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The Dark Night of the Civilization
Insidecatholic.com ^ | 3/05/09 | John Zmirak

Posted on 03/05/2009 7:47:07 AM PST by GonzoII

The Dark Night of the Civilization

by John Zmirak   
3/05/09

 
I've lived through a lot of Lents, but none has felt quite like this one. Most years, we try as well or badly as we can to follow Christ a few steps into the desert -- dipping our toes in the sand of some manageable sacrifice, penance, or works of charity. We give up some of the things that God made, and which are good, for the sake of something better -- closeness to Him.
 
And it works for us, or it doesn't. Either way, at Easter time, we follow the kindly counsel of St. John Chrysostom, which is read every year at the Russian Catholic parish I attended back in New York:
 
Let us all enter into the joy of the Lord!
First and last alike receive your reward;
rich and poor, rejoice together!
Sober and slothful, celebrate the day!

You that have kept the fast, and you that have not,
rejoice today for the Table is richly laden!
Feast royally on it, the calf is a fatted one.
Let no one go away hungry. Partake, all, of the cup of faith.
Enjoy all the riches of His goodness!
 
But this year we don't have very much choice in the matter of fasting. Economics, politics, culture . . . Lent rains down on us now like bitter manna from heaven. Or else, if you like, it seems that the hedge that God had built around us has been uprooted, and we are now put to the test. Will we, stripped of every consolation and earthly hope, emerge purified and stronger? Or will we curse God and die? I really can't say.
 
This drama played out in a conversation between two Catholics I know, which I'll try to reproduce here. (The names have been changed to protect the immanent.)
 
Franz: I'm done. Finito, like Mussolini. I really just can't afford to worry about what happens in politics anymore. Our situation is, humanly speaking, hopeless, and I'm not going to sit around waiting for a miracle. This isn't my country anymore -- I just happen to live here under occupation.
 
Rayne: Really? I'm sure God will be very pleased to hear that He has exhausted your patience.
 
Franz: He can think as He likes. He surely will. And maybe He'll punish me for this -- I can't control that. Or anything else. I've finally gotten around to admitting that, and now I'm going to try my best to stop caring. I want to just go live in a city with pretty buildings, read Evelyn Waugh and Tolkien . . . and drown my hopes in bourbon. I'm glad I don't have any kids for the future to experiment on.
 
Rayne: Good luck. You've got activism down in the marrow of your bones.
 
Franz: It has just been burned out. I've been active in pro-life politics for . . . let me count . . . 33 years. That's as long as Jesus walked the earth. And things are worse than ever, with absolutely no prospect of anything changing. The Supreme Court will soon be stacked with enough pro-abortion judges to keep the issue away from the voters for the rest of my natural life. The president just appointed as head of Health and Human Services a so-called Catholic who has as one of her close friends perhaps the worst abortionist in the country -- some guy who has done over 70,000 of them, including ninth-month, partial-birth procedures. And Obama the Messiah plans to push the government into every corner of the medical industry, using the massive taxes he's going to impose on every citizen who pokes his head up out of middle-class misery. How long do you think Catholic hospitals will survive that kind of pressure? At best, they will close. At worst, they'll cave.
 
Rayne: So we won't have Catholic hospitals. That will be sad, but health care isn't the Church's primary calling. We're here to preach the Gospel.
 
Franz: Along the way, we also built a civilization, and it's one I'm kind of attached to. No, I'll go further -- it's what attracted some of us in the first place. Maybe I'm not typical, but what kept me interested in the Church through all the kumbaya/Sandinista nonsense that was Catholic school in the 1970s was the gorgeous evidence of Christian culture: Gregorian chant, chivalry, Gothic cathedrals, Flemish Madonnas, illuminated manuscripts, the solemn Latin liturgy, Mozart's Masses, Raphael's frescos, Zurbaran's crucifixions . . .
 
Rayne: So you're in it for the art?
 
Franz: And what the art represents: a civilization where individuals matter, where they can better their lives and look out for their families, where the State doesn't take all their wealth, or micromanage their lives, where they have the right to stand up to unlawful authority and say, "Hell no." The cussed stubbornness of English yeomen and Swiss villagers when faced with tyranny -- which we carried over here in America, in our Yankee Protestant style. We Catholics put our own stamp on that when our bishops told us that Prohibition was an unjust law, and we didn't have to obey it. That was the proudest moment in American Catholic history.
 
Rayne: Ha. Let me go get a drink.
 
Franz: Enjoy. I gave it up for Lent.
 
Rayne: Psych!
 
Franz: Why don't you go comfort Job?
 
Rayne: Touché.
 
Franz: I'll admit, my path into the Church isn't everyone's.
 
Rayne: Didn't you once say that you'd choked down the Beatitudes for the sake of the Crusades?
 
