Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Hitch-22: The Last Revolution

Christopher Hitchens, the famous author and journalist, lays out his life story in his recent bestseller Hitch-22. In many ways, he embodies the generation which came of age during the 1968 revolution, throwing over political and sexual conventions, and, over time, shedding their illusions about socialism and pacifism. His memoir leaves nothing for anyone else to embellish on, from his early sexual escapades, to his high profile fights with prominent thinkers, artists, and politicians of the day, to his political reversals. It offers a fascinating history and perspective on the last forty years of world events and the people who made them, recalling for baby-boomers the ride they have taken through the decades, through for most from an armchair.

Hitchens' father was a career military man and World War II veteran who had found his war years to be the best and most meaningful. His mother was free-spirited and pushed his education forward. Her tragic suicide while he was a young man was a bitter experience, particularly knowing he had missed phone calls that he might have intervened. Later he discovered the Jewish roots she had concealed and found more places from his past.

His years at Oxford's Balliol College he described as follows: “a training in logic chopping and Talmudic-style microexegesis [that] can come in handy in later life, as can a training in speaking with a bullhorn from an upturned milk crate outside a factory, and then later scrambling into a dinner jacket and addressing the Oxford Union debating society under the rules of parliamentary order.”

Hitchens traveled from place to place as a young revolutionary supporting the cause, from Greece to Cuba, Portugal to Poland, and his observations during these engagements would test his socialist leanings. On a field trip to Cuba for young revolutionaries, in answer to his question about whether free speech was allowed, he was told: of course, except in the case of the “Leader of the Revolution” himself. Hitchens replied to the effect that “if the most salient figure in the state and society was immune from critical comment, then all the rest was detail” and was amused to find himself labeled a “counter-revolutionary.”

He soon discovered that journalism was best-suited to his tendency to straddle both sides of the fence and his relish for argument. Hitchens realized he could not support the curbs on freedom that a socialist regime imposes for the supposed good of all. “Whatever I might argue, I was more profoundly attached to liberal concepts of freedom—freedom of speech and of the press, academic freedom, independent judgment and independent judges.” A leading figure in the Solidarity movement in Poland, Adam Michnik, told Hitchens: “The real struggle for us is for the citizen to cease to be the property of the state.”

9/11 was another turning point. “In truth, a whole new terrain of struggle had just opened up in front of me.” And this time it was personal. As the Pentagon burned, his wife couldn't get across town to pick up their daughter from school. While the multicultural left was enabling radical Islam, Hitchens recognized that “to repudiate war in [a] morally neutral way was to allow fascism a clear run.” As Hitchens challenged a Georgetown audience, would Mandela or Allende have recruited supporters to slaughter innocent bystanders to move their cause forward?

In Iraq, he saw allied forces greeted as “liberators”, and in a harrowing description he recalled the brutal chemical slaughter of the Kurds as a reminder of the unpredictable brutality of Saddam Hussein, even while deploring the war's excesses. Hitchens dubbed himself a “pro-government dissident” from the Left. After living through the revolutionary years of 1968, 1989 and 2001, he recalls Hannah Arendt’s observation of “the lost treasure of revolution” with their “convolutions and contradictions". He considers Islam the worst enemy and America the best hope.

As is well known, Hitchens bitterly opposes religious strictures and hypocrisy. Recently, he called Pope Benedict XVI that “elderly criminal” and said that he was sorry he wouldn’t see his death before his own. His sloppy accusation, from a cursory and not disinterested reading of the sexual abuse scandal, is only the latest of his regular invectives against the Church. He is currently one of the four best-known British atheists and has written an entire volume on Mother Teresa and her “fraudulent” work, along with another bestseller God Is Not Good, the title of which his friend Salman Rushdie critiqued as having one word too many. Hitchens was hired by the Vatican to critique Mother Teresa’s canonization proceedings, and he boasts he is "the only living person to have represented the Devil pro bono".

Hitchens became an American citizen in 2007. He has an unabashed admiration for the American ideals, after so many disillusions. He described a deep admiration at his first sight of the skyline of New York: “I knew that I was surveying a tremendous work of man” and he asks himself: “How is the United States at once the most conservative and commercial AND the most revolutionary society on Earth?”

His idealism has been tempered by his philosophy. He writes: "I suspect that the hardest thing for the idealist to surrender is the teleological" and recalls Oscar Wilde's quip that "A map of the world that did not show Utopia would not be worth consulting." He states that: "It is not that there are no certainties, it is that it is an absolute certainty that there are no certainties". He is not unaware of the contradiction between his asserting rights and wrongs and his denial that religion should give anyone such an assurance of truth, nor does that hinder him. He adds that he sees "the unbounded areas and fields of one's ignorance are now expanding in such a way, and at such a velocity, as to make the contemplation of them almost fantastically beautiful".

