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Fusion Catholicism - A Charismatic Weekend by John Vennari
Fusion Catholicism - A Charismatic Weekend by John Vennari
Consequences of Vatican II
'Fusion Catholicism'
John Vennari
It was Saturday night at Franciscan University of Steubenville and all around the
gymnasium, bodies were dropping to the floor. Luis Entrialgo, a married lay-deacon
from Cuba, had just concluded a Protestant-styled “healing” service, and the slain-in-
the-spirit session immediately followed. Loud music throbbed in hypnotic rhythm
from the rock’n’roll “worship band”, lay-people laid hands on other lay-people, limp
bodies fell backwards ending face-up on the floor, participants stepped around
bodies to make their way down side aisles, a priest prayed in “tongues” over the
microphone, “sha-na-la-sha-na-la-sha-na-la-sha-na-la, sha-na-la, thank You, Jesus!”
It was the grand finale of the day.
The 1997 and 2000 events both were held in large sports stadiums, and both
organized by Franciscan University at Steubenville. I wrote my observations of these
conferences in Catholic Family News at the time, which were published as the book
Close-ups of the Charismatic Movement.[1]
1. Close-ups of the Charismatic Movement, J. Vennari [Los Angeles: Tradition in Action, 2002]. The book also
includes a section on the revolutionary Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens, one of the most radical prelates of the 20th
Century who was the Charismatic movement’s zealous advocate and Cardinal-Protector. Cardinal Suenens is also
famous for publicly opposing Humanae Vitae and destroying (“modernizing”) Convent life through his appalling book,
The Nun in the World. (www.cfnews.org/CharBk.htm)
Though there was much to see, learn and weep over at the 1997 and 2000
conferences, I knew that no study of Catholic Pentecostalism would be complete
without visiting the Mecca, the Mother-Church of Catholic-Charismaticism in the
United States: Franciscan University of Steubenville. When I learned of the
Charismatic weekend slated for June 2006, I knew I finally had to take the plunge. I
purchased my ticket and arrived at the Steubenville campus late Friday afternoon.
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Sunday afternoon found me weary and relieved the ordeal was over.
Fusion Catholicism
Friday night
The crowd of nearly 1000 was predominantly elderly and middle-aged. Clean-cut
Steubenville students in matching yellow shirts helped with the running of the event.
Some of them too bopped to the music.
Steubenville’s Mark Nehrbas was Master of Revels for the weekend. He greeted the
crowd who responded with enthusiastic applause. He then brought the “team” on-
stage, the speakers for the weekend, and quickly introduced them one by one. He
then introduced each member of the worship band, and made a few comments
about Steubenville being a spirit-filled institution. These formalities concluded, we
were now ready for “worship”.
The so-called “Praise and Worship” session at this Steubenville gathering was
nothing that Pope Pius X, Pius XI, Pius XII, Padre Pio, Saint Therese of Lisieux,
Saint Dominic Savio or any other canonized saint would recognize or accept as
Catholic. It is a worship session based not on Catholic teaching and tradition, but on
a techno-pop, Protestant model. The physical setting of the conference itself was
patterned on the contemporary Protestant construct. The stage is at the center with
a podium slightly off-center, to the audience’s left is the obligatory rock’n’pop band.
This one consisted of two plug-in acoustic guitars, electric bass, electric keyboard,
violin, full drums set, and two extra singers. On each side of the stage, large
television screens hung from the ceiling to project the lyrics of the songs to the
audience.
At former Charismatic binges I’ve attended, the musicians went under the name
“music ministry”. This group shunned that title, calling themselves a “worship band”.
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It was headed by Bob Rice on guitar, a young teacher at Steubenville. The rest were
Steubenville students, except for Ralph Martin’s daughter on the electric keyboard.
A brief word about the music. Each time I attend one of these Charismatic events, I
find that for the most part, the music is a different collection from the previous one. At
the 1997 bash, there was one assortment of songs, especially a tune called Let the
Fire Fall played over and over again. At Celebrate Jesus 2000, there was yet
another collection, the big number played repeatedly being Days of Elijah.
