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Young Catholics Seek to Restore Old Values on Sex (Thank you Pope John Paul!)
NY Times ^ | 4/14/05

Posted on 04/14/2005 7:32:32 AM PDT by areafiftyone

ROME, April 13 - No matter who is chosen as the next pope, John Paul II has left behind a generation of committed young Roman Catholics who are already shaping the church in a more conservative mold than did their parents. Church leaders call them Generation John Paul II.

At Catholic universities, these are the students studying the "theology of the body" - John Paul's theological justification for a conservative sexual ethic that includes opposition to contraception, abortion, premarital sex and some forms of assisted reproduction.

In seminaries, they are the young priests who wear the long black cassocks cast off by an earlier generation of Vatican II priests.

In their parishes, these are the youth group members who are reviving traditional spiritual practices like regular recitations of the rosary or "Eucharistic adorations" - praying for long stretches in front of the consecrated host.

"One of the great shocks to me was how conservative the people younger than me are, and these are Catholics from all over the world, not just the United States," said James Keating, 40, an American theologian who is spending his sabbatical in Rome running the Lay Center at Foyer Unitas Institute, a guesthouse for Catholic students.

"Their Catholicism is quite focused on John Paul II, especially his teachings on contraception and the family," said Mr. Keating, who teaches at Providence College in Rhode Island. "It's fairly significant. They are a force in the church."

John Paul II made evangelization of youth a priority of his pontificate. He appeared at World Youth Day events in cities around the world every two years, often choosing sites in countries he considered to be bastions of secularism: Denver, Paris, Rome, Toronto. These were open-air events held in stadiums or fields, and the pope used them to inspire his young flock to lead lives consistent with Catholic teaching.

Another World Youth Day is planned for Cologne, Germany, in August 2005.

One of the first tests for the next pope will be whether he can relate to these young people, a concern that is now preoccupying the cardinals who will begin meeting on Monday to select the next pope, according to interviews with church leaders.

Many of the young people who went to the World Youth Day events or flocked to Rome last week on a "pilgrimages" to John Paul's funeral readily admitted that while they adored John Paul, they did not live by what he preached. They were drawn by the pilgrimage experience, or by the pope's aura, not necessarily the message.

Indeed, not all younger Catholics have embraced John Paul's strict teaching on sexual morality; there are many who want the church to be more flexible about its ban on contraception, its hard line on divorce and its exclusion of women and married men from the priesthood.

But John Paul left behind enough of a committed core of young Catholics who are now becoming the church's Sunday school teachers, youth group leaders, theologians and priests.

Jennifer Miller, 24, from North Carolina, who is studying philosophy and the "theology of the body" at the Angelicum in Rome, said she has been delighted to discover that many younger Catholics, especially the priests, are theological and cultural conservatives like herself.

"I was recently living in Louisiana and saw it especially in the priests," she said. "They're very conservative, especially concerning the theology of the body. They're not afraid to preach it. And they have the parishes that grow."

Stephan Kampowski is a 32-year-old doctoral student from Germany at the John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and the Family at the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome. He said that what the church teaches about sexual morality, about marriage, "is not imposing on human freedom, it is not restricting us, but it is calling us to be all that we can be."

"In the past 12 years I have lived with young Catholics of my age who shared my convictions," he said. "They are there, from all kinds of different countries, so I don't feel I'm odd."


Part of the reason for the worldwide swing toward conservatism among young Catholics is that the pope encouraged the growth of conservative lay-led movements. There are thousands of such movements but among the largest are Opus Dei, the Neocatechumenal Way and Communion and Liberation, some of which also count clergy as members. They often recruit from universities, and live in communities that are devoted to service work and an active prayer life.

The Shalom Community is one example of a movement that is shaping the church in a more theologically conservative direction by reaching out to youth. It was founded in Brazil in 1982 to counter the influence of "liberation theology," a stream of Catholicism then influential in Latin America that championed the rights of workers and the poor. John Paul regarded the liberation theologians as Marxists, and their power diminished during his papacy.

"The pope gave his encouragement to us because liberation theology was not very orthodox," said Maria Emmir, one of the founders of the Shalom Community, which she said had about 50,000 members worldwide. "The lay movements are more linked to Rome than to liberation theology."

Data from the World Values Survey, gathered by researchers in 58 countries, tends to bear out impressions of a conservative trend. It shows that the "millennial generation" of young Catholics - those born in 1982 or later - has returned to the traditional religious attitudes and behavior of generations born before World War II, said Mark M. Gray, a research associate at the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University. The values survey, coordinated by the University of Michigan, has been conducted periodically since 1981 by researchers who pool their data and make it available to scholars.

