Monthly Archives: May 2015

Pop Culture Sometimes Gets It (7)

I almost hate to show it to you, because the trailer so very badly misrepresents the movie; but the movie is one of the finest such I’ve seen, and a really unusual and wonderful piece from Audrey Hepburn, as well.  I very much doubt you have ever seen any work that so frankly represents an actually spiritual struggle (and even failure) with God’s calling.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UufhueetoS0?rel=0&controls=0&showinfo=0]

grrrrrr

Declaring that they didn’t have the knowledge or will to properly catechize their son, local nominal Catholic parents Bert and Donna Tomlinson told the press today that they were officially leaving their son’s eternal salvation in the hands of his catechism teacher. “Yes, as a Religious Ed teacher, one of my duties is to make sure that my students learn about the things most parents don’t have time for, like Jesus and salvation.” Anthony Spalding told EOTT as he deposited his $750 paycheck.

(source: Nominal Catholic Parents Just Going To Kick Back And Let Son’s Religious Ed Teacher Do All The Work | EOTT LLC)

Toasting the Martyrs

From a genial review of a new book by Baylor Honors College (Sarah’s program) prof Michael Foley:

We live in serious times which call for action in the public square. But I sense that in addition to fighting for the truth about the human person in public Foley is urging us to live out the joy of the gospel among our friends and families. The dour Christian forgets that we are surrounded—yes, even at happy hour—by a great cloud of witnesses who have endured far worse times than ours. Who knows? Perhaps even some of John Piper’s Christian hedonists will join us there in fellowship, reflection, and friendly dialogue on the witness of these saints.

(source: It’s Vespers Somewhere | Logan Paul Gage | First Things)

Regime Against Religion: A Tactical Briefing

A parallel noted:

China’s third step to weaken Islam, though, strikes much closer to home. The government is now forcing Muslim store owners to do something their religion forbids: sell alcohol and cigarettes and display them prominently. Muslim storeowners who refuse face massive penalties, and have been told they will “see their shops sealed off, their business suspended and legal action pursued against them.”

Why the coercion? The government claims the mandate is designed “to provide greater convenience to the public.” But that claim is hard to take seriously. The government’s interest is not so much in providing public access to cigarettes and alcohol generally, but in making sure that those products come from particular parties — namely the religious objectors. Local party officials are at least candid enough to admit it, saying, “We have a campaign to weaken religion here and this is part of that campaign.”

Sadly, China’s cigarette-and-alcohol mandate bears a troubling resemblance to our own federal government’s contraception mandate, which forces religious ministries like the Little Sisters of the Poor to provide health plans that include access to free contraceptives and abortion-inducing drugs.

(source: American nuns, Chinese booze and religious persecution: Column)

…and it’s important to note that the parallel goes beyond the “contraception mandate” issue, too. Continue reading »

Prescient, Persistent

Thomas Hibbs’ recent review of the Mad Men finale directs me to the following fascinating passage in de Tocqueville, one of those writers whose most famous quotations list has made him seem to be a token booster of American national pride.  But this could have been written in our generation, friends:

It is strange to see with what feverish ardor the Americans pursue their own welfare, and to watch the vague dread that constantly torments them lest they should not have chosen the shortest path which may lead to it.

A native of the United States clings to this world’s goods as if he were certain never to die; and he is so hasty in grasping at all within his reach that one would suppose he was constantly afraid of not living long enough to enjoy them. He clutches everything, he holds nothing fast, but soon loosens his grasp to pursue fresh gratifications.

In the United States a man builds a house in which to spend his old age, and he sells it before the roof is on; he plants a garden and lets it just as the trees are coming into bearing; he brings a field into tillage and leaves other men to gather the crops; he embraces a profession and gives it up; he settles in a place, which he soon afterwards leaves to carry his changeable longings elsewhere. If his private affairs leave him any leisure, he instantly plunges into the vortex of politics; and if at the end of a year of unremitting labor he finds he has a few days’ vacation, his eager curiosity whirls him over the vast extent of the United States, and he will travel fifteen hundred miles in a few days to shake off his happiness. Death at length overtakes him, but it is before he is weary of his bootless chase of that complete felicity which forever escapes him.