At this latest bash, I was confronted with yet another assortment of thumping,
sensual “Christian-pop” tunes. Perhaps this constant change is due to the fact that
“Christian Rock” has pretty much gone the way of pop music. Christian Rock “artists”
continue to write songs and release CDs. Billboard charts their sales and reports on
their concerts. The CDs win Grammys. As Christian Rock is now an industry unto
itself, the assortment is vast and the old tunes will be replaced by the new.
Steubenville’s worship band officially kicked off the “Praise and Worship” session –
as it is called in the conference program – with Now is the Time to Worship, written
by Brian Doerksen, a Protestant “Worship leader”. Those in the audience sprang to
their feet and joined in: some with hands raised in Pentecostal manner, some
grooving in place, some clapping hands. The emotion of the audience intensified as
the rock music intensified, and diminished as the music diminished.
The “team” on stage: Father Michael Scanlon, Father John Gordon, Dr. Joanne
Storm, Sister Sarah Burdick, Sister Katherine Caldwell, Ralph Martin, Bert Ghezzi, Al
Mansfield and Mark Nehrbas, sang along, raised hands in Pentecostal fashion;
some sang with eyes clenched shut as if in the grip of some deep emotion. It
reminded me more of the 700 Club than anything recognizably Catholic.
At the conclusion of various numbers, the band would sustain the endings creating
rumbling background noise, as is done by pop bands at rock concerts to drive the
crowd into a frenzy. When this was done at Steubenville, members of the “team”
would launch into a spontaneous “praise the Lord” session. All was executed in a
Protestant manner: “Praise the Lord”; “Holy are You, Lord”, they would shout. The
crowd went into its own spontaneous praise. This back and forth of music and ad-lib
praise dragged on for forty minutes. The band closed with the upbeat Blessed be the
Name of the Lord while the audience grooved. A middle-aged woman danced in the
side aisles.
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is our privilege and our joy to worship Your Holy Name, and we thank You and praise
You for allowing us to come into Your throne room this night. All praise, honor and
glory to You Lord Jesus Christ, and GOD’S PEOPLE SAID ...”, the audience
screamed back “AMEN!”.
Bob Rice, the head of the worship band, then gave his testimony, or “Witness” (as
the conference program called it) of his personal faith journey. This was followed by
Charismatic Ralph Martin whose talk was entitled “Transformation in Christ: Wisdom
from the Saints”, the content of which, for the most part, was rather good. It spoke of
the need to renounce mortal and deliberate venial sin, the necessity of prayer, and
contained edifying quotations from the saints. This is what I mean when I say that at
this conference, there was the sense of being pulled in two opposing directions. It is
the very nature of fusion Catholicism. It is also the nature of Modernism, as Pope
Saint Pius X explained in Pascendi: on one page of the modernist’s book we find
orthodox doctrine, on the next page, we find the thoughts of an agnostic. It goes in
opposing directions at once.
After Martin’s lecture, Mark Nehrbas addressed the crowd, “I think this was not a talk
of spiritual milk, but of meat. Amen?” Then, with the worship band wafting mood
music in the background, he invited those in the crowd who had never done so
before to stand up and publicly accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. It was
remarkably similar to the Oral Robert’s style “altar call”, and to the “altar call” enacted
at Celebrate Jesus 2000 by “Holy Laughter” preacher Stephen Hill.
The baton was then passed to Steubenville’s Father John Gordon who took over the
business with gusto. He commenced a non-stop exhortation to commit oneself to
Jesus, doing so while prancing back and forth on the stage with a cordless
microphone, sometimes lapsing into “tongue” prayer: Sha-na-la-sha-na-la-sha-na-la.
Finally it was time to “make the commitment”, or as Protestants call this procedure,
to “get saved”. Father Gordon launched into a repeat-after-me, semi-improvised
formula: “Jesus, I ask You to be my Savior”. The audience responded, “Jesus, I ask
You to be my Savior”, Father Gordon continued, “I am a sinner,” the audience
echoed, “I am a sinner”.
Father Gordon: “I repent of all my sins”.
Audience: “I repent of all my sins.”
“I need You to be my Savior,” audience repeats;
“For I am a sinner”, audience repeats,
“I renounce all wrong doing”, audience repeats.