Catholics in the "millennial generation" are more likely to attend Mass weekly, pray every day, feel that religion is important and have a lot of confidence in the church than Catholics in either the Vatican II generation (born 1943 to 1960) or those in the Post-Vatican II generation (1961 to 1981), he said.

Mr. Gray, however, cautioned that the trend is preliminary because only the "leading edge" of the millennial generation were old enough to be making decisions independent of their parents. In addition, the survey's sample size for young people was significantly smaller than for the older age groups.

Sister Mary Bendyna, executive director of the Georgetown center, said young Catholics seemed to be "more receptive to the church, they participate more than their Generation X brothers and sisters, and are a little less cynical about institutions in general, the church included."

They are theologically conservative, but not conservative across the board when it comes to political issues, she said.

"They are more involved in traditional conservative religious practices, but they're very receptive to social justice messages about serving the poor," she said.

Msgr. John J. Strynkowski, a former official at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and now rector of St. James Cathedral in Brooklyn, says he sees the phenomenon as "a return to traditionalism."

In the 1970's, in the wake of the Vatican II Council, he said, priests let many traditions fall by the wayside. Now, he said, the younger generation is reviving devotional practices more familiar to their grandparents than their parents.

This trend might not be limited to Catholic youth. Leaders of other faiths, including Jews and Muslims in the United States, say that in recent years they too have noticed a renewed interest in traditional religious practices among young people who are engaged in their religion, raising the possibility that the John Paul II generation of Catholics may simply be mirroring a larger generational trend.




TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: catholics; generationy; johnpaulii
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1 posted on 04/14/2005 7:32:32 AM PDT by areafiftyone
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To: areafiftyone
Indeed, not all younger Catholics have embraced John Paul's strict teaching on sexual morality; there are many who want the church to be more flexible about its ban on contraception, its hard line on divorce and its exclusion of women and married men from the priesthood.

There's a name for these people: Protestants.

2 posted on 04/14/2005 7:35:23 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler ( .:: Johannes Paulus Magnus: "Well done, good and faithful servant!" ::.)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Cheap, no they are called liberal Catholics. Just like there are conservative and liberal Protestants.


3 posted on 04/14/2005 7:37:16 AM PDT by 3dognight
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To: areafiftyone

I am glad to hear about that. Gives me hope for the future. Thanks for posting this.


4 posted on 04/14/2005 7:40:12 AM PDT by yellowdoghunter (FR is so popular that people repost our thoughts on different message boards! It is an honor!)
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To: Jeff Chandler

How about we call them "John Kerry Catholics"?


5 posted on 04/14/2005 7:41:25 AM PDT by floydibanezer
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To: 3dognight
Cheap, no they are called liberal Catholics.

There's really no such thing as a "liberal" Catholic. There are Catholics and then there are hypocrites who pose as Catholics and believe nothing the Church teaches.
6 posted on 04/14/2005 7:46:01 AM PDT by mike182d ("Let fly the white flag of war." - Zapp Brannigan)
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To: areafiftyone
The hand-wringing at the Times is almost audible.
7 posted on 04/14/2005 7:46:48 AM PDT by B Knotts (Ioannes Paulus II, Requiescat in Pacem.)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Santo Subito!


8 posted on 04/14/2005 7:54:31 AM PDT by namsman
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To: namsman

Santo Subito!


9 posted on 04/14/2005 8:06:17 AM PDT by watsonfellow
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To: areafiftyone
I am a 45 year old Catholic. I attended mostly cathholic schools through graduate school.

I have not been happy with the Catholic Church for sometime. It has gotten to the point of being a chore to attend mass regularly.

It is not because I want it more liberal. Strangely enough I think the Catholic Church has gotten too liberal. On trying to be more "with-it" the traditions of the Church have been lost.

I personally do not like manner in which the mass is celebrated now. My parish masses remind me of musical theater. Every response is a 5 minute hand clapping hands waving in the air song. I do not like the way people dress so casual in mass. Jeans, t-shirts and mini skirts are not appropriate. Parents bring their bratty kids to mass and disrupt the service. I must emphasize that I had to go to mass every day with a nun's ruler threatening at any moment so it has been ingrained in me to behave a certain way.

I find I am more upset after going to mass than satisfied.
10 posted on 04/14/2005 8:10:20 AM PDT by Republican Red (DU: ''Reality sucks. That's the problem. We want another reality.'')
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To: areafiftyone

The sooner the Baby Boomers die off, the better the world will be.


11 posted on 04/14/2005 8:14:06 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: areafiftyone
Part of the reason for the worldwide swing toward conservatism among young Catholics is that the pope encouraged the growth of conservative lay-led movements.

