- Oct 31, 2008
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I really love my priest and while he's not trad, he's always come across conservative and orthodox to me. He was formerly the director of vocations for my diocese and he's been a priest for a long time, but he's not a boomer. Tonight we went to Vigil Mass for All Saints, and in his homily father said "Heaven is for everyone, not just Catholics" and he listed a few other random religions off the cuff and basically said if their intentions are good they'll go to heaven too.
Needless to say I felt shocked. Not just that he said it but that there doesn't seem to be much room for misinterpretation. I wish he meant "Heavens for everyone if they come through Christ" or that if they're part of another religion or atheism but eventually find their way into the Church then heaven's for them, but that's not how it sounded at all. But it kind of felt piggy backed on what Pope Francis said a little while ago.
I suppose I should ask him for clarification but I also don't wanna be "that guy" because he's really good to my family and I, he's a great pastor, a brother knight, and he's about to enter into a difficult stretch for who knows how many months where he's running the parish alone cause our parochial vicar's been reassigned to another parish and no replacement has been named.
Any suggestions? I was so caught off guard by this message, unless he tailors his messaging to the Mass since certain crowds tend to attend certain Masses. I attend the most traditional of our Sunday Masses so I wonder if he tailors his homilies to be more conservative and orthodox for that crowd? I doubt it though.
Needless to say I felt shocked. Not just that he said it but that there doesn't seem to be much room for misinterpretation. I wish he meant "Heavens for everyone if they come through Christ" or that if they're part of another religion or atheism but eventually find their way into the Church then heaven's for them, but that's not how it sounded at all. But it kind of felt piggy backed on what Pope Francis said a little while ago.
I suppose I should ask him for clarification but I also don't wanna be "that guy" because he's really good to my family and I, he's a great pastor, a brother knight, and he's about to enter into a difficult stretch for who knows how many months where he's running the parish alone cause our parochial vicar's been reassigned to another parish and no replacement has been named.
Any suggestions? I was so caught off guard by this message, unless he tailors his messaging to the Mass since certain crowds tend to attend certain Masses. I attend the most traditional of our Sunday Masses so I wonder if he tailors his homilies to be more conservative and orthodox for that crowd? I doubt it though.