Monday, October 14, 2024

The Dance of the Human Spirit Within the Heavenly Symphony of the Good, the True, and the Beautiful

 What follows is, of course, inspired by the heart-piercingly splendid theology of Fr. Hans Urs Von Balthasar.

Every human life is a single dance, but in response to a symphony informed by three interwoven mysteries: the Good, the True, the Beautiful.

The Drama of the Good-and-Evil; Person as Will, Freedom and Action; Spiritual Combat

Human existence is the engagement of our created freedom with that of others, with God and His kingdom, and against the Dark Kingdom. A binary choice: between the Good and Evil. It is constant, relentless spiritual combat. It is action: intelligent choice expressed in deed, concretely, in the flesh, over time. It is not melodrama or histrionics as in the sentimentality of soap operas; rather, it is engagement with, being grasped and formed, through choice, by powerful currents of the Good or Evil. The moral/spiritual realm is a simple binary: The Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Darkness, of sin and death, of Satan and his minions. Every person is a battlefield between the two; and yet every person is also living in the state of grace or the state of sin. The interior state of the soul is a hidden mystery, known only to God. But it is not detached from the flesh: the good tree bears good fruit. The Good (along with the True and the Beautiful) is diffusive, expansive, generous, welcoming. But in its inversion and perversity, so is the powerful Realm of Darkness. Each person is an actor in the Drama of salvation, of history, and endowed with heart-intellect-will, with freedom, with a mysterious integrity of charism, mission, suffering, and destiny. This mission is largely hidden from us in this life; it involves all the concrete detail of a specific life; in includes "state of life" (married, consecrated, ordained, single) and the unending and surprising itinerary of encounters, events, loves, failings, accomplishments, conspiracies, and delights.

The Human Intellect: Yeaning for the True and the Real

We see already in the young child an irrepressible curiosity about What Is? What is real? and Why? What is the purpose? The cause? The intention? The destiny and goal?

Creation, Reality, the Real...is the work of an infinite, absolute, perfect Intellect...that of God. The human person is created in the divine image and likeness to understand, engage, delight in, be in intelligent and deliberate communion with Reality in its totality. The human intellect is active and inquisitive, but fundamentally receptive as the True (like the Good and the Beautiful) manifests itself. The personal intellect is the Bride; the Real and True is the Groom. The intellect does not construct, imaginatively, the real...in a Kantian or postmodern sense. Rather, the intellect receives the Real, always in wonder, delight, gratitude. 

The Beautiful: Delight, Gratitude and Adoration

The Real, which is to say the True and the Good, is at the same time always Beautiful: delighting the heart-soul-intellect-will, as radiant and harmonious out of a mysterious, hidden-but-manifest inner integrity (form). The Real is always encountered as Good and True but also Beautiful; that is, delightful. Within the Trinity, this trilogy of transcendentals is absolute, perfect, infinite, eternal. In creation it is always finite, temporal, partial, mortal, and (after The Fall) flawed by sin, corruption and death. But the created is intended for participation in the Uncreated, the finite for the Infinite, the temporal for the Eternal, the partial for the Completion, and even the sinful for the Mercy of God.

Evil, Untruth, and the Ugly...although powerful in the historic realm...are themselves Unreality: negations, deprivations, distortions...empty of final substance and reality. They are finally powerless and vulnerable before the genuinely Good, True and Beautiful.

And so, even in this world of corruption, change, fragility, pain and sin...we delight always in the Real... and we exult (patiently) in Hope. In the very deepest darkness, the infallible/efficacious chiaroscuro of Divine Providence guarantees that the light...of the True, the Good, the Beautiful...shines all the brighter!



Saturday, September 21, 2024

Maryknoll College Seminary, Glen Ellyn, Illinois, Class of 1969: What Happened?

September 1965 we arrived, about 100 of us, ambitioning to give our lives in service of God and the suffering around the world as celibate, Catholic, Maryknoll, missionary priests.  Because of the distinctive timing (1965-9), ours was to be an entirely unique itinerary, even as we were a lucid microcosm of the broader, especially American Church. Last week we enjoyed our 55 year anniversary reunion, or even "renewal," of our lifelong friendship and the values we share. We have gathered every five years over the decades. We are not aware of any other class, before or after, doing this. This is due to the unrepeatable coalescence of time, place and our congenial but disparate personalities.

