The Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church is (finally) out and available. It looks like a great resource.
Wednesday, January 4, 2006
Compendium of the Catechism
Praising God in West Virginia
In the wake of the Asian tsunami, we explored the intellectual quandary that suffering poses for those who believe in God. In the wake of the awful turn of events in West Virginia, a slightly different question arises: to what extent should Christians attribute the mining accident to God, and how should that inform our response? Here's an excerpt from the news coverage of the mining accident:
[A local resident] said the tragedy has shaken the faith of some in the community, who "don't even know if there is a Lord anymore," she said. "We had a miracle, and it was taken away from us."
John Casto was at a church where families had gathered when the false report arrived, and later when the terrible news was announced. After the first report, "they were praising God," he said. After the second, "they were cursing."
Let me make clear that I would likely have shared the reactions of the family members, praising God at the seeming miracle, cursing as it was snatched away. But nevertheless the sequence makes me wince: if God is responsible for the miners' rescue, is God not also responsible for their deaths? And if God is responsible for both, should not Christians praise God for his sovereignty regardless of the outcome? But if the miners' deaths flow from the fallen state of the world and were not specifically brought about by God's design, does God deserve praise when rescuers' heroics overcome nature's operation?
It seems that there are three potential responses in this context: praising God for his sovereignty regardless of whether the miners happen to be rescued, leaving to the realm of mystery whether God intervened in the created (and fallen) order in any particular context; attributing the fate of the miners to human and natural forces and leaving God out of the equation; or praising God when the results comport with our understanding of how God should exercise his sovereignty and cursing when the results conflict with that understanding, implicitly assuming that the preferred results are evidence of God's specific intervention.
My inclination is that the first option most clearly reflects humanity's relationship with God (though I can't claim to have successfully followed it in the midst of my own suffering), as beautifully expressed by the classic hymn:
When peace, like a river, attendeth my way,
when sorrows like sea billows roll;
whatever my lot, thou hast taught me to say,
It is well, it is well with my soul.
Note that this sentiment does not preclude us from working to alleviate suffering, but simply establishes God's sovereignty in the midst of that suffering. Other thoughts?
Rob
Tuesday, January 3, 2006
"The Abuse of Popular Credulity"
Howard Friedman reports on a bizarre case in Italy that seems to hinge on the defendant's ability to prove that Jesus Christ existed.
Rob
Evolution vs. Religion
In light of the recent intelligent-design discussions, I thought folks might enjoy an an essay on the evolution debate I recently published in the Focolare's monthly magazine, Living City - it's posted at the sidebar under my name. It concludes with an excerpt from John Paul II's 1988 letter to George Coyne, SJ, in which he challenges both religion and science to discover a unity which is not identity, and which "presupposes the diversity and the integrity of its elements."
I have an inkling that the model of dialogue that he describes might be applied to tensions beyond the faith-science debates...
Amy
The Decline (Demise?) of Christianity?
Sightings 1/2/06
Predictions and Predicaments
-- Martin E. Marty
Predicting Religion is a book comprising papers by sociologists of religion who were asked to predict "Christian, Secular and Alternative Futures." Grace Davie, Paul Heelas, and Linda Woodhead edited chapters, many of them growing out of a 2001 conference. I finally had a chance to read the book during a quiet week, late enough in the game that the outcome of some of the predictions might be testable already! The notable authors disagree with each other as to whether we will see more secular or more religious, more Christian or more other-than-Christian futures in various places.
Europeans are bemused when they confront the many evidences of "salvational" Christian vitality in the U.S. -- and U.S. citizens, upon visiting Europe, come back with reports of empty chapels and cathedrals, casual participation by the few, and indifference and even disdain for faith communities.
