Best Pope EVAH?

  • Nah I like John Paul II

    Votes: 1 16.7%
  • Church is headed in the right direction

    Votes: 2 33.3%
  • we are going to hell in a hand basket

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • hope we here about women priests soon

    Votes: 3 50.0%
  • wish we still had Ratzinger...

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I don't care what the pope says....the next one could change the direction just as easily

    Votes: 4 66.7%

  • Total voters
    6

wil

UNeyeR1
Veteran Member
Messages
25,004
Reaction score
4,380
Points
108
Location
a figment of your imagination
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/1403144.htm All good! Sunday is a tad pretentious, take a day off each week for family would have been better...but hell number 9 ROCKS!!
1. "Live and let live." Everyone should be guided by this principle, he said, which has a similar expression in Rome with the saying, "Move forward and let others do the same."

14hp0353.jpg

Pope Francis greets the crowd as he arrives to lead a general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican last month. (CNS/Paul Haring)
2. "Be giving of yourself to others." People need to be open and generous toward others, he said, because "if you withdraw into yourself, you run the risk of becoming egocentric. And stagnant water becomes putrid."

3. "Proceed calmly" in life. The pope, who used to teach high school literature, used an image from an Argentine novel by Ricardo Guiraldes, in which the protagonist -- gaucho Don Segundo Sombra -- looks back on how he lived his life.

"He says that in his youth he was a stream full of rocks that he carried with him; as an adult, a rushing river; and in old age, he was still moving, but slowly, like a pool" of water, the pope said. He said he likes this latter image of a pool of water -- to have "the ability to move with kindness and humility, a calmness in life."

4. "A healthy sense of leisure." The pleasures of art, literature and playing together with children have been lost, he said.

"Consumerism has brought us anxiety" and stress, causing people to lose a "healthy culture of leisure." Their time is "swallowed up" so people can't share it with anyone.

Even though many parents work long hours, they must set aside time to play with their children; work schedules make it "complicated, but you must do it," he said.

Families must also turn off the TV when they sit down to eat because, even though television is useful for keeping up with the news, having it on during mealtime "doesn't let you communicate" with each other, the pope said.

5. Sundays should be holidays. Workers should have Sundays off because "Sunday is for family," he said.

6. Find innovative ways to create dignified jobs for young people. "We need to be creative with young people. If they have no opportunities they will get into drugs" and be more vulnerable to suicide, he said.

"It's not enough to give them food," he said. "Dignity is given to you when you can bring food home" from one's own labor.

7. Respect and take care of nature. Environmental degradation "is one of the biggest challenges we have," he said. "I think a question that we're not asking ourselves is: 'Isn't humanity committing suicide with this indiscriminate and tyrannical use of nature?'"

8. Stop being negative. "Needing to talk badly about others indicates low self-esteem. That means, 'I feel so low that instead of picking myself up I have to cut others down,'" the pope said. "Letting go of negative things quickly is healthy."

9. Don't proselytize; respect others' beliefs. "We can inspire others through witness so that one grows together in communicating. But the worst thing of all is religious proselytism, which paralyzes: 'I am talking with you in order to persuade you,' No. Each person dialogues, starting with his and her own identity. The church grows by attraction, not proselytizing," the pope said.

10. Work for peace. "We are living in a time of many wars," he said, and "the call for peace must be shouted. Peace sometimes gives the impression of being quiet, but it is never quiet, peace is always proactive" and dynamic.
 
As an outsider, I respect most of what Pope Francis has said/done, but things can change on a whim, including another major schism in the Roman Catholic Church.

Phyllis Sidhe_Uaine
 
including another major schism in the Roman Catholic Church.

That does make me wonder if the Vatican's political influence is great enough anymore to make it a worthy ally in a schism, where if it did split apart like during the Great Western Schism and there were multiple popes running around, you would see certain governments rally to each (liberal and conservative?) pope. I would assume if a schism were to happen, it would undermine enough of the pope's popularity to make his influence a relatively moot point.
 