From all over the country, we were a rich diversity of personalities, but quite homogeneous: 18 years old, white, male, working-middle class, mostly liberal politically, pious in a low key, self confident (notwithstanding standard adolescent insecurities) and surging with youthful altruism, idealism, curiosity, and adventure. We enjoyed a naive (to be short-lived) confidence in the messianic role of both the Catholic Church and the USA, not only in countervailing Soviet Communism, but also in lifting up the undeveloped world. We were iconic products of post-war, (1945-65) American Catholic Camelot. 

We had been screened by Maryknoll for emotional stability, capacity for college academics, Catholic piety, potential for leadership and wholesome family backgrounds. Basically however, we were a self-chosen group. What we surely shared more than anything else was a deep, powerful impulse of generosity to help those who suffer. We were the pampered, privileged boomer generation; but we were grateful for our blessings and eager to share with the less fortunate.

Time: 1965-9

1965 was the culmination, the terminus, the pinnacle of the post-war American Catholic Camelot. Vatican II was just ending. The Church was exploding: large families, tons of vocations, new parishes, schools, colleges, seminaries, convents and rectories. A surge of missionary activity, especially to Latin America. Maryknoll was ordaining close to 50 men a year. Cultural icons, even beyond Catholicism, were the Kennedy family, Fulton Sheen, Thomas Merton, Doctor Tom Dooley and others. Civil rights movement was fiercely championed by the Church along with all elite institutions. The previous two decades had been an unprecedented love affair between the USA and Catholicism. But the honeymoon was to end very shortly...and harshly.

The progressive narrative is that the Council marked the end of the Tridentine Church and the beginning of a new Vatican II Church. But it is better understood as the culmination, the final product of powerful trends that were building for the entire 20th century but especially since the war: ecumenism, liturgy, scripture studies, social justice, role of the laity, religious freedom and Church/state relationships, dialogue with modernity, and a return to the sources. The documents of the Council were all approved by overwhelming majorities, in the high 90%s. In our country, (as I recall), there was widespread euphoria and only marginal resistance because it expressed values we had already been living for at least two decades. Even as the Council was being implemented, however, by some historic (or demonic?) irony, the Cultural, Progressive Revolution was exploding across the culture, deconstructing the post-war Catholicism which produced us. We deeply inhaled the toxins from our now-open seminary.

The Place: Maryknoll College Seminary, Glen Ellyn, Illinois, 1965-69

When we entered the college seminary in 1965, it was intact, vigorous, coherent. Several hundred of us lived a quasi-monastic, wholesome rule of life centered around study, prayer, liturgy, strong friendships, and modest amounts of manual labor and athletic recreation. I fondly recall, for example, the custom of 2 or 3 seminarians and priests, walking around our large building in the recreation time between dinner and night prayers (6:30-7:15) and praying together the rosary. It was a virile, wholesome, serene and challenging life. It was to fall apart, with much of the American Church, in the next four years. It was a different entity when we graduated in 1969. Some of us had lost our Catholic faith, others had given up daily prayer, some had girl friends, others worked in a local bar, many had embraced the New Left or the new religion of psychology. By 1971 it was closed. 

Our faculty and formators were mostly middle aged Maryknollers, the Silent Generation,  men who had chosen the missionary life but were sent, because of their academic intelligence, to graduate schools to educate us younger men. Not first class scholars, they were competent in their fields; intelligent; sound emotionally; of good character; and generally men of faith, in accord with the time that formed them. Perhaps as many as half left the priesthood in the following years. 

One would imagine that good, middle aged men without children of their own would take a paternal interest in the young adults entrusted to them. Sadly, this did not happen. A "class structure" existed that erected an invisible wall between priests and seminarians. They taught us in the classroom and lived with us as prefects in our units, but on the whole there was little intimacy between us. It was like a residential prep school: on our part there was respect and affection, but from a distance. There were exceptions: some classmates fondly recall confessors and spiritual directors; an infirm priest elicited intense affection from those assigned to care for him; I myself was mentored by a lay, librarian autodidact. 