As the clapping and cheering persisted, Father Gordon shouted in celebratory tone,
“REMEMBER THIS DAY! HEAR THE CHURCH SUPPORT YOU! HEAR THE
CHURCH BEHIND YOU! PRAISE GOD! PRAISE GOD! PRAISE GOD!” (sustained
applause as the newly committed returned to their seats.)
Father Gordon then invited those who had previously committed themselves to
Jesus as Lord and Savior to stand up and do it again, and a similar ritual played out,
though those committing themselves did so by standing in place rather than walking
to the front. Father Gordon continued his non-stop patter and at one point told the
people to cry out:, “JESUS MY SAVIOR”, the audience reverberated “JESUS MY
SAVIOR”, Father Gordon bellowed, “HOW I NEED YOU AND I WANT YOU”. The
audience followed suit.
Father Gordon went on, “THANK YOU JESUS FOR BEING MY SAVIOR, SAVE ME
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JESUS, I NEED YOU JESUS, I CAN’T DO IT WITHOUT YOU JESUS. YOU ARE
MY SAVIOR, PRAISE YOU JESUS, PRAISE YOU JESUS, PRAISE YOU JESUS,
PRAISE YOU JESUS.” While this was going on, the background mood music
swelled and crashed into another performance of the throbbing, Lord I Give You My
Heart. Father Gordon, still full of fuel, pattered on over top the music, “Blessed is the
Lord Our God, Hallelujah, Lord. Blessed is the name of the Lord”. The “team” on
stage sang along. All was thundering high emotion.
The worship band finally terminated their piece, the audience cheered, there was
more, “Thank you Lord, praise God” patter from Mark Nehrbas overtop the applause.
Each speaker then gave a précis of the Saturday workshop he or she was to
conduct, and the day finally drew to a close.
Debauched Catholicism
While watching the noisy “commit your life to Jesus” session, I kept asking myself:
what is the point? Catholics have never engaged in such a degrading spectacle
before. Why do it at all? It is easy to understand why Protestants put themselves
through this exercise, since for many of them, it is the one and only means of
becoming “saved”.
Most evangelical and Pentecostal Protestants do not believe that a Christian is “born
again” when baptized. Rather, a man or woman is not “saved”, does not become a
“Christian,” until he makes a personal commitment to Jesus Christ. It is the standard
“get saved” process one sees in Protestant tracts. I acknowledge I am a sinner, I
acknowledge my need for Jesus, and I commit myself to Jesus by accepting Him as
my personal Lord and Savior. Thus, according to this system, even if you are a
baptized Roman Catholic, you are still not a “Christian” until you make this personal
commitment to Jesus.
This dear friend of mine had been baptized and raised Catholic, so indeed, he had
been a Christian since the day of his Christening. But at one point in his life, he
attended one of those noisome evangelical businessman’s gatherings where he was
told that his baptism really didn’t matter. His Catholicism didn’t matter. No, if he
wanted to be a “Christian”, there was no other way to do it but to accept Jesus as
Lord and Savior. And as he was a product of post-Vatican II Catholic education, he
fell for it in a flash.
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Karl of Austria submitting to this gushing “commit your life to Jesus” parody.
In fact, the Catholic Church already has a public ceremony to “re-commit one’s life to
Jesus”, if you will, it is the “Renewal of Baptismal Promises” enacted on Holy
Saturday. This dignified and noble ceremony is steeped in Catholic tradition and
symbolism. It is not, as were the Steubenville antics, a cheap imitation of Jim and
Tammy Baker emotionalism. And if a baptized soul falls from grace, then he must
seek the Sacrament of Confession, a point of doctrine that the Steubenville species
does not appear to deny (there were confessions going on throughout the
conference weekend and the attendees were encouraged to go).
Again, what we see in all this is fusion Catholicism: Catholicism admixtured with
Protestant elements that denigrate the Catholic Faith, and serves to ennoble a
Protestant practice that denies the very words of Our Lord Jesus Christ in His
institution of the Sacraments.[2]
Blessed Pope Pius IX, as with all the Popes up to Vatican II, rightly recognized
Protestantism in all its forms as “a revolt against God.”[3] Pius IX also, in his
magnificent Syllabus of Errors, solemnly condemned the error that “Protestantism is
nothing more than another form of the same true Christian religion”,[4] an error on
which “Catholic Pentecostalism” is based.[5] What went on at this Steubenville
weekend — which was steeped to the gills in Protestant spirit — was by no means
an explosive outpouring of the Holy Spirit. On the contrary, all indications point to the
spirit of the underworld at work.