He shares with fellow atheist Richard Dawkins the acknowledgement of an incredible coincidence, the "sense of wonder at the sheer unlikelihood of having briefly `made it' on a planet where crude extinction has held such sway, and where the chance of being conceived, let alone safely delivered, is so infinitesimal." Again, it is personal, because he lived, while his mother had aborted twice, just before and just after him.

The coincidence of his memoir’s publication and his cancer diagnosis is especially poignant with the volume's reflections on death. The first page of his book quotes Leopold Bloom in Ulysses: “Read your own obituary notice; they say you live longer. Gives you second wind. New lease of life.” Hitchens proactively discounts any potential deathbed conversion as untrustworthy and "pathetic" because he would be "half-demented". He is only at his best and truest, according to himself, when being in full possession of his powers.

Hitchens doesn’t squirm to confront his own logical conclusion: “The fact is that all attempts to imagine one’s own extinction are futile by definition.” For a man who has always been ready to brawl over the latest injustice, he adds: “I do not especially like the idea that one day I shall be tapped on the shoulder and informed, not that the party is over but that it is most assuredly going on—only henceforth in my absence.” Even after such so many and varied experiences, he complains: "How terrible it is that we have so many more desires than opportunities." He refuses any answer to this, a priori.

Reprinted from ilsussidiario.net

Friday, August 27, 2010

Where do you start?

There is a very moving article by Fiammetta Cappellini from the Meeting at Rimini, "Is the world still remembering our tragedy?", who works for the AVSI aid organization in Haiti.  I have been following her story at ilsussidiario.net since the earthquake hit.  In each of her letters she gives insight into how to keep starting again in the face of every imaginable obstacle.  What I learn from her is not to imagine that we can solve problems in any comprehensive way, because it doesn't belong to us to do this but to Another, and that presumption only paralyzes us.   Instead, it's about taking steps and following the provocation.  In this case, a teacher and some schoolchildren took a step which gave Haitian children living in tents a chance to continue their studies.
It is difficult to land here from Haiti to a world without cracks, to Western life, and to succeed in building a speech with iron logic and meticulous explanations that people expect. I got a bit troubled, I didn't feel up to it. I still have the impression of not being able to make people understand the most important thing: that Haitians have found hope, and trust again, and that the desire for great things that is hope in tomorrow, has taken force, and has returned to life. I thought I did not find the words to tell about the long road made of small steps which has carried us from the tragedy to a window on the future.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

John Waters Reports on The Meeting

The Irish Times: "Time to Revel in a Little Mystery"
"It is easy to be deceived by the content of the meeting, which on the whole appears to be a bumper accumulation of the things we deal with in our everyday culture. There are politics and science and art and music and literature and sport.

But the approach is different to conventional cultural approaches in that it opens everything out in the direction of what is unknowable. Everything that is touched upon is immediately seen to lead somewhere else, to become detached from the schemas our culture creates to accommodate knowledge that is reluctantly conceded as contingent or provisional or partial, but nonetheless claimed as a down-payment on omniscience."
- More

Sunday, August 22, 2010

The Church Defends the Gypsies

France is having its own immigration crackdown, and for the past month President Nicolas Sarkozy has called for "security measures" in regard to the Roma people, or gypsies.  Some fifty illegal camps have been dismantled.

Archbishop of Aix Christophe Dufour was present during one of the police raids.  He gave this statement:
The caravans have been destroyed.  I do not question the police who obey orders.  But I ask for respect for persons and their dignity, under French law.  Security discourses which may suggest that there are inferior populations are unacceptable.  These people are Europeans and living here peacefully for the most part, some of them for many years.
The archbishop offered to meet with the authorities in an attempt to arbitrate (via @lepetitchose).

Today, in his weekly Angelus address, the Holy Father addressed this issue with the French-speaking pilgrims:  
The liturgical texts of today repeat to us that all men are called to salvation.  They contain a call to learn to accept legitimate human diversity, following Jesus who came to unite people of all nations and all languages.  Dear parents, educate your children in universal brotherhood.

The Origin of a Cultural Initiative

Fr. Giussani wrote a brief statement describing the origin of the Meeting, just months after the very first session, in 1980.   What it is today was there from the beginning.  An excerpt:

This is the ideal that unites: it is a response to the need to live that unites people, that creates society. Friendship: a company guided toward destiny, as I always defined it with the youngsters. The perception of a situation as the absence of the ideal, and therefore a commitment, so that it would exist, so that the presence of the ideal happens.