Our faculty was entirely embracive of the Vatican Council, but was not consciously critical of the Cultural Revolution exploding at that very moment. Rather, since many left the priesthood in the following years, it is clear many were influenced by it, uncritically. I don't recall any priest clearly identifying and renouncing it. I recall for example, a respected theologian delivering a significant lecture, towards the end of our time there, about the rapidity of culture change and that society increasingly needs to look to the young, rather than the old (experienced, learned, grounded in tradition) for wisdom. That thesis is surely at the heart of the Progressive Revolt: disparagement of tradition, authority, and the past. Arguably the biggest influence on our class was noted priest-psychologist Eugene Kennedy (my personal nemesis!) who left the priesthood and was widely received as a guru of Catholic progressivism.

With our faculty largely disengaged from ourselves and social developments, we as a class were left (especially in the last two tumultuous years of 1968-9) to form each other, in the currents sweeping around us. My personal recall of those years was a low-grade, constant, ecstatic frenzy of reading, thinking, discussing, arguing. To be sure, not all of our class were so vulnerable to this intellectual virus; perhaps half or more continued tranquilly, immune to this contagion. Specifically, many of us returned as seniors after the summer of 1968 (arguably the explosion point of the Revolution) from experiences that had "blown our minds" (a favored phrase at the time): a group stayed in a black inner city parish, I myself studied Spanish at the Ivan Illich radical think tank in Cuernavaca, Mexico, and such. All institutions, but especially those of the Church, were critically scrutinized and questioned. Sacred authority, as in our Catholic tradition, was forgotten; an Alinsky-like, soft Marxist paradigm of authority as power, of the oppressor over the oppressed, became evident everywhere, including the Catholic hierarchy. Our senior year became an intense workshop in political/cultural radicalism.

Weakness of the Catholic Camelot

Looking back, it is evident that the confident, expansive, fecund Catholicism of our childhood had underlying weaknesses, superficial roots. How else could it have collapsed so catastrophically within a few years in the 60-70s?

The primary problem was lack of an evangelical/mystical foundation: the failure to hear and engage the Gospel event-person of Jesus Christ, God-and-man, our personal/communal Lord and Savior. The entire Catholic elaboration (morals, dogmas, liturgy) springs from the personal encounter with the crucified-risen-ascended-Spirit-sending Jesus Christ. Without that spiritual basis, Catholicism is an incoherence, a house of cards. And so, our cohort (along with the entire Church) had been moralized, sacramentalized, and dogmatized but NOT evangelized. We had not come to know deeply, personally, intimately the Divine Person of Jesus in relationship with the Father and the Spirit. And so, in large part, this Camelot Catholicism collapsed, almost immediately, like a house of cards, under the demonic assault of the Cultural Revolution and sexual/political progressivism.

Closely related to this spiritual problem was an intellectual one: our American Church was not deeply, clearly rooted in a philosophical, dogmatic (in the best sense) understanding of our faith. Intellectually, we were largely defenseless against the assault that came. Our immigrant, American character was largely pragmatic and activist but weak in contemplation and metaphysical reflection. This is true of our entire society; and so of our Church; and specifically of the the Maryknoll missioner bringing American-know-how (credit unions, agriculture, education, etc.) to the deprived around the globe.  

We, Wannabe Catholic Evangelizers, are Evangelized

The irony: we were being formed to spread our faith; in the process we (largely) lost our faith and accepted a new one. Our faith formation had been childish and shallow, without deep roots or a solid foundation. Our faculty was distant from us and largely clueless about the tsunami of change around us; they were not forming us in the Catholic faith. We were forming ourselves, in the currents of anti-Catholic progressivism. 

Those years were intellectually stimulating; but spiritually they were a dessert. I cannot recall any inspiring homily or lecture; nor going to confession; nor a life-changing retreat or conference. Spiritual direction (as I recall) was a priest doing an exercise in Rogerian listening, when I had nothing really to say! There was a stability, but a monotony to our liturgical life. Fervor for the Gospel...passionate love for Jesus Christ...the fire of the Holy Spirit...were not evident.

The vacuum was filled by the twin fascinations of progressivism:  the political and the therapeutic.

What is Cultural Progressivism?

