The Pope's joy in the Gospel and his confidence in his flock to proclaim the Gospel is evident even when he is pointing out our flaws. I had to look up the meaning of the term "immanentism".
I found online a definition given by a French theologian, Father Louis Bouyer, who defines immanentism as follows: “A tendency to understand the immanence of God or of His action in us in such a way that it would, in fact, exclude the reality of His transcendence.”
http://fssp.com/press/2011/04/immanentism-catholicism-and-religious-experience-by-d-q-mcinerny-ph-d/
The highlight below are mine.
From Evangelii Gaudium
Yes to the new
relationships brought by Christ
87. Today,
when the networks and means of human communication have made unprecedented
advances, we sense the challenge of finding and sharing a “mystique” of living
together, of mingling and encounter, of embracing and sup- porting one another,
of stepping into this flood tide which, while chaotic, can become a genuine
experience of fraternity, a caravan of solidarity, a sacred pilgrimage. Greater
possibilities for communication thus turn into greater possibilities for
encounter and solidarity for everyone. If
we were able to take this route, it would be so good, so soothing, so
liberating and hope-filled! To go out of ourselves and to join others is
healthy for us. To be self-enclosed is to taste the bitter poison of
immanence, and humanity will be worse for every selfish choice we make.
88. The
Christian ideal will always be a summons to overcome suspicion, habitual
mistrust, fear of
losing our privacy, all the defensive attitudes which today’s world imposes on
us. Many try to escape from others and take refuge in the comfort of their
privacy or in a small circle of close friends, renouncing the realism of the social
aspect of the Gospel. For just as some people want a purely spiritual Christ,
without flesh and without the cross, they also want their inter-personal relationships provided by
sophisticated equipment, by screens and systems which can be turned on and off
on command. …. True faith in the incarnate Son of God is inseparable from self-giving,
from membership in the community, from service, from reconciliation with
others. The Son of God, by becoming flesh, summoned us to the revolution of
tenderness.
89.
Isolation, which is a version of immanentism, can find expression in a false autonomy
which has no place for God. But in the realm of religion it can also take the
form of a spiritual consumerism tailored to one’s own unhealthy individualism. ….
Today, our challenge is not so much
atheism as the need to respond adequately to many people’s thirst for God,
lest they try to satisfy it with alienating solutions or with a disembodied
Jesus who demands nothing of us with regard to others….
90. Genuine
forms of popular religiosity are incarnate, since they are born of the incarnation
of Christian faith in popular culture. For this reason they entail a personal
relationship, not with vague spiritual energies or powers, but with God, with
Christ, with Mary, with the saints. These devotions are fleshy, they have a
face. They are capable of fostering relationships and not just enabling
escapism. In other parts of our society, we see the growing attraction to
various forms of a “spirituality of well-being” divorced from any community
life, or to a “theology of prosperity” detached from responsibility for our
brothers and sisters, or to depersonalized experiences which are nothing more
than a form of self-centredness.
91. One
important challenge is to show that the solution will never be found in fleeing
from a personal and committed relationship with God which at the same time
commits us to serving others. This happens frequently nowadays, as believers
seek to hide or keep apart from others or quietly flit from one place to
another or from one task to another, without creating deep and stable bonds.
“Imaginatio locorum et mutatio multos fefellit”. [ Thomas À Kempis, De
Imitatione Christi, Lib. I, IX, 5: “Dreaming of different places, and moving
from one to another, has misled many”.] …. We need to help others to realize
that the only way is to learn how to encounter others with the right attitude,
which is to accept and esteem them as companions along the way, without
interior resistance. Better yet, it means learning to find Jesus in the faces
of others, in their voices, in their pleas. And learning to suffer in the
embrace of the crucified Jesus whenever we are unjustly attacked or meet with
ingratitude, never tiring of our decision to live in fraternity.
92. There
indeed we find true healing, since the way to relate to others which truly
heals instead of debilitating us, is a mystical fraternity, a contemplative
fraternity. It is a fraternal love capable of seeing the sacred grandeur of our
neighbour, of finding God in every human being, of tolerating the nuisances of
life in common by clinging to the love of God, of opening the heart to divine
love and seeking the happiness of others just as their heavenly Father does. Here
and now, especially where we are a “little flock” (Lk 12:32), the Lord’s
disciples are called to live as a community which is the salt of the earth and
the light of the world (cf. Mt 5:13-16). We are called to bear witness to a
constantly new way of living together in fidelity to the Gospel. Let us not allow ourselves to be robbed of
community!
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