What is the danger of New Age ideologies for Catholics?

During the last decades, many currents of thought have emerged that promote the elevation of the human being through different disciplines whose intention is to generate spiritual self-sufficiency, taking advantage of the legitimate human nature of spiritual longing. This group of various disciplines is commonly referred to as “New Age” ideologies.

An adequate Christian discernment of New Age thought and practice cannot fail to recognize that, it represents something of a compendium of positions that the Church has identified as heterodox.  Saint John Paul II warned us with regard to the “return of ancient gnostic1 ideas under the guise of the so-called New Age: We cannot delude ourselves that this will lead toward a renewal of religion. It is only a new way of practicing gnosticism – that attitude of the spirit that, in the name of a profound knowledge of God, results in distorting His Word and replacing it with purely human words…”2 (Jesus Christ the Bearer of the Water of Life, §1.4)

People feel the Christian religion no longer offers them something they really need. The search which often leads people to the New Age is a genuine yearning: for a deeper spirituality, for something which will touch their hearts, and for a way of making sense of a confusing and often alienating world.

Any problems there are with New Age are to be found in what it proposes as alternative answers to life’s questions. If the Church is not to be accused of being deaf to people’s longings, her members need to do two things: to root themselves ever more firmly in the fundamentals of their faith, and to understand the often-silent cry in people’s hearts, which leads them elsewhere if they are not satisfied by the Church. There is also a call in all of this to come closer to Jesus Christ and to be ready to follow Him, since He is the real way to happiness, the truth about God and the fulness of life for every man and woman who is prepared to respond to his love. (Jesus Christ the Bearer of the Water of Life, §1.5)

We can clearly identify these ideologies by their way of promoting a higher state of consciousness or trying to improve our health through their methods, whether through “energy therapies”, “energy balancing”, “bioenergetics” or “awakening the intelligence of our organs” among others.

Let us remember that our Lord Jesus Christ is the way, and the truth and the life, no one can enter the Kingdom of Heaven except through Him (John 14:6). Let us lift our spirits through fervent prayer and be one with our Lord through communion every time we come to Mass.


1 Gnosis: in a generic sense, it is a form of knowledge that is not intellectual, but visionary or mystical, thought to be revealed and capable of joining the human being to the divine mystery.

2 John Paul II, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, (Knopf) 1994, 90

A reflection on the 10th Eucharistic Congress

There comes a time in one’s life when a series of events, or merely just a single event, has a profound impact on that individual.  The occurrence of these events initiates or contributes to the individual’s growth and is transformational. 

For some Woodstock, in 1969, was a nexus of the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War and other pressing social issues that sparked a cultural revolution whose effects continues to propagate to this day. 

For others it was 9/11, a “Call to Arms,” an event that surfaced the exacerbated discord in the world, precipitated wars, and resulted in the realignment and isolation of the earthly governing powers.  It changed our political thinking and how we perceive the other nations and peoples of the world community.

Another seminal event, with the Grace of God, just occurred July 17 through 21 in Indianapolis, Indiana; the National Eucharistic Congress.  

This Congress, a manifestation of the ongoing Eucharistic Revival, has happened to raise our consciousnesses and reenergize our souls, to the sacrifice made by Jesus to save us, and the real presence of our Lord in the Eucharist.  It has grown and picked up momentum the past three years, coming to a well calibrated inflection point, a celebration, in the National Eucharistic Congress. 

This National Eucharistic Congress, again three years in its planning by the American Catholic Church, was preceded, over 60 days prior to the Congress, with Pilgrimages from the four corners of our Country culminating in Indianapolis.

The five-day Congress in Indianapolis was both visceral and cerebral with those in attendance; Cardinals, Bishops, Priests, Deacons, Seminarians, Religious, Artists and over 50,000 of the Faithful, all on Fire with the Holy Spirit.  The joy and love present were intense, palatable in every corner of the city.  People of all ages and backgrounds communed together in perfect harmony.  The venue of events for the five days were all enthusiastically packed to the max and ranged from stadium filled Masses and Revivals to smaller breakout sessions, lectures, and workshops.

On the afternoon of the fourth day a Procession of the Eucharist filled the streets of Indianapolis for over three miles, from the city Convention Center to a Memorial Park, lasted several hours without incident, and ending in peaceful prayer and celebration.  That evening, Lucas Oil Stadium rocked with testimony and music in a final Revival that left everyone present with an unforgettable, once-in-a-lifetime experience.

Sunday’s culminating Encounter Session and closing Mass at the filled Lucas Oil Stadium ended with the mandate to spread the Good Word with the “Walk With One” campaign (each attendee brings another person one step closer to the church).

The proclamation of the Good Word with this effort will enable our deepest Hopes to be realized.  It was announced that the next National Eucharistic Congress is targeted to be held in 2033; two thousand years since the redemption; passion, death, and resurrection of our Lord, Jesus Christ.  Nothing is impossible with God.  May God be with you all.


Noelsch, Robert “A reflection on the 10th Eucharistic Congress”, 28 July 2024, Bay Shore , NY