At first sight there is something surprising in this strange unrest of so many happy men, restless in the midst of abundance. The spectacle itself, however, is as old as the world; the novelty is to see a whole people furnish an exemplification of it.

(source: Tocqueville: Book II Chapter 13)

Do you doubt that this is a durable component of our national character?  Take a look at what mind-warping folly is often written on the subject of jealousy (the laudable, if tempered, desire to protect what one rightly enjoys) and envy (the mortal sin of desiring that no one else should enjoy anything unless I can enjoy it, too).

M. de Tocqueville continues: Continue reading »

Answers to a Survey on the Family–part 4

In early 2015, our Archdiocese like many others was offered a 47-question open-ended survey in order to gather information about what people throughout the world understand about the Church’s teaching, her pastoral practice, current conditions, and the reality of marriage and family life.  The survey was probably a poor translation, and the questions were ill-structured, so I ended up writing about 15,500 words in the one week window for completing it.  I have chosen to share a few of these, here, as well, for your comments.  I will quote the question, and what follows is my answer.  I have edited the answers slightly for brevity, politeness, and clarity.

7. To what extent and by what means is the ordinary pastoral care of families addressed to those on the periphery? (cf. n. 11). What are the operational guidelines available to foster and appreciate the “desire to form a family” planted by the Creator in the heart of every person, especially among young people, including those in family situations which do not correspond to the Christian vision? How do they respond to the Church’s efforts in her mission to them? How prevalent is natural marriage among the non-baptized, also in relation to the desire to form a family among the young?

It is hard to make plain sense of the language of the Relatio here: “People need to be accepted in the concrete circumstances of life. We need to know how to support them in their searching and to encourage them in their hunger for God and their wish to feel fully part of the Church, also including those who have experienced failure or find themselves in a variety of situations.”

What on earth could we mean by this? What people have not “experienced failure” and do not “find themselves in a variety of situations”? What “concrete circumstances of life” are under consideration? Among whom, and for what purpose, do these “people need to be accepted”?

Lung cancer patients are accepted in the oncology ward for treatment; smokers are not accepted in neonatal intensive care, though they can be if they scrub in and agree not to light up. Burn victims are accepted by the burn unit, even if they are also arsonists, but we do not thereby think arson acceptable. We accept children for elementary school, but we insist that adults who can’t read attend literacy programs elsewhere. When we embrace those who are at least open to the idea of sharing in the goods of Creation and, we hope, of Redemption; we do not thereby take into ourselves the smoker’s lung cancer, his addiction, or his defiance of doctors’ advice.

To truly accept the poor in their concrete circumstances is first to regard people without regarding their poverty, and then to regard their poverty as a problem to be alleviated. When we turn to addicts, or white-collar criminals, or violent felons, or asthmatics, or many another voluntary or involuntary, habitual or episodic, moral or incidental problem, we should always regard people first without regarding their ills and evils, and then we should seek to remedy those ills and evils in a manner actually suited to each specific problem. Each person’s dignity is unquestioned, but that dignity can be obscured by sinful action in ways that “concrete circumstances” by themselves cannot accomplish; and every person needs to actually be made a partaker in Redemption, someone to be regarded “in Christ” as a “new creation,” more than to be welcomed into any society not oriented to accomplishing that end.

Those who are not attached to an intact, faithful family need, as a practical matter, to be integrated into the life of families; the hospitality of families and their interdependence with any who belong to the Church and her neighborhood is the means par excellence of achieving this end.