Therefore the event of a new initiative, the generation of an adult begins, the adult starts generating. They have created a place where one encounters a subject. The presence is this: a place. The generation of an adult, which makes present one's own life beyond oneself, it is a place where one encounters a subject. A subject, a person, a humanity, who has something to say; a humanity with a message.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Meeting: An Expansion of the Heart

The theme of the 2010 Meeting, ""That nature which pushes us to desire great things is the heart", quoted from Camus' Caligula, started from a characteristically contemporary expression of doubt:
This sentence is part of the response of Don Giussani to a young woman who had confessed her doubt that it was all an illusion to wish for great things. His response continued like this: "Then follow it. What does it mean to follow? It means to compare all the encounters you have with what your heart tells you and when they correspond, to follow them. So, going forward you will have no fear that it is an illusion, but understand that in fact this is not an illusion. What seems an illusion, is in fact, a bias, a suspicion."

The Meeting explores a humanity which is not reduced to biological and psychological boundaries.  The participants are not in lockstep, politically, socially or otherwise.  They are open and ready for something new and great.
What was evident at one time is not obvious today: does there really exist a universality of the human? Is there something objective in the subjectivity of each of us? Can we speak of an "elementary experience" common to all men, whatever their race, history and culture?

On this an unprecedented cultural battle is being waged. It is enough to make a careful and honest observation about ourselves to realize that we have an infinite desire. This is the stature of the human heart.
Even more than a discussion about ideas, the Meeting introduces individuals who demonstrate this expansion of the heart.
The Meeting intends to document that the original nature of the heart exists and is the only resource to resist any attack against the humanity of each one. It will do so primarily through the intervention of Don Stefano Alberto, a professor of introductory theology at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan, which will be dedicated to the title of the Meeting; by the conference by Cardinal Scola and by an exceptional dialogue between the Metropolitan Filaret and Cardinal Erdo. Further, it will try to bring forth people for whom the "I" is not reduced and who are a testimony to a new subject who lives the reality of everything with a positive and constructive gaze.
(Rimini Meeting: "That nature which pushes us to desire great things is the heart", Alberto Savorana)

Friday, August 20, 2010

Does the anti-mosque fury mirror past anti-Catholicism?


Patricia Zapor reports HERE on the similarities between the anti-Islam of today and the anti-Catholicism of yesterday. At first read, I was moved by the comparison. It made me sympathetic toward those Muslims who are not enemies of freedom, the United States, Christianity or whatever else; and it made me frustrated with those behind the sentiments.

Georgetown professor, Chester Gillis: "At its core, the mosque furor is not unlike what Catholics experienced in the United States for more than 100 years, according to Georgetown University theology professor Chester Gillis.... While there are a wide range of political, philosophical and even zoning arguments about the Islamic center plans, Gillis sees anti-Muslim sentiment -- based in misconceptions and xenophobia -- at the core of the debate."

At the end of the article, Gillis is quoted as saying, "it may sound simplistic, but you really need to know Muslims as people."

As I said, my initial reaction was sympathy for Gillis's position. However, I can't overlook the "simplistic" action he takes by saying that the anti-Muslim sentiment at the core of the debate is based on misconceptions and xenophobia, just as it was when Catholics were the center of xenophobic ire.

While I don't purport to be an expert of Catholic history in the United States, I am unaware of any massive attacks carried out against United States citizens in the name of the Catholic Church. I am also unaware of many cases where Protestant fears about papists actively working to subvert American democracy and culture were substantiated. I am also unaware of Catholics actively seeking to set up parallel laws and systems of justice for themselves as some Muslims hope to do with Sharia law here and in Europe... of course, I am open to correction! Sadly for those Muslims forced to qualify themselves "moderate Muslims," there is reason for mistrust and wariness that needs to be acknowledged and dealt with, not glossed over as "misconception" or "xenophobia."

To create a dichotomy between ignorant xenophobes and the enlightened open-minded in this debate (which goes much deeper than the Ground Zero Mosque) is stifling. Those favoring the mosque and an improved position of Muslims in the United States need to "call a spade a spade," there are violent radicals among them. Those in opposition do not need to abandon their memories, but need to be open to a reality that is different from their preconceptions or previous experiences. Each side need to be cognizant of the difficult position they are asking the other to adopt.

As always, comments of disagreement and discussion are welcome and desired!

Meeting: Irish President Mary McAleese

Irish President Mary McAleese will address the Rimini Meeting on Sunday, August 22nd.  Journalist John Waters, who will join the panel, offers background on her political role in an article for Il Sussidiario.  
She was marginalized and repudiated by her fellow workers (some of whom have since recanted and apologized to her as President). When, later on, she acted as spokeswoman for the Catholic Bishops, she was the subject of venomous attacks which resulted in her life being threatened by unionist extremists.

Nevertheless, by sheer force of personality, McAleese emerged as a thoughtful and courageous voice, unafraid to speak up about her origins, her faith or her sense of an Ireland ungoverned by ideological prescriptions. A keen student of philosophy, history and politics, her public interventions were characterized most of all by her engagingly conversational style, by which she succeeded in saying quite complex, and sometimes quite rigorous things without conveying any sense of intellectual detachment.