When I read about or visit Europe, I come back to reality with this question: Can it happen here? Christian decline in Britain was a long, slow process, followed by sudden downturns. I used to teach about Irish Catholic history and about times when the seminary at Maynooth had many hundreds of seminarians. Today almost none graduate and proceed to ordination. (Closer to home, visitors to Quebec used to find full churches and huge outdoor festivals. Now decline is precipitous.) Why the European fate? Some blame tired and corrupt establishments, clerical sexual scandals, or new prosperity and materialism in Ireland as distractions. But why does consumerism boost American religious institutions -- and more? To the point:
Steve Bruce writes on "The Demise [not decline] of Christianity in Britain." Church attendance saw decline to 8 percent by 1999; in the 1980s the Church of England lost one-fourth of its attenders. The over-65 set makes up about one-fifth of Anglican attendance figures, and other churches run toward 40 percent. Membership? About 10 percent remain "members." In 1900, half of British kids were in Sunday school; now it is less than 4 percent. And in 1900 there were 45,400 clerics but, while population has since doubled, clerical numbers have fallen over 25 percent. Beliefs? Most serious decline is in "belief in a personal God and belief in Jesus as the Son of God." Politics: very little, very residual influence. Indifference reigns.
Liberal Christians used to trade on those persons shaped by intense religion but who rejected much of it as they grew. Today there is too little intensity left for adults to use to help shape the young. Bruce predicts: 1) "The church form of religion cannot return"; 2) "The sect form ... will decline slowly"; 3) "The cultic religion of New Age Spirituality will become ever more diffuse and ever less significant"; 4) "Three decades from now, Christianity in Britain will have largely disappeared." If help is to come, it has to be of a trickle-up sort, in which vitalities of sub-Saharan, Latin American, and Asian Christianity "go north." The Christianity that "went south" prospers, and selectively influences Christianity "up north."
Were this weekly electronic op-ed based in Europe, Sightings would have to be called Squintings. Are the predictors using the wrong spectacles, or is their vision clear? Again, regarding demise: Can it happen here?
Martin E. Marty's biography, current projects, upcoming events, publications, and contact information can be found at www.illuminos.com.
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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.
Monday, January 2, 2006
Condolences to Rick
The Fiesta Bowl:
Ohio State 34, Notre Dame 20.
As we Cubs fans are used to saying: 'Wait until next year!"
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The Right, the Left, and God's Politics
[This an op-ed will be of interest to MOJ-readers.]
New York Times
January 2, 2006
Nearer, My God, to the G.O.P.
By JOSEPH LOCONTE
NANCY PELOSI, the Democratic leader in the House, sounded like an Old Testament prophet recently when she denounced the Republican budget for its "injustice and immorality" and urged her colleagues to cast their no votes "as an act of worship" during this religious season.
This, apparently, is what the Democrats had in mind when they vowed after President Bush's re-election to reclaim religious voters for their party. In the House, they set up a Democratic Faith Working Group. Senator Harry Reid, the minority leader, created a Web site called Word to the Faithful. And Democratic officials began holding conferences with religious progressives. All of this was with the intention of learning how to link faith with public policy. An event for liberal politicians and advocates at the University of California at Berkeley in July even offered a seminar titled "I Don't Believe in God, but I Know America Needs a Spiritual Left."
A look at the tactics and theology of the religious left, however, suggests that this is exactly what American politics does not need. If Democrats give religious progressives a stronger voice, they'll only replicate the misdeeds of the religious right.
For starters, we'll see more attempts to draw a direct line from the Bible to a political agenda. The Rev. Jim Wallis, a popular adviser to leading Democrats and an organizer of the Berkeley meeting, routinely engages in this kind of Bible-thumping. In his book "God's Politics," Mr. Wallis insists that his faith-based platform transcends partisan categories.
"We affirm God's vision of a good society offered to us by the prophet Isaiah," he writes. Yet Isaiah, an agent of divine judgment living in a theocratic state, conveniently affirms every spending scheme of the Democratic Party. This is no different than the fundamentalist impulse to cite the book of Leviticus to justify laws against homosexuality.
When Christians - liberal or conservative - invoke a biblical theocracy as a handy guide to contemporary politics, they threaten our democratic discourse. Numerous "policy papers" from liberal churches and activist groups employ the same approach: they're awash in scriptural references to justice, poverty and peace, stacked alongside claims about global warming, debt relief and the United Nations Security Council.
