Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Podjoint Logo
US
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/43/7c/72/437c720c-a30a-ae6b-7aec-28634c55cfb7/mza_15646287632532029882.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg
Discerning Hearts Catholic Podcasts
12 episodes
2 months ago
Join Dr. David Fagerberg and Kris McGregor as they discuss the nature of Liturgical Theology, and in particular Liturgical Asceticism and Mysticism. Their conversations range from the experience of the Desert Fathers to the deeply rich encounter found in the sacramental life.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality,
Spirituality,
Religion
RSS
All content for Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg is the property of Discerning Hearts Catholic Podcasts and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Join Dr. David Fagerberg and Kris McGregor as they discuss the nature of Liturgical Theology, and in particular Liturgical Asceticism and Mysticism. Their conversations range from the experience of the Desert Fathers to the deeply rich encounter found in the sacramental life.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality,
Spirituality,
Religion
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/43/7c/72/437c720c-a30a-ae6b-7aec-28634c55cfb7/mza_15646287632532029882.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
PSM4 – The Form of Liturgy – Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg – Discerning Hearts Podcast
Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg
30 minutes 35 seconds
2 years ago
PSM4 – The Form of Liturgy – Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg – Discerning Hearts Podcast


Episode 4 – The Form of Liturgy – Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg Ph.D.
Dr. David Fagerberg and Kris McGregor discuss the form of liturgy and how it can become distorted.
Here are some of the topics explored in this episode:
The experience of lukewarm prayer.
The nature of humility and worship.
What is the form of liturgy?
What is Dulia and Latria?
Liturgy comes from whom we are worshipping.
From the discussion with Dr. Fagerberg:
The odd thing is that we can sometimes be proud of our humility and our self knowledge which makes us more vainglorious I have a couple of lines that I’m proud of having written, and this is one of them. So long as there is this old Adam ego humility will feel like humiliation. And if you wake up in the morning with a Christian smile and say, dear God, I’d like to become more humble today. He’ll accommodate you. There will be humiliations. Oh, I didn’t mean to say that. Oh, I meant to hold my tongue. Oh, I’m not even, I’m going to fact like it’s humiliating. Yes. That’s what it is to carry these crosses to be nailed with Jesus to the cross is for you to die to yourself, to your seam. This isn’t ego like healthy your strength. This is like me for as myself second, or there’s anything left. I’ll take it. This is a, God is my servant. Rather than me being his servant.
 
More taken from the discussion:
It’s not as if God is changing so rapidly, that new material has to be inserted into the liturgy. Just to keep up with him. If the liturgy were totally or even significantly culturally dependent, then we could say that it would need continual revision for, with a changing material. The form would have to be different too, but liturgy is not an expression of how people see things. Rather it proposes instead how God sees all people.
And still more:
They are Dulia and Latria. Dulia means a homage or reverence or respect you pay dulia to distinguished persons, or even places. The Archangel Gabriel gets dulia. Saint Augustin gets dulia. Mother Theresa gets dulia. The grotto at Notre Dame gets dulia. Lartia is different from dulia. And I don’t know if I can give it a single English word. So instead I’ll give it a description. Latria is what we give God. And only God, because he is God, you can give dulia to the emperor, but you must give latria to God. And you ought not to give latria to the emperor because that would be giving latria to something other than God, to an image of God, to something lesser than God, which in Greek was the word eídolo. And that’s where the word idolatry comes from idos lateria is giving latria to something other than God


For more podcast episodes of this series visit the
Pathways to Sacred Mysteries w/Dr. David Fagerberg page

David W. Fagerberg is a Professor in the Department of Theology at the University of Notre Dame. He holds master’s degrees from Luther Northwestern Seminary, St. John’s University (Collegeville), Yale Divinity School, and Yale University. His Ph.D. is from Yale University in liturgical theology.
Fagerberg’s work has explored how the Church’s lex credendi (law of belief) is founded upon the Church’s lex orandi (law of prayer). This was expressed in Theologia Prima (Hillenbrand Books, 2003). He has integrated into this the Eastern Orthodox understanding of asceticism by cons...
Pathway to Sacred Mysteries with Dr. David Fagerberg
Join Dr. David Fagerberg and Kris McGregor as they discuss the nature of Liturgical Theology, and in particular Liturgical Asceticism and Mysticism. Their conversations range from the experience of the Desert Fathers to the deeply rich encounter found in the sacramental life.