In addition to all this, she was a clear-minded and unapologetic Catholic who took her faith seriously and saw no reason to compartmentalize it outside or alongside her public persona. Her work with the Catholic bishops had mainly been in the context of a forum established to address the matter of the continuing conflict that had blighted her home place for many years. She was, naturally, dismissed by opponents as “conservative” and “traditionalist”, but when the arguments started she left them all for dead.

Meeting: Flannery O'Connor Exhibit

 

 

Flannery O’ Connor

The infinite measure of the limit

22 August 2010 - 28 August 2010

Meeting: Michael Fitzgerald on the Courage of Flannery O'Connor

This coming week at the Meeting at Rimini, there will be an Anglo-American exhibit on the American fiction writer Flannery O'Connor (see also Traces 12:7).  Screenwriter Michael Fitzgerald accepted an invitation to give a presentation on O'Connor.  Fitzgerald, the son of O'Connor's close friends Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, persuaded director John Huston to produce the 1979 film Wise Blood, based on O'Connor's novel.  He wrote the screenplay together with his brother and raised the funding for the low-budget production. 

Fitzgerald is presenting on O'Connor's courage in living with lupus, the inherited illness which crippled her and took her life at age 39.  In an interview with Martino Cervo, he described her ironic outlook with the story that when she was six years old she taught a chicken to walk backwards.  Referring to the film, he said, "I was there with the chicken. I was just there to help, but it was the highlight of my life.  Everything that has happened since then has been an anti-climax."  He said:
The illness was the central event of her life.  At twenty years old, right after returning home after a stay with us, she had her first attack.  After that, it always accompanied her.  But the limitation on her talent was a springboard for her freedom.  There is one episode that explains better than anything else what I mean.  In the last moments of her life, at 39 years old, she sent a letter to my parents describing the food at the hospital:  she wrote of a terrible "stew that smelled like Kleenex".  She was dying...
 She would have deflected or laughed at the idea of being considered a great writer, which in fact happened.  She would have been horrified at the idea of promoting a particular artistic conception.  She was a great Catholic writer, her Catholicism and her sense of the absolute were completely at the center of everything she wrote.  And this is exactly what shocked the literary world, without them knowing it.  For example, there is no doubt about her influence on a giant like Cormac McCarthy.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

NYC Mosque: Exercise rights or do the right thing?

There is little question in my (albeit inexperienced) mind about whether or not the Muslims seeking to build a mosque, cultural center, or whatever you want to call it, have a right to do so. Bill McGurn asks if it is the right thing to do and refers to how John Paul II counseled a group of carmelites facing a similar dilema in Poland.

The full article on WSJ is HERE.

"So what did Pope John Paul II do? He waited, and he counseled. And when he saw that the nuns were not budging—and that their presence was doing more harm than good—he asked the Carmelites to move. He acknowledged that his letter would probably be a trial to each of the sisters, but asked them to accept it while continuing to pursue their mission in that same city at another convent that had been built for them... By asking the nuns to withdraw, he didn't concede them either. What he did was recognize that having the right to do something doesn't mean it's the right thing to do."

A real question for those wanting to build: As a matter of prudence, is moving forward with your plans best? Of course, it is hard to look in the face of what may be unjust objections and appear to concede. But those unjust objections, being a reality, may make the mosque a bad idea and unnecessarily fuel the anger being directed toward Islam in general. Reality does not always direct us to do what we can do just because we can do it, other factors are at play.

As for me, I don't have a concrete view one way or the other.

The Dimensions of the Human Heart

The 31st session of the Meeting for Friendship Amongst Peoples in Rimini, which drew 800,000 visitors last year, begins on Sunday.  The subject is the human heart.  In an introduction to the topic the challenge is set forth, to break out of the prescribed mold.
We are immersed in a culture that tends to erase “man’s humanity,” the “want and emptiness … the chief sign of the grandeur and nobility of human nature” expressed by Leopardi in his Thoughts, and risk affirming a purely materialistic conception of life. The provocation in this year’s title, instead, affirms the opposite. The human being’s nature is first of all the heart, which expresses itself as desire for great things. The driving force of all human action is this aspiration to something great, the need for something infinite. The human being is relationship with the infinite. This striving is the unmistakeable feature of the human, the spark of every action, from work to family, from scientific research to politics, from art to provision for daily needs.
Journalist John Waters has a wry piece in Traces (12:7) exploring the problem of the heart in anticipation of the Meeting.  We think of the heart as the nemesis of the thinking person, or a "scapegoat", as it gets carried away and messes up the plan.  In fact:  "The mind has effected a coup in which the heart is retained for operational and symbolic purposes, but stripped of all authority concerning decision-making."  There is no way out without acknowledging that the autonomous model does not account for that "something [that] remains unexplained".  There is this "irrationality.  The heart, the font of the desire that follows me from the beyond whence I came, speaks to me every moment of what this `I' really seeks, really wants, really is."