Christians are right to argue that the Bible is a priceless source of moral and spiritual insight. But they're wrong to treat it as a substitute for a coherent political philosophy.
There is another worrisome trait shared by religious liberals and many conservatives: the tendency to moralize in the most extreme terms. William Sloane Coffin of the Clergy Leadership Network was typical in his denunciation of the Bush tax cuts: "I think he should remember that it was the devil who tempted Jesus with unparalleled wealth and power."
This trend is at its worst in the misplaced outrage in the war against Islamic terrorism. It's true that in the days after the Sept. 11 attacks, some Christian conservatives shamed themselves by blaming the horror on feminists and gays, who allegedly incited God's wrath. But such nonsense is echoed by liberals like the theologian Stanley Hauerwas of Duke University.
"The price that Americans are going to have to pay for the kind of arrogance that we are operating out of right now is going to be terrible indeed," he said of the United States' response to the Qaeda attacks. "People will exact some very strong judgments against America - and I think we will well deserve it." Professor Hauerwas joins a chorus of left-wing clerics and religious scholars who compare the United States to Imperial Rome and Nazi Germany.
Democrats who want religious values to play a greater role in their party might take a cue from the human-rights agenda of religious conservatives. Evangelicals begin with the Bible's account of the God-given dignity of every person. And they've joined hands with liberal and secular groups to defend the rights of the vulnerable and oppressed, be it through prison programs for offenders and their families, laws against the trafficking of women and children, or an American-brokered peace plan for Sudan. In each case believers have applied their religious ideals with a strong dose of realism and generosity.
A completely secular public square is neither possible nor desirable; democracy needs the moral ballast of religion. But a partisan campaign to enlist the sacred is equally wrongheaded. When people of faith join political debates, they must welcome those democratic virtues that promote the common good: prudence, reason, compromise - and a realization that politics can't usher in the kingdom of heaven.
Joseph Loconte, a research fellow in religion at the Heritage Foundation and a commentator for National Public Radio, is the editor of "The End of Illusions: Religious Leaders Confront Hitler's Gathering Storm."
Discipleship and 2006
First of all, belated Christmas greetings to MOJ contributors and readers. I apologize for not responding earlier but a combination of a month-long cold (probably a result of my flu shot) and assisting in a parish during the Christmas and New Year's Day season has kept me occupied these past several weeks.
However, during this time I have enjoyed reading many of the recent contributions to this site. After much reflection on how to respond and contribute in a fruitful manner, I concluded that one thing that might bring together a number of recent themes is how each of us as a member of the Church has been called to holiness and discipleship. We have just celebrated Christmas and have been reminded that God is with us. Regardless of our individual status as lay, religious, or clerical, each of us has a role to exercise in evangelizing a world that is desperate for holiness. The past year has again demonstrated that we human beings sometimes exercise our free will in a manner that is sinful and inconsistent with the call to holiness. At the same time, knowing that we are sinners, we turn to our merciful God seeking divine forgiveness which is there for the asking if the request is sincere. This is a powerful sign of hope in the future that God promises us.
With forgiveness and getting back on the straight path to God, we are rejuvenated to do his work in this world. And, there is much to do. Many of us are teachers, and we have been given the ongoing opportunity to renew not only ourselves but those whom we meet-- often colleagues and students--who are also beneficiaries of the call to holiness. In spite of the darkness generated by human sinfulness, God has given us all the chance once again to respond to the challenge made by John the Baptist in today's Gospel from St. John.
My hope-filled prayer for each of us in this new year is that our fidelity to discipleship will help guide not only ourselves but those whom we meet throughout the coming year.
