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From Fr. Angelo:
We are not all called to have visions. Not all true visionaries are
holy and visions don’t make anyone holy. But we are all called to an
intimate communion with God, which is the holiness that only God can
work in us and which is the primary vocation of all men. Sometimes God
uses extraordinary charisms to confirm the presence of holiness in a
saint, as he did with the stigmata in St. Francis and Padre Pio, but the
presence of charisms prove nothing if they are not accompanied by
heroic virtue. Balaam was a true prophet of God, for example, but he
was an utterly wicked man....
Furthermore, while it is true that the right use of all the Sacraments,
including Matrimony contribute to our intimate communion with God, it
would be a mistake to suggest that the use of Holy Matrimony is somehow
singularly mystical. The Sacrament of Holy Matrimony itself, its whole
reality including the use of it, is a great mystery, because of its reference to Christ and His Church (Eph 5:32; here the Greek mysterion is rendered in the Latin sacramentum).
But if from all this one concludes that sex in the context of Holy
Matrimony, even as it is experienced by saintly couples, is a uniquely
instrumental in the mystical life, say perhaps even more than reception
of the Sacrament of Penance, then one is veering very close to the kind
of sex mysticism practiced by the pagans. In fact, sex mysticism is a
particular hallmark of both historical paganism and today’s
neopaganism. So the ambiguous use of word “mysticism” in this context
can create a great deal of confusion, as indeed it has. (Read more.)
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