Monday, August 16, 2010

Rimini Meeting August 22-28

Rimini Meeting 2010

"That nature which pushes us to desire great things is the heart."


The Meeting Program 2010

The Program 2010 has just come out: you can find all the Meetings, Focus, Texts & Contexts, Shows and Sport.

From 22nd to the 28th August 2010 - in Rimini Fiera

Click here to read the program
 

Culture

(@_parham) La culture ne s'hérite pas, elle se conquiert.  Culture is not inherited, it is conquered.  --André Malraux


Sunday, August 15, 2010

When surrounded by beauty, something happens.

Earlier this month, I visited my home-state of Colorado and was given the chance to hike a fourteener (a mountain at or above 14,000 ft). It was barely unsuccessful because a closed road added 3 miles to the beginning of the journey, which was more than enough to keep us from summiting until after lightning started to roll in. We then camped near the Great Sand Dunes National Park and spent the next morning marveling, climbing, and (admittedly) playing in the hot sand surprisingly found in the middle of the Rockies.

At times, my friends and I could not help but to announce our amazement at the sights in front of us. How could such delicate plants and animals be placed with and survive within such unforgiving conditions as the tundra and the Dunes? What could possibly conceive of such original beauty as that had by a mountain? How is it that we have the opportunity to see some of these sights that very few people ever have or ever will? The circumstances left us in the position of being unreasonable were we not to recognize and acknowledge Someone behind this. Someone all loving and all creative. This acknowledgement was evident among us even if it was not always explicit... What a true leap of faith it would require to look at all we saw and affirm nothing!

Interesting fact: The Great Sand Dunes in Colorado are home to at least six species of insects found no where else on Earth. (I found this interesting enough to share, I hope it was interesting enough to read!)

Here are a few pictures taken by Paul:





Friday, August 13, 2010

Too Orthodox for a Catholic College?



Seton Hall University has been searching for a new president. Shortly after the list of two candidates was narrowed to one (viz. Msgr StuartSwetland), members of the faculty protested Msgr Swetland's candidacy, citing his orthodox Catholic beliefs. The faculty senate passed a resolution declaring the search for a president unfinished and asking for an openness to a non-Catholic priest candidate.

From The Catholic World Report:
When Msgr. Swetland withdrew his candidacy, Thomas White, the Seton Hall spokesman, told the Star-Ledger, “This is probably best for both parties…it’s important we get it right…Msgr. Swetland is tremendously talented and will go on to great things, I am sure.” Unfortunately, the Star-Ledger also reported that (unnamed) Seton Hall “officials” said that Swetland was “seeking a long list of perks, including a three-year severance package.” In an interview with a Star-Ledger reporter, Msgr. Swetland denied making any of those demands and said he was disappointed that details of the talks had been openly discussed. This sort of backlash is common when well-qualified orthodox Catholics apply for faculty and leadership positions on Catholic campuses. The reasons for not hiring them are never attributed to their faithfulness or to their orthodox beliefs. Rather, they are portrayed as unable to collaborate, too rigid or intolerant, inexperienced, or as in this case, wanting “too much money.” FULL ARTICLE

Obviously, the timing and circumstances only lead to speculation that Msgr Swetland's orthodoxy was behind the way things played out... Either way, elevating those with non-Catholic sentiments/beliefs/missions to administrative po
sitions in Catholic academic settings is one thing (as Marquette almost did), but making orthodoxy handicap is another. The latter almost seems more egregious because it reveals an outright disdain for Christ as the Church proposes Him rather than a possibly innocent intellectual curiosity in other traditions.

For Marquette to give a position to Jodi O'Brien would have been irresponsible. For Seton Hall to reject Msgr Swetland for his orthodoxy (I recognize that this is not exactly what happened) would have been far more forgetful of Christ.

Msgr Swetland speaking at Benedictine College's (my alma mater) 2010 Commencement Exercises

Thursday, August 12, 2010

The Ideal of Marriage

Every society has its ideals and ideologies, about marriage as much as about any other institution. And the fact that wedlock was once somewhat more about property and somewhat less about love than it is today doesn’t mean that our ancestors didn’t have their own theories of marriage, and their own arguments about what the institution meant and ought to mean.

Read the Greeks and Romans; read the New Testament; read Shakespeare and The Book of Common Prayer. There was never a time when human beings weren’t building ideologies of marriage, and there was never a culture where those ideologies didn’t have an impact on how people wed and parented and loved.