Some notes: The call to marriage bears almost no resemblance to what our commercial and political culture inculcates under such headings as “sexual awakening,” romantic pursuit, coupling, and having a wedding. Unfortunately, even within the Church, we have too often been colonized by the ideology of our culture: Where we should point out that wounds received in our families and from our culture do limit culpability, but also demand education and discipline as a healing remedy, we are all too prone to oscillate between a determinist view (in which our sin is involuntary and overpowering) and a Pelagian view (in which all necessary moral resources are bound up in each individual’s willpower). The Church, even in its most recent teaching, has wisely condemned both of these views.

Training specifically necessary for those young people who will most likely need to know how to work and live as a family fundamentally comes from families trained to serve in the Church. These families model the response to Christ’s call for themselves and for other families. Understanding the outright hostility of our culture to those who embrace this call, though, it is perhaps especially important that those who serve Christian families should work to strengthen and extend existing arrangements for marriage preparation. A lifelong commitment must not seem to hang on temporary emotional intensity or a single day’s training at a classroom “retreat.” Engaged couples to be married in the Church will need examples, companions, pastoral counsel, and Natural Family Planning training sufficient to begin practice months before the wedding night.

Families produce single people; single people become husbands, wives, priests, monks, nuns, and serve God in a wide variety of ways. While both marriage and ordination involve specific sacramental graces, the single person seeking a call and the vowed religious alike share in the universal call to holiness, to membership in the Body of Christ, and to dedicated service. The final vows of those who enter religious orders express the judgment of the individual and the community that a divine call to total commitment according to a certain rule has been understood and embraced. For those who serve Christ in singleness without any such final commitment, the possibility of such a commitment cannot be entirely ruled out; there is therefore always a certain shared sense of “waiting” and “looking” among singles. In this state, single people enjoy significantly greater freedom to change their situation and follow various perceived calls, making singles especially valuable in meeting acute needs and helping to launch new endeavors.

Each single person, however, will tend to also experience certain limitations in ministry: restlessness, loneliness, lack of stability, and a sense of living in the margins of the Church are very real afflictions even for those singles who patiently serve God with their lives. Families and those who serve families in the Church have an obligation to involve singles with married couples and whole families, encouraging them to have a share in the hospitality, shared work, and child-rearing opportunities that both constitute and model the family life. Singles groups and teams of singles tend to reinforce the sense that single service is a “waiting stage.” While such “while you wait” groups sometimes help faithful singles meet suitable partners, they are by no means an adequate description of the single person’s involvement in the concrete life of the Church. Healthy single service is service among, within, and to the families, vowed religious, and clergy who support them and rely on them.

In addition to recognizing that the faithful family is peripheral in our culture, and that the single person needs to be integrated among families, there are other “outlier phenomena” to be considered. The autistic young person will need special training, and the family special care; in a very different way, so will the gifted athlete. The person who struggles with feelings of anxiety and condemnation so relentless that he is tempted to disbelieve the goodness of God needs special training, and his family special care; in a very different way, so will the mother who had her child surgically killed in the womb. The successful businessman whose time and talent are heavily mortgaged in order to secure treasures needs particular admonitions and opportunities, and so will his family. The schizophrenic needs both care and medication; the alcoholic needs help abstaining. The unchaste need help recognizing chastity in a culture militantly opposed to the display of that virtue; the technically chaste need help flourishing and bearing fruit as hospitable, generous lovers.

If there are any other “concrete circumstances” than these, if any “variety of situations” we might be discussing involve matters more profound than autism or schizophrenia, more life-altering than the choice between chastity and porneia, more socially consequential than the choice between commercial success and evangelical poverty, more spiritually wrenching than a mother’s weeping for her murdered baby or the scrupulous soul’s torment, then we may need to specify them clearly in order to discuss them fruitfully.

Pop Culture Sometimes Gets It (6)

Multiple clips, from a movie you really should watch through.  It’s a very American story of conversion:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwqhtIKhNyY?rel=0&controls=0&showinfo=0]

and then

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-6wSxKLhbo?rel=0&controls=0&showinfo=0]

and let’s not forget

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rn6w255CGkk?rel=0&controls=0&showinfo=0]

…and just play that last one over and over.