2. For example, for Our Lord’s institution of the Sacrament of Baptism, the Holy Eucharist, and Confession, see John
3:5; Matthew 28:19; Matthew 26:27-28; Mark 14:22-24; Luke 22:19-20; 1 Cor. 11:23-26; John 6:54-59; John 20:21-23.
See also Council of Trent, On the Sacraments, Canon I (found on page 2 of this issue).
3. Blessed Pope Pius IX identified Protestantism in all its forms as “a revolt against God, it being an attempt to
substitute a human for a divine authority, a declaration of the creature’s independence from God.” Quoted from Father
Michael Müller, C.SS.R., The Catholic Dogma [New York: Benzinger Brothers, 1888], p. 43-4.
4. Syllabus of Errors, Condemned Proposition # 18.
5. See companion piece, “‘Catholic’ Pentecostalism: Grown in the Garden of Heresy”, J. Vennari, page 3 of the
August 2006 issue of Catholic Family News.
Saturday
Joseph Fitcher, in his 1974 book The Catholic Cult of the Paraclete, mentioned that
some Catholic prelates were “worried about the Protestant influence on their people”
due to Pentecostalism. Fitcher quoted Bishop Joseph McKinney’s worry about
Catholics being “misled and not being firmly grounded in theology”.[7]
6. Dwyer’s criticism appeared in an interview published in the National Catholic Register, July 21, 1974 and is cited
from Joseph Fitcher’s The Catholic Cult of the Paraclete, Sheed and Ward, Inc. New York, 1974, p. 40
7. Op. cit. page 40. Original quote from Bishop Joseph McKinney appeared in an interview published in New
Covenant, September, 1971, pp. 10-16.
My weekend at Steubenville proved how correct were these good bishops’ concerns.
This was especially evident during Saturday’s events. The day began with a short
“Worship and Praise” session, with the same rock’n’pop music, the same
emotionalism from the audience, the same Protestant-style “Praise God”,
“Hallelujah”, “Praise the Lord” salvos from the podium. This was followed by two
lectures. Al Mansfield spoke on “We Walk by Faith, Not By Sight”, telling the
heartbreaking story of his New Orleans home being destroyed in Hurricane Katrina.
In the process, he urged everyone, “do not leave here without getting baptized in the
Holy Spirit.”
Then came Bert Ghezzi’s “The Transforming Power of the Sign of the Cross,” which
was by and large a fine presentation. He explained the Catholic practice of making
the Sign of the Cross, the history of this practice and what a holy and powerful
sacramental it is.
This was followed by the 10:30 a.m. “Eucharistic Liturgy”, a Novus Ordo celebration
full of rock’n’pop music. Some of the details of this liturgy will be recounted in a
future installment.
We then arrived at the two afternoon workshop sessions: the first at 2:00, the second
at 3:30. Each of the sessions had five workshops conducted simultaneously by
various speakers. For the moment, I will only mention one of the workshops I
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attended. It was entitled “Forming Your Character With the Saints” conducted by
Joanne Storm, Ph.D., a preppy and enthusiastic young lady who teaches
Psychology at Steubenville. Though her manner of presentation may not be for
everyone, the content of her speech was, for the most part, quite good. She listed a
“Top 10 Characteristics” of the Saints that included: frequent use of confession; living
a counter-cultural life; humility; devotion to the Eucharist and other points. Not
mentioned on the Top 10, however, was devotion to Our Blessed Mother. I thought
this a serious omission, though I do not in any way question Dr. Storm’s love of Our
Lady.