This means that if the ideology that justifies defining marriage as lifelong heterosexual monogamy gets swept into history’s dustbin, we won’t suddenly be flung into a landscape where the only real things are people and the people they love. We’ll just get a different ideology of marriage in its place, one that makes a different set of assumptions and generalizations and invests the institution with a different kind of purpose.
Ross Douthat punctures the ideal in the new ideology with "We're All Marriage Ideologues".   A sense of failure seems to have swept over many of those who hold a Christian view of marriage since this Proposition 8 hearing, though this ideal has been betrayed not only in the last forty years, but continuously in the history of our race.  Whatever the legal outcome, the vision we have and the faith we keep is the necessary witness to the origin of this union as recorded in Genesis (and immediately broken):  equal and complementary, fruitful and self-giving, and dependent on God's mercy.  Even those who have endured the awful rupture of divorce or raised children separate from biological parents or struggled with same-sex attraction can offer a testimony to the ideal, a sign that refers to the final and complete faithfulness that only Christ can offer to each one.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

A Euthanasia Fight in Canada

Friends of ours have involved themselves in a fight to protect the vulnerable in Canada with a manifesto issued from McGill University.
“It is critical for our society to conclude this debate with an unequivocal renunciation of euthanasia,” said Dr. Gerald Batist, chair of the department of oncology in McGill’s faculty of medicine. “As a cancer doctor who works with chronically ill and terminal patients frequently, my goal is to find the best way to help them live their lives. The solution is enhancing resources, not giving up on people,” he added.
Also, Dr. Marc Beauchamp publicly denounced the lie that was being circulated in Quebec that 75% of physicians supported assisted suicide, when in fact only 23% had returned the survey.

I am impressed by this effort among friends as a beautiful example of the "charity in truth" that the Pope keeps insisting on, which seeks the good of the person in view of the truth of their destiny.
Charity in truth, to which Jesus Christ bore witness by his earthly life and especially by his death and resurrection, is the principal driving force behind the authentic development of every person and of all humanity. Love — caritas — is an extraordinary force which leads people to opt for courageous and generous engagement in the field of justice and peace.


Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Benedict XVI on Julian the Apostate

"24. A mention of the emperor Julian the Apostate († 363) can also show how essential the early Church considered the organized practice of charity. As a child of six years, Julian witnessed the assassination of his father, brother and other family members by the guards of the imperial palace; rightly or wrongly, he blamed this brutal act on the Emperor Constantius, who passed himself off as an outstanding Christian. The Christian faith was thus definitively discredited in his eyes. Upon becoming emperor, Julian decided to restore paganism, the ancient Roman religion, while reforming it in the hope of making it the driving force behind the empire. In this project he was amply inspired by Christianity. He established a hierarchy of metropolitans and priests who were to foster love of God and neighbour. In one of his letters,[16] he wrote that the sole aspect of Christianity which had impressed him was the Church's charitable activity. He thus considered it essential for his new pagan religion that, alongside the system of the Church's charity, an equivalent activity of its own be established. According to him, this was the reason for the popularity of the 'Galileans'. They needed now to be imitated and outdone. In this way, then, the Emperor confirmed that charity was a decisive feature of the Christian community, the Church."

Monday, August 9, 2010

Apostate Christianity or Renewal of Culture?

In a provocative post at On the Square, Orthodox theologian David Bentley Hart makes an analogy between Christian activists and Julian the Apostate. Hart's post recalls Charles Péguy's lament: "For the first time after Jesus, we have seen, beneath our eyes… a new world arise… a society taking shape… after Jesus, without Jesus. And what is most terrible, my friend, it cannot be denied, is that they have succeeded… You are the first of the moderns" (Véronique qtd in Traces). 


Hart tells us that Julian's "hatred of Christianity rose out of an always deeper reserve of genuine, guileless affection for the beauty and nobility of the pre-Christian order, and a profound faith in its invincible vitality." But in fact, Julian had the idea that the pagan tradition would offer a motive for charitable works comparable to those of Christianity, even though this paganism had never born such fruits before. Christianity had already changed what Julian knew of his paganism. At any rate, Hart is right about one thing, Julian's attempt to reproduce Christian virtue without Christ has much in common with contemporary attempts to preserve all kinds of customs, morals, and institutions apart from the encounter with Christ which caused them to sprout in the first place.

What's at issue is the nature of culture. Is culture a template, a schema, "a blank form to be filled in" or is it that which begins with "something that has happened to us and that we can’t tear our eyes away from, a singular living reality" (to bring back the quote Sharon posted on August 3: "The Beginning of Culture")? Does Christ bring with Himself a renewed affection for human life? The test of life would then be this: "everything can be encountered and compared taking as a criterion the clarity about man brought by the Christian revelation, and using this criterion, we can retain and give value to what is true and good in everything (Communion and Liberation: A Movement in the Church, p 80). At root, culture begins in a realization that God who has drawn near to us in Christ has not abandoned us.

