Posted on 11/25/2008 5:54:10 AM PST by Publius804
The Last Embers of the Fire
by Anthony Esolen
11/24/08
We Catholics are commonly urged to "engage the culture"; not to flee for monasteries of our own making, but to work within the institutions of mass media, mass education, mass marketing, and mass entertainment to advance the banners of Christ, our King.
I do not wish to criticize those who toil at that thankless task. Nor will I suggest that their work will be futile; no true service of the Lord can be without fruit. But I do believe we have mistaken the signs of the times. We seek to engage a culture, when there is no culture to engage. Our task is rather to revive the memory of what a culture is.
If that declaration seems provocative, I ask you to consider that word "culture," and to cease using it to denote the habits and fads of the masses. For the "masses" do not produce culture. The people do, when they cherish and preserve and pass along to their descendants what is most dear to them: their memorials and feasts, their music and dances and rites of passage and of courtship; their know-how, their moral laws; most important, their worship. There is no culture without cultus. Without a common belief in God or the gods, you do not get ancient Athens and the Parthenon atop its rocky mount. You do not hear the Psalms in the synagogue. Michelangelo does not sculpt the David as a tribute to the patriots of his native Florence.
Do Americans now possess a culture?
(Excerpt) Read more at insidecatholic.com ...
Excellent read....thank you for the post
great read.
Good article, and Anthony Esolen is a very good writer. We have been receiving Touchstone for about 5-6 years and it is a very scholarly-written magazine. Coming from a baptist background, I have found a renewed sense of my belief and not only that, I have found a lot of good arguments for dealing with non-believers, evolutionists, and abortionists. They do a terrific job of setting out the tenets of the real issue, not just good sound-bites of info. We look forward to Anthony’s articles, but there are many writers just as good! I have deepened my faith, reading this magazine, and I have a very deep respect for the Catholic church and how it is facing the challenge against faith issues these days. I’d have to say that the majority of protestant churches seem to have failed and are not even aware that they are irrelevant.
Very thought provoking. Thank you from a lapsed Catholic.
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