During her presentation it occurred to me that there was another point the saints had
in common. All of them became saints without a Pentecostal “baptism of the Holy
Spirit”. All of them rose to heroic sanctity without attending rock’n’roll masses,
without publicly “accepting Jesus as Lord and Savior” in the Protestant fashion,
without adopting Protestant terminology and mannerisms. Her talk inadvertently
demonstrated that the last thing one needs to become a saint is any participation in
this new wave of Pentecostalism now infecting the Catholic Church.
In fact, every saint that Dr. Storm mentioned: Saint John Vianney, Saint Teresa of
Avila; Saint Joan of Arc, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, Saint John Bosco, would have
run from that Steubenville conference screaming in horror at what was presented as
“Catholic” to gullible participants. Worse, Saint Katherine Drexel of Philadelphia, who
died in 1928, would have immediately recognized the Steubenville weekend for what
it was: a high-decibel reincarnation of the revivalist, big-tent, store-front Protestant
pentecostalism rampant in early 20th Century America.
People often ask how I can stand to attend these rollicking events. I answer that I
had been a professional musician studying jazz and classical guitar, and playing pop
music in night clubs for five years. All those years desensitized me, so I don’t feel
compelled to flee the room when the loud music ignites. I neither play nor listen to
rock music any more, but I still know a rock concert when I see one, and I recognize
these Charismatic weekends (as well as World Youth Day) as rock jamborees with a
thin “Christian” veneer.
This does not mean that I find these events easy to endure. They are extremely
taxing. By Saturday night, I was weary and looking for some sort of reprieve. So
when I saw a “Holy Hour” scheduled for around 8:00 that night I had hoped that
perhaps, after the non-stop noise of the day — the blasting rock’n’roll; bombastic
“praise the Lord” sessions; continuous cheers from the audience; the Hindu-like buzz
of orchestrated “prayer in tongues” — maybe, just maybe, we were actually going to
have an hour of quiet.
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Holy Hour” commenced.
The lights in the hall were dimmed, and a golden-yellow spotlight perched on a small
loft in the back of the hall, trained on the monstrance held aloft by Father Gordon.
Three young men in white robes: two holding candles and one walking backwards
incensing the monstrance led the procession. All the while, the hall throbbed with the
worship band’s rhythms. Fusion Catholicism again. The band then kicked into a slow,
pulsating rock number written by Protestant Michael W. Smith called Agnus Dei and
found on the Rockin’ with the Cross website.
The music grew quiet, a din of “tongue” prayer continued. More pop music was set
off, this time We Fall Down by Protestant Chris Tomlin and found, you guessed it, on
the Rockin’ with the Cross website.
In fact, with the exception of about two hymns, every song performed at the “Holy
Hour” was a Protestant pop-tune written by a Protestant and found on the Protestant
Rockin’ with the Cross website. One can only imagine how Pope Saint Pius X would
have reacted to this profanity.
Pope Saint Pius X, in conformity with all the Popes before him, reiterated the age-old
truth that only Sacred Music is lawful for Church and for Catholic worship. He
obviously considered this of paramount importance, for he was only three months in
office when he issued the magnificent Instruction on Sacred Music, Tra le
Sollecitudini. Pius decreed:
Saint Pius X insisted that Sacred Music must be composed of three elements: it
must be holy; it must be true art; and it must be universal.
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must, therefore, exclude all profanity not only
in itself, but in the manner of those who
execute it.” (Speaking of “those who execute
it”, the worship band members dressed in an off-
the-street manner: casual attire, girls in dungaree
trousers, for both Saturday Mass and the “Holy
Hour”.[8] The fault here must be placed primarily
with the “spirit filled” clergy at Steubenville for
their dereliction of duty, not teaching youngsters
in their charge about proper attire for church
functions. The audience was likewise slovenly
dressed for these Saturday events).
“... Gregorian Chant has always been regarded as the supreme model for
Sacred Music, so that it is fully legitimate to lay down the following rule:
the more closely a composition for church approaches in its
movement, inspiration and savor the Gregorian form, the more
sacred and liturgical it becomes: and the more out of harmony it is
with that supreme model, the less worthy it is of the temple.”[9]
8. I arrived after the Sunday Mass the next day, and the crowd did not appear to be dressed all that differently from
Saturday.