St. Edith Stein and her Companions

Father Hamans, has undertaken the onerous task of compiling biographies, often accompanied by photographs, of many of the religious and laity who were rounded up from their various convents and monasteries and homes on the same day as Saint Edith Stein, August 2, 1942; most of them were taken to the Amersfoort concentration camp and from there put on trains to Auschwitz, where the majority, soon after their arrival at the camp, were gassed and buried in a common grave between August 9 and September 30, 1942. They were all Catholic Jews, and their arrest was in retaliation for the letter of the Catholic bishops of the Netherlands that was read from the pulpits of all churches on July 26, 1942.  (Foreword by Dr. Ralph McInerny to Auschwitz and Catholic Jews)
Today is the feast of St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith Stein), Virgin, Martyr.  She was a German philosopher-convert who entered the Cologne Carmel at the time of Nazi persecutions.  After her profession, she moved to the Carmel of Echt in Holland in 1938 because of the danger to her community of her presence.  Documents produced for Edith Stein's canonization describe the circumstances of the Jewish Holocaust in Holland.

In 1942, the Nazis invaded neutral Holland and began to round up the Jews for deportation.  While the Dutch government hesitated to confront the Nazis, the Christian churches formulated a strong response which included a day of prayer and a statement from the pulpit.  The Nazis offered ostensibly to protect those Jews who belonged to the various congregations, if the churches did not go ahead with their protest.  The Catholic bishops proceeded with reading their declaration on July 26, 1942, which included Jesus' prophecy about the fate of Jerusalem which was understood to refer to the Nazi regime:  "Truly, the days will come upon you, when your enemy will set up ramparts around you and surround you, and hem you in on all sides. They will crush you to the ground, you and your children and will not leave within you one stone upon another; because you have not recognized the time of your visitation from God."

The response from the Reich Commissar Arthur Seyss-Inquart was unequivocal:  "Since the Catholic bishops interfered in this matter which was not their concern, the entire population of Catholic Jews are to be deported this week. No interventions are to be considered. Commissar General Schmidt will deliver the official reply to the bishops during a party function on Sunday, August 2, 1942."  In all, 4,000 Christian Jews were deported to Auschwitz, 200 of them Catholic, including St. Edith Stein and her sister Rosa
Learn from St. Thérèse to depend on God alone and serve Him with a wholly pure and detached heart. Then, like her, you will be able to say ‘I do not regret that I have given myself up to Love’.  (St. Edith Stein)



Sunday, August 8, 2010

Humanity and the Church

http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/vatican-paper-raphael-masterpiece-is-meant-for-the-liturgy-not-the-museum/

".- The place of Raphael's “Transfiguration” in an art museum and not in a place of worship means the “most beautiful painting in the world” has lost most of its ability to speak, an article in L'Osservatore Romano has claimed. The Vatican newspaper says that the venue rendered the artwork into little more than an object.


Raphael's final work, the "Transfiguration" was painted on a wooden surface over a period of four years up until his death in 1620. Centuries ago it hung in a church. Since then, it has been on display in the Vatican Museums' Pinacoteca, or picture gallery, for the last 200 years."

Sharon recently tweeted this intriguing report. Here, you have a painting whose original purpose for for the liturgy but which the Church has moved to a museum. It reminds me of T.S. Eliot's question, "Has the Church failed mankind, or has mankind failed the Church?" Fr. Giussani reminds us that both share the blame. As a result, I attend Mass in a yellow brick building with abstract unearnest stained glass and the usual paintings and statues: Our Lady of Guadalupe, Our Mother of Perpetual Help, Divine Mercy (above the confessionals), full relief stations of the cross, Peter & Paul, the Holy Family, the Crucifix. The art is nominal: it's there, it has a place, and yet there's barely room for a human breath, a human question.

A few years back, after a friend asked me about Kansas City's Caravaggio, I visited St. John the Baptist in the Wilderness. A sketch by the nameplate on the wall showed what the paining would have looked like in the context of a chapel. I had some time, so I stayed a while and contemplated St. John and his profound solitude. I wondered what point in John's mission Caravaggio was illustrating: either the moment of beginning to wait for the Messiah in the desert, or that moment after Peter and Andrew left him to follow Jesus. Since I was in front of the painting for a while, a woman asked me what I saw in the painting, and I said it was John's solitude: the weariness, grime, and aloneness after having sent his disciples to follow Jesus instead. So, this woman said to me that it was the story that attracted me. If I go back and somebody asks me this question again, I'll say that it's the same reason I look at a photo of my grandfather: because I miss him and want to be close to him.