RJA sj
Saturday, December 31, 2005
Paradise Found, Limbo Lost
New York Times
January 1, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist
Paradise Found, Limbo Lost
By HAROLD BLOOM
New Haven
I feel both personal and literary regrets that, if Pope Benedict XVI gets his way, in perhaps a year or so Limbo will be in limbo (as it were). The issue spurs a reminiscence. Walking down Broadway on a chilly Upper West Side morning in 1972, I bumped into my good acquaintance, the novelist Anthony Burgess, and at his request I resigned to him the bottle of Fundador I had just purchased at a nearby liquor store. Standing in a tattered robe and blinking in the sun, after a night devoted to composition, Burgess required immediate medication.
Besides, he had introduced me to this invigorating Spanish brandy only a few weeks before, so I urged him to retain the bottle after he had absorbed two prodigious swigs outdoors. As I wended back to the liquor shop, he called out after me: "The debt shall be paid, Bloom! When you arrive in Limbo, I will await you there with a bottle of Fundador."
A lapsed Roman Catholic (like his idol, James Joyce), Burgess was being unduly optimistic about our reunion on the Other Shore, since neither of us qualified for Limbo, a state that the church, largely at the prodding of Thomas Aquinas, designated for unbaptized babies and the Hebrew patriarchs who preceded Jesus.
Dante, of course, in Canto IV of "The Inferno," went beyond Aquinas, and thronged Limbo with the philosophers and poets of the ancient world; primarily his beloved guide, Virgil, but also Homer, Horace, Ovid and others, and even literary characters like Hector and Aeneas. Rather surprisingly, Dante also admitted three Muslims: the warrior Saladin and the philosophers Avicenna and Averroes.
Limbo has a rich literary history, in honor of which I hope the pope and his International Theological Commission will refrain from exiling this amiably ambiguous realm. Hell, Purgatory and Heaven may seem rather strictly demarcated and limited destinations, without Limbo as an interesting outrider. In the Italian Renaissance poet Luduvico Ariosto's "Orlando Furioso," the knight Astolfo visits the moon's Limbo and discovers there all of earth's wastages: talents locked up in named vases, bribes hanging on gold hooks, and much besides.
In "Henry VIII," Shakespeare uses the "Limbo of the Fathers" as a synonym for prison, while John Milton in "Paradise Lost" gives us the Paradise of Fools as a "limbo large and broad," where winds blow about Roman Catholic cowls, hoods, habits, relics, beads, indulgences, pardons and Papal Bulls.
The 18th-century satirical poet Alexander Pope expands on Ariosto and Milton in "The Rape of the Lock," where the lunar Limbo contains "the smiles of harlots and the tears of heirs." Much more somber is the "Limbo" of the Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, most famous for "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" and "Kubla Khan." Coleridge's Limbo is not on the moon, nor on Hell's borders, but on the phantasmagoric line between what is and what is not, the waking nightmares of an opium addict: "The sole true Something - This! In Limbo's Den/It frightens Ghosts, as here Ghosts frighten men."
The Vatican's motives for changing its theology doubtless are benign: worried African and Asian converts whose babies die before baptism will be reassured that Paradise, not Limbo, awaits the lost infants. And in any case, non-Catholics like myself need not mix in matters relevant only to the faithful. Still, a few days ago I received an anonymous phone call from a woman who assured me that my most recent book certainly would send me to Hell. I would prefer Limbo, if only to share Fundador again with Anthony Burgess.
Harold Bloom is the author, most recently, of "Jesus and Yahweh: The Names Divine."
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Culture and Catholic Engagement with the broader community
I am reading Rocco Buttiglione's interesting and insightful book, Karol Wojtyla: The Thought of the Man Who Became Paul John Paul II. I thought I’d share one paragraph that caught my attention this morning.
“After the Communists came to power, [Cardinal} Sapieha realized immediately that culture would be the decisive battleground between them. … From the beginning, the Polish bishops decided not to petition on their own behalf against the regime which violated their ancient rights… They chose instead to take a position in support of fundamental human and national rights, renouncing any particular reclamation which would have indicated that they made a distinction, not to say a contradistinction, between human rights and religious rights, between the inspiration of the nation and that of the Church.”
It seems to me that their decision was not only a correct one for them (as history seems to have confirmed) but provides powerful insight for our own time. What do others think?
Michael S.