9. Pope Saint Pius X, Motu Proprio Tra le Sollecitudini: Instruction on Sacred Music, November 22, 1902. (Emphasis
added on all quotes). For more, see “Pope St. Pius X’s Motu Proprio: Tra le Sollecitudini,” Eight Part Series by Patrick
Brill, Ph.D. (From CFN, reprint #2045, $5.00US)
Few forms of music could be further from the Gregorian Chant model than “Christian
rock” written by modern Protestant songwriters for Protestant services. It does not
say much for the “Christian rock” played at Steubenville when I observe that the only
forms “less worthy of the temple” would be rap, punk and heavy metal.
In fact, even today’s Pope Benedict XVI, who is progressive in other areas, has
recently expressed his displeasure at pop music at church functions. At a June 27
concert conducted by Domenico Bartolucci, the director of music at the Sistine
Chapel, Benedict XVI said that the only suitable music for Catholic worship was the
traditional type. “It is possible to modernize holy music,” said Benedict XVI, “but it
should not happen outside the traditional path of Gregorian chants or sacred
polyphonic choral music.”[10]
Rock music is disordered by its very nature, no matter what lyrics are layered on top
of it. Rock’s beat-driven structure is de-signed to inflame emotions, inflame the lower
passions. Even The Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards admitted, “Rock music is music
for the neck down.”[11]
10. “The Pope Wants Pop Music Banned from Churches”, Hindustan Times, June 27, 2006. Next month, we will
contrast this with Pope Benedict XVI’s reportedly positive attitude toward the Charismatic movement, and ask how the
two can possibly go together.
11. “Elefant: The Black Magic Show”, Stylus Magazine. www.stylusmagaz ine.com/review.php?ID=3972 (rock
website).
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After the session already mentioned, Father Gordon gave a brief homily that was, in
the Charismatic fashion, interspersed with applause from the audience at least five
times. Then the Procession began.
The worship band kicked into one of its throbbing Protestant numbers, Father
Gordon came down from the stage with the monstrance and began to process slowly
throughout the hall. Again, the three young men in white robes, two acolytes and an
incensor, went before him. The lights were low, the golden-yellow spotlight illumined
the monstrance that Father Gordon held aloft, he moved at a snail’s-pace slowly
blessing the crowd with the monstrance as he went along. Father Gordon’s
movements here were slow and even regal, in sharp contrast to rock’n’pop music
enveloping the hall.
There is more to observe from this Charismatic weekend that will have to wait until
next month. It should be noted that Steubenville youth rallies, which host tens of
thousands of Catholic teen-agers from high schools around the country, are
conducted according to the same techno-Protestant approach to Catholicism,
wherein teens are bombarded by rock’n’pop praise music, urged to “commit their
lives to Jesus” in the Protestant fashion, and encouraged to be “baptized in the Holy
Spirit”.[12] Worse, these events sometimes include the supremely ridiculous rappin’
priest, Father Stan Fortuna.
12. I saw a similar youth fiasco at Celebrate Jesus 2000 organized by Steubenville University.
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spirit” to thumping rock music. “We were packed in the hall so tightly that we could
barely move,” he said. “There were young people collapsing all around me. I couldn’t
wait to get out of there. I was scared to death.”
Yet due to the severe confusion in the Church brought about by Vatican II, a
confusion that suddenly blesses what the Church always condemned, Franciscan
University of Steubenville enjoys the reputation as one of North America’s leading
bastions of Catholic orthodoxy.
This confusion extends to the dear souls who attended the Charismatic weekend.
Most Charismatics at this conference, I would guess, are kind, generous, well-
meaning people who have been misled, due to what Sister Lucy of Fatima called the
diabolic disorientation of those who occupy places of responsibility in the Church.
On Sunday just before leaving the June conference, I stopped at the University book
store, a place where fusion Catholicism flourished. The collection of materials was
both Catholic and “Charismatic”, both pre-Conciliar and post-Conciliar.
Once again, the most notable element was noise. Blasting through the store’s
loudspeakers was an even harder-edge “Christian rock” than what was performed
throughout the weekend. It was a sampling from the many “Christian Rock” CD’s for
sale at the spirit-filled university.
This article was first published in Catholic Family News, August 2006
Traditionalist Issues
Crisis in Ecumenism
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