Yes, that's why I'm not in such a big hurry for great change in big religious and political organisations. The ruling body can only guide the whole through small steps. I'm very liberal myself but I don't expect everyone to share my views, and as long as there is a slow but steady development to the "better" I'm very satisfied.
 
I believe Catholics like tradition.... Americans change their mind like a swift boat, I think the body Catholic turns more like an aircraft carrier.. My observation, the breath of fresh air that John Paul was to non Catholics and liberal Catholics is similar to the relief the more conservative felt when Ratzinger went in...the new guy is a disappointment...they thought the church got over that interfaith nonsense...
 
I was happy, at first, with Francis. He seemed like... a decent chap, but... like his predecessors, he's opposed to...
contraception, abortion, gay marriage, and women priests.

when will the church catch up with the rest of us?

probably never, and that's why I refuse to take communion.
 
That does make me wonder if the Vatican's political influence is great enough anymore to make it a worthy ally in a schism...
I don't think so ... but I could be wrong. The last schism we had was over Vatican II, but the SSPX never amounted to anything.
I thought there might be a breakaway American catholicism at one point, but that never materialised, and I doubt it will now.

As a Catlick, I'm always amused by the opinions of non-Catlicks, which is largely shaped by whether the media decides they like the pope or not. JPII had 'the common touch' so he was OK, but he was conservative and hardline. Benedict XVI was a classical 'trad', probably more open to dialogue, but an intellectual, so always suspected by the media. The fuss of his comments about western Buddhism "auto-eroticisme" was a typical storm-in-a-teacup because the reporters didn't bother to look up the French term and assumed something else. The Regensburg lecture fiasco was a media-manipulated PR disaster for him. He was never a political animal and he lost out in that arena.

And Pope Francis? Well he has 'the common touch' in spades, so he is, for the moment, a good guy in the media eye. So much so that they have tried to remake him their own creature. How long that will last, I don't know, but I fear for him on the day the media decide to do a volte face. 'Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned', the saying goes, but it's no longer true. When the media turns, they tend to be quite Jacobean in their thirst for revenge ...

g way from the reality.
 
As a Catlick, I'm always amused by the opinions of non-Catlicks, which is largely shaped by whether the media decides they like the pope or not.
I don't know any non Catholics that care about what the media thinks...

Most of us listen to the words he says to various groups... Looks for consistency, more interfaith and outreach and less my way or the highway..

His power and influence reaches beyond the church and is the main reason we care...
 
Most of us listen to the words he says to various groups... Looks for consistency, more interfaith and outreach and less my way or the highway..

Yep. This is why I like the guy. For his actions, media or no media. Of course it helps a great deal that I give the media the attention it is due, which is to say little to none.
 
About the Pope... I guess I wasn't clear....Catholics care what the media thinks about the Pope.... We care about what we think about the Pope...
Still LOL. I love it when you speak for all Catholicism, and all of everyone else and, wouldn't you know it, Catholics are always in the negative ... full marks for consistency, though.
 
Still LOL. I love it when you speak for all Catholicism, and all of everyone else and, wouldn't you know it, Catholics are always in the negative ... full marks for consistency, though.
Oh...my bad...Catholics could care less what the public or media think about the Pope.

Sheesh...it has to be hilarious the way you read my posts. Do tell what I said that was so wrong, and how it is so negative and why it infuriates you so.

And how it differs from your words...this would help me greatly.... I've got no clue where these eggshells are of yours that I am stepping on.
As a Catlick, I'm always amused by the opinions of non-Catlicks, which is largely shaped by whether the media decides they like the pope or not.
 
So far, he seems to be a good guy. I'm not so big in the idea of the Pope, but as a man, he seems a good guy. Several Imams I've heard Khutbas from lately have quoted him a time or 2 of course that is when what he says agrees with out faith.
 
Back
Top