Franz: I will neither confirm nor deny that statement. But yes. If Christianity really did boil down to what the Quakers say, I would persecute it myself.
 
Rayne: You'd feed such people to the lions?
 
Franz: No. They might make the poor lions sick. The thing that the liberals and biblical critics are always sniping at, the "Constantinian Church" -- that's the only Church I know or want to know.
 
Rayne: Perhaps its day has passed.
 
Franz: Yeah, maybe we'll end up squatting in catacombs, scrawling lambs on the walls of subway tunnels.
 
Rayne: Those "churches" will still be more reverent than the quarter-billion dollar cathedrals they build nowadays . . .
 
Franz: Which are meant to look like . . . catacombs. How fitting -- since buildings like that are really a kind of auto-persecution, of the Church by churchmen.
 
Rayne: Amen, brother.
 
Franz: Don't worry -- they'll soon be mosques. The problem is, the same thing is probably true of Chartres, Westminster Cathedral, the Escorial . . . Our mother continent is being swamped by an enemy civilization, and it's going down without a fight. Really, the only "hope" for Europe is that its Muslims get infected by European values and stop having children. In a war between Islam and the Culture of Death . . . it's almost hard to know who to root for.
 
Rayne: At least that's not happening in America.
                                       
Franz: No, you're right. Here we aren't importing jihad, thank God. What we are doing is throwing away a flawed but functional culture in favor of some polyglot multicultural nightmare that will end up like Lebanon. We're too lazy to mow our own lawns, too cheap to pay Americans decent wages to do it, so we're importing the population of chaotic, impoverished countries -- who will bring with them the same civic values that currently have drug gangs controlling the northern quarter of Mexico. Hardworking as the first generation of immigrants are, their kids too often grow up and assimilate to gang culture and the welfare state. They keep the benches warm in church for one generation -- so our bishops want to keep the border open. Meanwhile, the former "majority" in the country is going to end up like the white farmers in Zimbabwe.
 
Rayne: So where does that leave you?
 
Franz: Pretty close to the mouth of a .45, frankly.
 
Rayne: Thank God for the doctrine of hell!
 
Franz: It has saved better men than me.
                                                          
Rayne: Aren't you overlooking something?
 
Franz: Oh yeah -- our imperial, delusionary foreign policy that's going to push us into war with Iran, or Russia, or China . . . whomever the neocons pick by throwing darts at their Risk board pinned to the wall.
 
Rayne: Shut up!
 
Franz: Okay, what?
 
Rayne: That auto-persecution. It's ending, isn't it? Would you ever, in 1980, have imagined that after -- just by the way -- Communism imploded, that the Latin Mass would be liberated, that orthodox religious orders would be the only ones that were growing, while the liberal groups were busy trying to hire people to wipe the corners of their mouths while they faded out of existence?
 
Franz: No, I wouldn't.
 
Rayne: Well, culture comes from "cult," doesn't it?
 
Franz: Er, yes.
 
Rayne: Worship first, action later. St. Benedict before St. Joan of Arc.
 
Franz: Okay . . .
 
Rayne: Then maybe God's sowing the seeds of hope everywhere. And that smell you keep complaining about? Well, think of it as fertilizer.
 

John Zmirak is the author, most recently, of the graphic novel
The Grand Inquisitor and is Writer-in-Residence at Thomas More College in New Hampshire. He writes weekly for InsideCatholic.com.

Readers have left 3 comments.
   Quote(1) Lenten Paths
March 05th, 2009 | 2:13am
Well, for a guy who regularly "snarks" on pious people ... particuarly women, this column signs hope. Maybe those smell-fertile, holy women - having their kids, tending their marriages, praying instead of snarking - suggest a path through Lent you could recommend to the immanencies of Rayne and Franz, if they might consider what a faithful woman has to model.
 Written by Marjorie Campbell
   Quote(2) And about those hospitals
March 05th, 2009 | 5:20am
the regnant battle cry for many Catholics is that it IS all about preaching the Gospel - the spiritual and corporal works of mercy are irrelevant and that includes hospitals and other traditional forms of Catholic evangelization to the larger community. The civilization and culture built and sustained by the Church has also been cast aside because it's all about preaching the Gospel and culture doesn't matter.

So here we are. No culture, no civilization (other than a thin, generic sort of Christianity that isn't worthy of the name) and a bunch of people who are out proclaiming the Gospel, but making no impact.
 Written by Clara
   Quote(3) Voices.
March 05th, 2009 | 9:31am
Well. Now I am worried.Have the voices in my head become audible or has Mr. Zmirak developed mind reading skills in his spare time? A good read and something to ponder this Lent.
 Written by Pamelanak

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TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: lent
 Who is like unto God?
1 posted on 03/05/2009 7:47:07 AM PST by GonzoII
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To: GonzoII
A Catholic Lawyer explained to me one time that there ARE Chritians in the Catholic church. LOL. I have to admit I liked this but I am pretty far from Catholic. Gotta say I particularly like that about the Prohibition deal. I never heard that before, the church actually told folks that they didn't have to obey the unjust law. ALmost enough to make me go Catholic. LOL.