I recently attended a lecture by an aging nun bemoaning the failure of the contemporary Church to "implement Vatican II." She kept insisting that one of the biggest challenges remaining was the development of lay leadership in the Church. I pointed out to her that in fact some of the most vibrant movements in the presentday Church have been instituted and are being led by lay Catholics, many of them young. It's only because these movements are traditionalist (orthodox) that people like that nun pretend they are not even there.

12 posted on 04/14/2005 8:15:04 AM PDT by madprof98
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To: Republican Red

I am a 44 year old Catholic female and tend to agree with you. When I was a kid the females had to wear something on our head either a hat or a veil now it's not required. People do tend to dress like slobs in church! Things have changed too much. We don't have the clapping and waving in our church but alot of the old traditions that were around when I was a kid have gone. I had to go to religious instruction on Thursdays because I went to a public school and those nuns kept us public school kids in line. And we didn't really mind it. We had structure and discipline!


13 posted on 04/14/2005 8:17:48 AM PDT by areafiftyone (The Democrat's Mind: The Hamster's dead but the wheel's still spinning!)
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To: HamiltonJay

Ummmmm I'm a baby boomer (I was born in 1960 and am 44 years old) and I don't intend to die off quickly if I can help it. Baby boomers are NOT only liberals ya know!


14 posted on 04/14/2005 8:19:06 AM PDT by areafiftyone (The Democrat's Mind: The Hamster's dead but the wheel's still spinning!)
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To: Republican Red

Agreed on many points... I do not for the life of me understand folks attending mass in Jeans, or Stretch Pants, or sweats... Yes God loves you no matter what you wear... but you should have enough respect for your Lord and yourself to desire to look your best in his house.

What I find the most disturbing though at least in many parishes is the inability to take the Gospel and deliver a sermon on it if the topic is uncomfortable.

When the Gospel is about the many times divorced woman, the sermon is about a completely different topic.... I'm sorry, I know many Catholics have and do divorce, but that doesn't mean that the Church should read the holy word of God and then just pretend its an elephant in the corner.

The entire concept of Tithing isn't even addressed in catholicism anymore that I can tell. Congregations of Catholics attend 4 masses on Sunday totalling around 1,000 total attendees... and their weekly collections are maybe $10,000. I've attended small churches of other faiths that have one mass with maybe 100-200 people tht collect that much or more.

Finally I am amazed at how many priests are absolutely ABYSMAL public speakers.... had to go through 3 different churches before I could find one with a priest who could deliver a relevant sermon and do it well.


15 posted on 04/14/2005 8:20:50 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: HamiltonJay

I agree one hundred percent. Really, the baby boomers will go down in history as perhaps the most narcisist, greedy, self-absorbed, materialist, just plain awful generation ever.

It's always been just about "them".

When they were entering college, "EVERYBODY LOOK AT US WHILE WE BURN THESE BUILDINGS DOWN"

When they were entering sexual maturity "EVERYBODY LOOK AT US WHILE WE WHORE AROUND"

and god help us when they enter old age....they've always acted as if they were the first generation to ever do anything........

I can't wait for them all to be six feet under!


16 posted on 04/14/2005 8:21:08 AM PDT by watsonfellow
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To: areafiftyone

I know not all Baby Boomers are liberals, and I did not say they were.. however they have been pandered to as a group their entire lives... and due to this have created an anomaly in the human existance that has hurt society and will continue to until they are gone.

Parents survived the depression and WWII... then when US was only manufacturer left, these folks overendulged thier children (mostly)... and can't blame em.. but the combination of no global competition created an environment of expectation that went to the extreme.. this and the pandering of everyone who wanted their dollars etc etc etc..

Its not a liberal or conservative statement, its just a reality statement.


17 posted on 04/14/2005 8:23:36 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: areafiftyone

I am very familiar with the "Lay Centre" mentioned in the article. What Dr. Keating says is true: CAtholics in their 20's, studying theology in Rome, from all over the world, committed to the doctrinal truths of the Catholic faith. Very, very inspiring--and worthy of our financial support!!


18 posted on 04/14/2005 8:24:54 AM PDT by Remole
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To: Republican Red

Find a Catholic parish, avoid the circus parish.


19 posted on 04/14/2005 8:32:37 AM PDT by pbear8 (Please,Lord, make the new pope really, really Catholic)
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To: 3dognight
Cheap, no they are called liberal Catholics. Just like there are conservative and liberal Protestants.

I agree. Conservative Catholics need their Conservative Protestant and Conservative Jewish brothers...

20 posted on 04/14/2005 8:35:21 AM PDT by frogjerk
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