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"Something Good is Coming" - Catholic Church
National Review Online ^ | 23/4/2002 | Michael Novak

Posted on 04/23/2002 6:39:35 AM PDT by StAthanasiustheGreat

April 23, 2002 8:45 a.m. Something Good Is Coming The great awakening ahead.

n a fairly regular basis, the Lord makes His people suffer, His church, His Beloved. The present has been such a time, and our own sins have brought on our troubles.

The much acclaimed "Church of Vatican II," the church of "the progressives," energized since 1965 by dissent and rebellion against many traditions and teachings of the Church, and intent upon foisting on the Church a new morality of sex and marriage and birth and priesthood, has made an awful botch of things.

In 1964, I called my first book A New Generation: American and Catholic. Magazines those days were full of stories about "the New Breed" of priests and laity, and how great the "renewed" church would be. Implicitly, how much better than the old.

We certainly showed them. Never has the Catholic Church in America been so shamed, humiliated, and mortified before the whole world. The "new morality" of the New Breed has turned into a disgrace.

Much good, of course, has been done in and through the Church during the last forty years. Many things — ecumenism, for instance — have been made better. (In my opinion, the liturgy in many ways is far worse done than earlier, with far less respect, and far less sense of holiness, dignity, and awe.) Openness and dialogue are much better, even though some have taken "openness" to mean an inner hollowness, without content or character of its own.

The current scandals, alas, have made the name "Catholic" a badge of self-inflicted shame, a shame inflicted by a tiny proportion of the clergy.

If interviews in the press are correct, some of these culprits actually picture themselves as an advance party for a new and better sexual morality than that of the tradition they loathe. They are not in favor of celibacy — and certainly not of chastity, either — but of "self-exploration" and "self-acceptance of one's own body and its pleasures," of "being at home in one's own body," and other such rationalizations.

To some extent, this pattern may be explained by the tsunami of the sexual revolution of the Sixties and Seventies, that earthquake/hurricane/tidal wave which threw millions of souls into confusion about who and what to believe about authentic morality. Many good people, conservative as well as liberal, were thrown off balance in those days. A fairly large proportion of Catholics, like others, may be tempted to rationalize away their own errors of those days, by trying now to "normalize" what in other ages was taken as plainly sinful, or to use the current secular term, "deviant" behavior. Abortion, for instance, adultery, homosexual actions.

But the sexual revolution does not explain the full pride of the "reformers" of Vatican II, who when the ink was not yet dry on the decrees of that council, were already foreseeing Vatican III, and a wholly new church of their imagination.

A utopian church of the progressive dream emerged, always different from the Church dragged down by the weight of the actual Rome of Pope Paul VI (in his day as loathed by progressives as John Paul II is today). In the name of this airy and future church, all sorts of opinions and actions and policies were countenanced as "forward-looking" that in other ages would have been seen as wanderings far from authentic faith.

This was the climate within which the "deviancy" that brought on the current scandals prospered, undetected, undeterred. Note, for instance, that most of the scandals being reported in 2002 actually happened more than ten years ago, in the heyday of those thirty most-progressive years from 1965 until about 1993. About that time, reforms instituted by the bishops began to take effect. Many badly errant seminaries were cleaned out, or shut down. A number of new, more orthodox and traditional seminaries began to bear good fruit and to prosper in vocations.

The change already under way in many places is tangible.

The life of celibacy can be a very hard one, especially in times of aridity in prayer, and career frustration, and normal loneliness — and when acute temptations arise in situations almost wholly undefended by safeguards and precautions, by ascetical practices, and by a surrounding community of loving fidelity and chastity. Maintaining chastity requires abundant graces. These require silence and prayer for their reception.

A life too long lived apart from intense daily prayer, meditation on the lives of the saints, the devout praying of the daily office of the Church, and a slowly and reflectively enacted sacrifice of the Mass each day, is not a life in which the probabilities of fidelity are enhanced.

On the contrary, the probabilities of chastity decline exponentially, as neglect of the life of the spirit extends its control, like a summer drought spreading its reach across sun-baked fields. Where the love of God withers, the love of this world gains a chokehold.