So, this split between mankind and the Church persists. But it's not complete. One can still sit in front of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and feel the human question. The parish where I was married has an icon of Jesus's baptism, handpainted stations of the cross, and a painted crucifix from Italy (this replaced a dingy bronze risen Christ). And one can still contemplate a painting or statue in a museum: Caravaggio, Rothko...

Can Man Create Himself?

From an interview in Traces with philosopher Pietro Barcellona, "Can Man Create Himself?"
Man’s freedom requires the mystery, it requires indetermination. Freedom is associated with pain, with loss; this is why men are afraid of freedom. It intimidates the one who commands and the one who is commanded. Ours is a world that wants to be commanded; the majority of men are undergoing an assault that produces a herd mentality, where what dominates is the consumerism that controls desire and exhausts everything in the instant.
He goes on to argue the absurdity of imagining our life as it is without a Creator.  Can we picture a van Gogh painting as random?  And that while intelligence is an attribute of the species for survival, love is something other.

Friday, August 6, 2010

The Best Thing About Being a Bishop ... Archbishop Roberto Gonzalez, OFM

In an interview with Michael Sean Winters at NCR, Archbishop Gonzalez of San Juan, Puerto Rico, shares what is the best thing for him about being a bishop:  the "new evangelization".  It can't be easy to be a bishop, especially this year, so this bishop's affirmation is a real sign that all is well. 

I am noticing a new enthusiasm in the Church for what are often small communities of people sharing an intense Christian life.  In my parish, our pastor recently went out of his way to meet with and invite our little CL group to start having School of Community at the parish again and to welcome the parishioners to join us.  Instead of being just accommodated, there seems to be a new push to seek out the life of the Church and bring it forward where it can be seen.  The archbishop's emphasis below on the word "organism" as life, as opposed to a program, underlines this phenomenon.  This excitement is something that pushes me to want to live the charism more fully, because someone else sees something new that I don't want to take for granted.
The best thing about being a bishop in 2010 is to see the call for a “new evangelization” begin to come to fruition....

One of the areas where we see this new evangelization at work is in the new ecclesial movements such as Communion & Liberation, the Neo-Catechumenal Way, and Focolare. These groups are finding new ways to invite believers to deepen their relationship with the Lord, new ways to express their experience of faith, new ways to proclaim the Gospel to our modern culture which often seems awash in a sea of relativism and despair.

In announcing the new pontifical Council for the New Evangelization in June, Pope Benedict XVI used an interesting word. He said, “I have decided to create a new organism, in the form of a pontifical council, with the principal task of promoting a renewed evangelization in the countries where the first proclamation of faith has already resounded and where there are churches of ancient foundation present, but which are living through a progressive secularization of society and a kind of ‘eclipse of the sense of God,’” The word “organism” indicates to me that the bishops of our day, with their clergy and lay faithful, must see this new evangelization not in programmatic or bureaucratic terms, but as a way of life, rooted in the event of Jesus Christ, growing in new and creative ways. It is exciting to be a bishop at a time when our apostolic calling to spread the Good News once again is the focus of new and exciting ways, spreading the Gospel to a culture that is as hungry for God as was the Mediterranean culture to which Sts. Peter and Paul preached.

Q & A: Archbishop Roberto Gonzalez, OFM

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

A Problem of Attention

If we are attentive to how the things we learn happen, life is easy. What Giussani says is always striking to me: “The problem of life is not a problem of intelligence; it is a problem of attention.” Attention is openness to reality that is so complete that it becomes true intelligence: the capacity to become aware of reality according to all its factors, excluding nothing, always discovering new things and still more things happening. And so you see that we can be ransomed from our form, thrown wide open to totality. And if we grasp this, then the activity of the cultural center forms a part of the great educational purpose which is the reality of the movement, because we collaborate with this openness to totality. We have nothing else more interesting, more important to do.
Fr. Juliàn Carrón


This Week at Il Sussidiario - English Spoken Here

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

The Beginning of Culture

Culture is not a blank form to be filled in, when its beginning is something that has happened to us and that we can’t tear our eyes away from, a singular living reality.
Luigi Giussani

Monday, August 2, 2010

Education without Teachers

I can tell you one simple truth from my experience out there: The values of the executives who steered that ship of disaster look very similar to the values of those among us who think that the way to sustain the great tradition of public higher education is to trim expenses by outsourcing the teaching—the core of the undergraduate experience—to grad students and adjuncts. (An Academic Rip Van Winkle - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education)
After documenting the misery of work as an adjunct without prospects of a steady, affordable living, David Hiscoe asks what's in it for the students. Not much.  Just more debt as the institution builds itself while losing its focus.  Adjunct teachers aren't always there, not continuously from semester to semester, and not between classes as they hold down other jobs or travel between campuses.  Often, an adjunct doesn't even have a desk of their own.  Education with only ad hoc teaching isn't sustainable.