You Must Not Feed the Lion

Dear friends, you cannot grow tired of hearing the truth about your world, your lives, your loves.  And you cannot quit hearing the love that goes before, beyond, behind, under, and around your loves, that makes them possible and makes it possible for them to be real loves–for you to be partakers in the divine.

Because it is not possible for you to succeed by denying this reality, in either direction.

I have just been reading the news accounts of a friend, a friend of many of my friends, a friend of my wife’s and mine, from a ways back, who has been mauled by that rogue lion.  A friend who’s going to need a lot of help before he’s ever going home, a friend who many will not want to help, now.  Who may not be able to “deserve” help, now.

And so I’m going to pray, and go to bed.

And you must not forget these words:

Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that in due time he may exalt you. Cast all your anxieties on him, for he cares about you. Be sober, be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking some one to devour. Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same experience of suffering is required of your brotherhood throughout the world. And after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, establish, and strengthen you. To him be the dominion for ever and ever. Amen.

(source: 1 Peter 5 RSVCE)

[“and when you are converted, strengthen your brethren”]

Answers to a Survey on the Family–part 3

In early 2015, our Archdiocese like many others was offered a 47-question open-ended survey in order to gather information about what people throughout the world understand about the Church’s teaching, her pastoral practice, current conditions, and the reality of marriage and family life.  The survey was probably a poor translation, and the questions were ill-structured, so I ended up writing about 15,500 words in the one week window for completing it.  I have chosen to share a few of these, here, as well, for your comments.  I will quote the question, and what follows is my answer.  I have edited the answers slightly for brevity, politeness, and clarity.

6. How do Christian families bear witness, for succeeding generations, to the development and growth of a life of sentiment? (cf. ns. 9 – 10). In this regard, how might the formation of ordained ministers be improved? What qualified persons are urgently needed in this pastoral activity?

Even after reading the (rather turgid) paragraphs from the Relatio, I am quite unable to think of a straightforward sense in which “a life of sentiment” is the sort of thing whose “development and growth” we need to seek—what kind of “sentiment”? what sort of “life”? in what direction should “development” proceed? And even should we assign meanings to these terms, what would it mean to “bear witness” to such a thing? I am at a loss to process this gobbledygook. I’ll assume that we are meant to understand “provide to succeeding generations a model of emotional maturity.”

Emotional maturity means the ability to actively engage the whole of life without becoming enervated or sinking into despair, on the one hand, or seeking intoxicants and distraction for escape, on the other. Families are the model of this insofar as they concretely share not only their own but also the Church’s life, and especially when they do so in neighborhood.

Some notes, including at the end a note on those called to orders:

When husband and wife live their marriage as mutual support in ministry to the “household of faith,” beginning with their own highest responsibility for one another and their children but proceeding immediately to their Church family, and then to their whole neighborhood, the marriage covenant concretely performs what it symbolizes; its grace bears fruit, without being spent and wasted.

I would like to navigate past two errors toward a truth. The family, as a unit, has specific responsibilities both within itself and toward the Church that separate individuals would not have: responsibilities having to do with the proclamation of Christ’s love for His Body bound up with the sacrament itself, as well as the education of children for the Church. Those who serve families in the Church therefore have to address families as units of responsibility: husbands for their households, husbands and wives for each other, parents for children, and even children as responsible to their parents and for their siblings. Church ministry ought never begin from a position of dividing families into separate units, only subsequently attempting to teach these alienated souls to simulate appropriate roles.