There is a lesson in the present time: The prayerful, orthodox, and faithful priests and religious of this generation did not bring about the scandals that now humiliate the church.

The sins that have brought us low were abetted by a culture of rebellion, pride, and moral superiority, among those who thought themselves more intelligent, more able, more in tune with human progress, open, experimental, and brave. They despised the merely traditional, observant, and orthodox, whom they considered closed-minded, rigid, and intransigent. They turned away from the tried and true asceticism and paths of holiness of the past.

The sins that have disgraced us are the sins of those who promised "renewal" and "progress" down "new" paths.

"But we did not mean child-abuse," the progressives will say in self-defense. "We didn't mean the abuse of teenagers."

But, hey, a climate in which it was regarded as "rigid" to say that sex outside of marriage was sinful, was not a climate in which playground sand long held lines drawn in it. Young people in pre-marital coupling, older couples "experimenting" beyond the marriage bond, and same-sex coupling were in that climate not regarded as "disordered" but as "healthy experimentation."

"When is the Catholic Church ever going to get over its Victorian moral qualms, and get up to date with contemporary sex science?" was the subject of many a dinner-party interlude. Remember those days?

The "progressive" vision of the human being embodies a profound error of anthropology. It imagines human beings to be "persons," whose bodies are somehow separable from these genderless "persons," and malleable for deployment in any of a number of culturally and personally preferential ways, so long as the person of the other is "respected" and, in its fashion, "loved."

Progressivism, in short, is a form of gnosticism. Its systematic separation of body and person (soul) is a very ancient heresy. The moral dissoluteness to which it gradually leads has been witnessed in many earlier cycles of human history.

For the curing of this disease, the greatest kindness is strict adherence to a more demanding regimen: respect for a more accurate anthropology of the embodied person, the spirited body, the incarnate person, the flesh-and-blood human being fashioned by the Creator for His own inhabitation. This is the regimen of the oneness and wholeness of God's transcendent love, diffused by understanding, reflection, and loving choice through every organ, member, and fiber of human tissue. It is the regimen of that chastity of the heart which is, to paraphrase Kierkegaard, to will one love.

The current humiliation of the Catholic Church will, I feel sure, lead to the great grace of remembrance — remembrance of our true and most precious inheritance, trust in the Word of God bequeathed to us by the ancient Church, and by the Sacred Scripture to whose canonical status it attests. "He is no Catholic who is not united in sacra doctrina with the Bishop of Rome," Stanislaus Hosius says, on a tablet memorialized on the walls of S. Maria in Trastevere in Rome, the titular church of the great Cardinal Gibbons.

There is coming an awakening of a great love for orthodoxy, for fidelity, for clinging to the whole truth as it was handed down to us. There is also arising, justifiably, a certain hard-won contempt for the learned doctors whose pride led them to try to sell us a bill of goods for, lo, so many decades now. To what a miserable state have they reduced their lower regions of the church.

The good and solid things of the Tradition have proved more reliable than they. By far.

These are the notes I look to hear from Rome, more sweetly said, during the coming weeks and months — and maybe days.

— Michael Novak, the George F. Jewett scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Mr. Novak is the author, most recently, of On Two Wings: Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; church; romancatholic; scandal
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Good Read, God Bless
1 posted on 04/23/2002 6:39:35 AM PDT by StAthanasiustheGreat
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To: Catholic_list
ping
2 posted on 04/23/2002 6:48:30 AM PDT by SMEDLEYBUTLER
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To: NWU Army ROTC
You know we evangelical prots (I am a member of the clergy in said group)have been praying for years for the next great awakening. In fact we proudly trace our lineage from the awakenings under Jonathan Edwards, Whitfield and Wesley, Finney, and Moody. How cool would it be if our sovereign God decided to start the next great awakening in the Catholic church.
3 posted on 04/23/2002 6:50:58 AM PDT by sonrise57
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To: sonrise57
No mention of the fact that revival/renewal only follows after repentance? Not being a Catholic (and therefore apparently not saved or united in sacred doctrine), perhaps I don't understand how simply returning to traditional works leads to anything but external reconstruction.
4 posted on 04/23/2002 7:00:55 AM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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To: sonrise57
I pray that we do experience another Great Awakening. As an Orthodox Catholic, I hope that my Church experiences it, for the Catholic Church in America has lost its way, and is again in need of direction. My Church needs leaders to help pull it back on the right track. God Bless
5 posted on 04/23/2002 7:01:23 AM PDT by StAthanasiustheGreat
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To: NWU Army ROTC
Michael Novak is one of the bright lights of our day. I hope he is right: "Something Good is Coming."