Μολὼν λάβε

2 posted on 03/05/2009 8:53:32 AM PST by wastoute (translation of tag "Come and get them (bastards)" and the Scout Motto)
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To: GonzoII

"And Obama the Messiah plans to push the government into every corner of the medical industry, using the massive taxes he's going to impose on every citizen who pokes his head up out of middle-class misery."

As with the people who lived through the Russian and French Revolutions or the penal times of the Reformation, it becomes necessary to rediscover the life of the spirit. Through prayer and fasting or works of mercy.

"In Dostoevsky's view, as Berdiaev recreated it in "Spirits of the Russian Revolution," socialism appealed to the Russian intelligentsia not by virtue of its class-based ideology, but as a secular religion, a new faith that promised the kingdom of God on earth." - Jane Burbank, Intelligentsia and Revolution: Russian Views of Bolshevism, 1917-1922.

A gnostic secular religion has to be checked by real religion and real morality. Labors of the spirit. Whether its the Bolsheviks in 1917 or the secular humanist Illuminati using a puppet today, statism has to be opposed by real Christianity. Today's generation has to find spiritual strength in Christianity. Prayer, fasting, works of mercy, spiritual reading, family, work, Mass. It may look hopeless but that's a temptation. Ash Wednesday really means something this year as a call to conversion, faith, and the Holy Spirit. It was never supposed to be easy. Prayer, chapel, Mass all become more urgent and important.

A false messiah reminds people of their need for the real messiah and where to find Him.

A teaching moment.

3 posted on 03/05/2009 8:58:05 AM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
"A false messiah reminds people of their need for the real messiah and where to find Him."

We're on this earth for ONE reason:

"to know, love and serve HIM on this earth and to be happy with him forever in heaven.”

4 posted on 03/05/2009 9:20:39 AM PST by GonzoII ("That they may be one...Father")
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To: GonzoII; narses; NYer; redgolum

And to love your neighbor thereby spreading the image of God.
Civilization begins with love. The "dark night" leads back to that love.

The recent apparent triumphs of the pro-abortion movement just make it all the more necessary to share that love with children and teach them the true faith.

5 posted on 03/05/2009 9:44:36 AM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: GonzoII

I read this over coffee this morning and wondered if I had recently spoken to Zmarik and wondered why he was calling me Franz....


6 posted on 03/05/2009 9:56:01 AM PST by Alexius (An absolutely new idea is one of the rarest things known to man. - St. Thomas More)
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity; GonzoII; narses; NYer; Kolokotronis
And to love your neighbor thereby spreading the image of God. Civilization begins with love. The "dark night" leads back to that love. The recent apparent triumphs of the pro-abortion movement just make it all the more necessary to share that love with children and teach them the true faith.

Indeed. The birth of my first child a few weeks ago has really made that plain to me. When we were engaged, we knew that we wanted to do the nursery in Noah's Ark. After four long years of trying, we finally were able to have a baby girl, who we named Faith.

Looking at the little painted icon we got from a Greek Orthodox church that shows Noah and his family sacrificing to God after leaving the ark last night, I was reminded of something. Way back in Confirmation classes, Pastor talked of the family, and the Church, as a type of Ark. Outside all may be perishing, but with Christ we can be preserved through the deluge.

We are entering into (or rather continuing) a dark night of the Western civilization. Churches in Europe stand empty or are turned into Mosques, and here in the New World they are often more like a theater than worship. The light of the Cross in the West is tarnished and fading, but it will remain.

And even if we follow down the same path our brothers in the East had to tread for these last thousand years, the Cross will remain. Perhaps the new center of Christianity will be in South America, or Africa, or Asia. Here in my community we have a group of Korean missionaries, working among the unchurched descendants of those who sent missionaries to them.

The West may be falling, and to be honest that might not be a bad thing. We have squandered the gifts that God has given us, and brought back the horrors of child sacrifice. Not to a brazen idol this time, but in the name of convenience and "choice". We have spent our heritage for cheap baubles made by slave labor. We have looked at our full barns and said "I need not work! Let me eat, drink and be merry!" But even if we do fall, the Cross and Church will remain. I don't really want to go through a time of troubles, but through such times many lost sheep are found again. And even if they are not, in the end it isn't the West that is important, but Christ.

7 posted on 03/05/2009 5:53:21 PM PST by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: redgolum

True.

It's a good time to reflect on the spiritual foundations of Western civilization.
Conservatives need to reconnect with their spiritual and moral values.
The crisis is about more than just money or economics.

8 posted on 03/05/2009 6:29:22 PM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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