On the other hand, it is precisely this understanding that requires us not to imagine that any family is completely autonomous, either! I have seen some “family integrated church,” home-school, and traditionalist material that comes very close to setting up each “domestic church” as its very own Protestant denomination. Precisely because the graces and promises of Christ for marriages and children are bound up with the sacramental economy that Christ entrusted to His Church, because Matrimony as well as Baptism, Confirmation, and Eucharist are necessary to Christian families and available only in the Church, the family as a responsible unit is responsible to Christ, and therefore to His Church. Those who serve families in the Church ought always to call families as families to serve Christ through his Church, and so fulfill their callings as Christian husbands, wives, parents, and children.

Such a call, as I’ve said, must address the family in its integrity, as a responsible unit. Families should be called to work proper to families, such as caring for children and passing on trade skills, wisdom, basic education, and spiritual lessons; and they should be resourced in a manner that fits this calling. Families can also have advantages in productivity and efficiency over single people or even teams of singles in certain areas of practical life and Christian service, if they are taught to regard themselves as functional units of society (a reality our culture actively works to obscure and fragment, today). Teaching families to work together for goals proper to their Christian calling, to forego individual opportunities in order to achieve common goals, makes strengthening family bonds one and the same as helping family members achieve their calling in Christ.

Such teaching should also help to prevent a harmful byproduct of much “traditional family values” teaching, the tendency to regard a self-absorbed nuclear family as the Christian ideal. In fact, this ideal is not “traditional” in any society, but reflects the negative impact of industrialization and its search for the smallest “atom” of human society, the economic unit that most efficiently organizes capital and consumption to serve financial and commercial interests. Strong families are not strong in themselves, but as they honor and depend on extended families and are firmly embedded in thriving communities of faith, work, and cultural practice.

Christians serving families should always focus on the family as a fruitful unity, not an atom of consumption; the family must be taught to “do good to all men, and especially to those who are of the household of faith,” and such teaching will always involve the family in the reciprocal sharing of care, hospitality, and support by which whole communities become impregnated with familial life.

Ordained ministers need to have grown up in neighborhoods comprising faithful families, so that mundane virtues will have been formed before heroic virtues are demanded of them.

We urgently need leaders who are competent to help families build neighborhood in each parish, leaders who will help to organize the local civic, economic, and educational measures required to build civil societies in the middle of a culture generally bent on atomizing them. These will be people with an understanding of the importance of trades and professions, and a good sense of how living in any occupation is a family job.

Hanby contra “Retreat”

Michael Hanby is one of those writers I generally want to agree with, yet whose writing often leaves me uncertain which “map” we’re on.  Typically, at least when I have a lot of sympathy with the basic analysis, I just conclude that the writer must be deeply involved in a more specialized conversation than I am.  This article, however, had too many good observations in it for me to pass it over.

First, then, in the context of the discussion Hanby’s having, here, “liberal” seems to mean “an American Catholic committed to functioning within post-Enlightenment secular synthesis” (roughly “classical liberal”) and “radical” seems to mean “an American Catholic who expects the post-Enlightenment secular synthesis to prove incompatible with faithful Christianity.”  Specifically, some of these “radicals” embrace what has been called “the Benedict Option,” though others (including myself) are not confident that proposal is quite ready for the light of day.  Hanby’s article offers some criticism of “the Benedict Option,” but also answers some “liberal” criticism that Hanby considers ill-founded.  I agree with Hanby’s arguments in answer, so let me try to find a few of the pithiest portions.  I will clip and add emphasis freely:

The questions at issue, then, between liberals and radicals are not first political—whether to advance or retreat, engage or withdraw—but philosophical and theological: what the truth of God and the human being is and whether it is finally worth knowing, how this truth should bear on Christian existence today and whether it begets deeper forms of engagement than those afforded by liberal order, and above all, whether we are willing to stake our lives on this truth even if it makes us strangers to the public square. These are demanding questions, and moreover, they are the questions which this moment demands. We cannot resolve them by refusing to think about them.

(source: On Retreat | Michael Hanby | First Things)

(No, don’t run away; I want you to finish the post!)   Continue reading »