As a Protestant, I can say the whole Body of Christ grieves when a single part is laid low. I can also say this problem is not the problem of the Catholic Church alone.

The problem is much bigger than the Catholic Church in America. Christianity as a whole is under attack, not just Catholicism, and not just in this way. The hope of the enemy is to divide and conquer.

Interestingly, civilization itself, built upon Christian values, is under both external and internal attack at the same time. Both attacks were made possible by the turning away of our own peoples.

I see so few signs of repentance and reawakening that I suspect we are still on the downward portion of the path.

Personally, I am certain Mr. Novak is right in the end, but when that end comes I do not know. Nor do I know how high a price we, personally and collectively, must pay before it gets here.

6 posted on 04/23/2002 7:12:35 AM PDT by EternalHope
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To: EternalHope; anniegetyourgun
There is no need for "repentance" as far as serious Catholics are concerned. The crisis you now see in the clergy is the direct result of the kind of Modernism that traditional Catholics have complained about for years. They have no reason to repent in this case -- in fact, history will remember that they were the ones who knew all along that post-Vatican II Catholicism was largely a fraud.

Incidentally, many Catholics aren't even all that disturbed by what is happening with these sex abuse cases -- these Catholics wrote off their local bishops, priests, etc. years ago.

7 posted on 04/23/2002 7:24:04 AM PDT by Alberta's Child
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To: NWU Army ROTC
The Pope's comments reported today demonstrated all talk and no action. I'm waiting to see if the Vatican takes any real action; I'm pessimistic.
8 posted on 04/23/2002 7:29:05 AM PDT by JoeFromCA
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To: Slyfox; rose; Aunt Polgara; Codie; ELS; katnip;viadexter; pax_et_bonum; Romulus...
p i n g and BUMP
9 posted on 04/23/2002 7:53:58 AM PDT by history_matters
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To: Alberta's Child
Incidentally, many Catholics aren't even all that disturbed by what is happening with these sex abuse cases

I agree. A visiting Priest advised that we pray for those involved in the current scandal. I was taken aback, since I was aware (unavoidable, since it was on the front page of every paper for several days), but had not followed the news closely.

I made the decision several years ago to search for a Priest who followed and taught the traditional beliefs of the Church. I looked long and hard, but managed to find such a man 30 miles from home. My family and I drive 60 miles round trip every week to attend Mass celebrated by him.

The devout Priests far outnumber the perverts. I view the scandal as something happening outside my Church -- it has nothing to do with me, because I made the conscious decision to avoid "Catholic" Churches that deemed themselves progressive. Those progressive Churches do not follow my Faith, and I do not follow them.

10 posted on 04/23/2002 7:57:26 AM PDT by reformed_democrat
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To: NWU Army ROTC
"Maintaining chastity requires abundant graces. These require silence and prayer for their reception.

A life too long lived apart from intense daily prayer, meditation on the lives of the saints, the devout praying of the daily office of the Church, and a slowly and reflectively enacted sacrifice of the Mass each day, is not a life in which the probabilities of fidelity are enhanced.

On the contrary, the probabilities of chastity decline exponentially, as neglect of the life of the spirit extends its control, like a summer drought spreading its reach across sun-baked fields. Where the love of God withers, the love of this world gains a chokehold.

There is a lesson in the present time: The prayerful, orthodox, and faithful priests and religious of this generation did not bring about the scandals that now humiliate the church.

Bingo, bump, and "...this is what I have been saying all along..." An intense inner relationship with Jesus Christ precludes mortal sin, simply because there is no room for the contemplation of sinful acts. People who pray frequently and deeply know how to deal with temptation.

"...sin is couching at the door; its desire is for you, but you must master it (Gen.4:7 RSV)." God said this to Cain BEFORE he murdered Abel. It IS possible to master temptation, and a mortally sinful act must be deliberately CHOSEN. These men have deliberately chosen frequent mortal sin.

11 posted on 04/23/2002 8:01:38 AM PDT by redhead
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To: history_matters
Thank you for the ping..."Whom the Lord loveth, He chasteneth."
12 posted on 04/23/2002 8:06:16 AM PDT by Judith Anne
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To: EternalHope
Michael Novak is one of the bright lights of our day. I hope he is right: "Something Good is Coming."

Amen, this man has been one of my heroes for many years.

One effort that I am most proud of was personally raising enough money from the business community to bring Mr. Novak to our local University for two addresses, one to adults and one to students.

That was back in the '80's and it was very well worth the effort and the money.

13 posted on 04/23/2002 8:11:15 AM PDT by iconoclast
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To: NWU Army ROTC
"Something Good is Coming"

I'll bet they tell that to all the alter boys.

14 posted on 04/23/2002 8:18:36 AM PDT by putupon
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To: redhead
I do believe something good is coming...especially if you meet some of the young Catholics today (in their late teens and 20s) at places like Franciscan University.

I never met anyone in my youth as committed to the Catholic Church as some of them are --and they're not ashamed of their faith in the least.

The sad part is the "tweenies" --those of us who grew up in the church in the '60s and '70s, post Vatican II, including those who were victimized by the errant priests.

My mother is the only one of her group who has ALL of her children attending Mass regularly today. And she brokered NO excuses for missing Mass in those days, or breaking the rules of the church.

It was a tough existence for us kids, and I didn't really understand it until my mid 30s. But today I do, and I wish I had understood it earlier.

If you can understand the Church's graces at a young age, you have a much better chance for having a peaceful, fulfilling life, in your marriage and/or vocation, whatever it might be.

15 posted on 04/23/2002 9:31:26 AM PDT by glorygirl
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To: reformed_democrat
My family and I drive 60 miles round trip every week to attend Mass celebrated by him.

God bless you and your family. Here in the Chicago area people are making similar lengthy round-trips to one of the most exciting faith communities in the nation, the Parish Church of Saint John Cantius, with its long-overdue mission: Restoring the Sacred.

Please stop by if ever you're in the 'hood.

Saint John Cantius Parish Church, Chicago, IL

16 posted on 04/23/2002 9:34:47 AM PDT by Hibernius Druid
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To: sonrise57
I would not be surprised by a Great Awakening in all the Churches. We are about due in the Catholic Church. The Pope has spoken about a Second Spring in the new millennium, and I think he is right. There is something like the stirrings of an awakening among Evangelicals already, I think. And I have long hoped for an awakening in the black churches, where there is undoubted faith but where the people have been led astray by politicized ministers. Nothing short of such an awakening can pull America out of the cultural decay in which we have been sinking since the 1960s.
17 posted on 04/23/2002 10:44:33 AM PDT by Cicero
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To: Cicero
"Nothing short of such an awakening can pull America out of the cultural decay in which we have been sinking since the 1960s."

Amen, and it must start with God's people on their faces in humility and repentance. Though I am not Catholic, and while I appreciate the pontif declaring this sin and a crime, I'll be convinced if he calls all Catholics to a day of solemn assembly and repentance. Even more so if the congregates obey that call.

18 posted on 04/23/2002 1:44:18 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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To: Hibernius Druid
Thanks for the link. I checked their Mass schedule, and want to attend either the 11:00 A.M. Novus Ordo or the 12:30 P.M.Tridentine High Mass. I haven't been to a High Mass since grade school.
I wonder if I still remember my Latin (probably not . . .)
19 posted on 04/23/2002 3:17:55 PM PDT by reformed_democrat
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To: EternalHope
Christianity as a whole is under attack, not just Catholicism, and not just in this way. The hope of the enemy is to divide and conquer.

You said it. Amen!

20 posted on 04/23/2002 7:39:23 PM PDT by pray4liberty
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