A perfect storm of diabolic currents...all anti-Catholic...that had been simmering for decades but exploded volcanically around 1968:

- A secularism, very materialistic, that ignored the supernatural and relocated the spiritual in the political and the therapeutic. Thus, an incomprehension of: the male-celibate priesthood, chastity, virginity, the demonic, divine wrath, spiritual warfare, the miraculous, cloistered monastic life, relics, final judgement, sacramental efficacy, papal infallibility, the inherent sanctity of hierarchy/dogma/patriarchy...and the entire architecture of Catholicism...all radiating from the Splendor of Christ.  It is tyranny of the activist/pragmatic/efficient over the contemplative/ mystical/sacred.

- The contraceptive sterilization of sexuality and and its displacement from enclosure in the spousal as unitive, fecund, faithful, chaste, sacrificial.

- Tolerance of abortion as back-up contraception and the desecration of human life that is incompetent.

- A Darwinian trust in the inevitable triumph of science/reason over the ignorance and superstition of the religious past. Thus, a disparagement of tradition, revelation, authority.

- Prominence of the Marxist model of oppressor/oppressed throughout history and society: male/female, black/white, capitalist/worker, straight/gay, colonizer/colonized, etc. With this an allegiance to political leftism in a messianic key and exaggeration of policy and government as efficacious and salvific. 

- Triumph of the therapeutic over the spiritual disciplines of prayer, confession of sin, penance, and communal liturgy. Personal, private health and thriving replaced older ideals of the heroic and the holy.

- The absolute sovereignty of the individual, isolated, "choosing" Self, dislocated from history, family, tradition, the Mystical Body and the Trinity. 

The seductive appeal of progressivism for elite Catholicism, including our cohort, is that it is itself a Christian heresy. It is not a bold, lucid rejection of our faith like Nazi neo-paganism. Like all heresies, it inflates key elements of our faith, detaching them from the Catholic gestalt and turning them against other truths. So progressivism is a humanism, accentuating the dignity of the person; it champions the social/political underdog; it frees sexuality from shame/guilt to declare its inherent goodness; it accentuates the power of the intellect and science and especially all the wisdom unveiled by psychology and the social sciences. The Catholic Progressive self-identifies, not as an "ex" or lapsed Catholic, but as one who is more enlightened, contemporary, scientific, and compassionate.

Maryknoll

Maryknoll was particularly vulnerable to the corrosive toxins of post 1965 Progressivism, but first some history. We can contrast the original Maryknoll (1911-45) with the post-war society (1945-65). The founders (Fathers Price and Walsh, Bishops Ford and Walsh) shared a fierce Tridentine spirituality: Marian, sacramental, hierarchical and passionate to save souls from the world, flesh and the devil by baptism into the one true Church. By contrast, the Maryknoll that attracted our class in the early 1960s, at the time of the Council and before the Cultural Revolution, was a happy marriage of American cultural confidence and Catholic generosity. 

That second paradigm collapsed catastrophically, immediately after 1965, for several reasons:

1. Individualism. The Maryknoll ideal, much like that of the Jesuits, was of the solitary, heroic individual, courageously pursuing his mission in a foreign land. At that time, there was a famous TV cigarette commercial of the "Marlboro Man": strong, handsome male on a horse, in the American West, calmly smoking his Marlboro. The Maryknoller was the Marlboro Man! Catholicism in its most potent expressions is always fiercely communal: the monks and mendicants, the lay renewal movements (charismatic, Neocatechumenal, Communion and Liberation) and the new, conservative religious orders attracting our youth. Such thick communities...whether evangelical/charismatic or traditional...are resistant to hegemonic liberal individualism. Not so the Jesuits and the Maryknollers. 

2. Missiology. Vatican II stressed the positive, even salvific elements of other religions; it downplayed the negative, violent, even demonic aspects. It would have benefited, for example, from a dose of Rene Girard's anthropology of mimetic, sacred violence. This imbalance opened the Church to an anthropological relativism and universalism: all paths lead to God; avoid triumphalism at all costs; God's mercy brings pretty much everyone to heaven anyway. Our theology professor Fr. Fraizer explained that the paradigm of Church as sacrament had been replaced by sign. A sacrament we know is an efficacious sign of God's grace. The new model, drained of efficacy, sees God's grace already operative so the Church is there to illuminate that presence. The mission task is not to convert to Christ and his Church, but to somehow clarify and highlight grace already at work. This is a vague abstraction at best. It ignores sin, the demonic, the desperate need for conversion, the distinctive and incomparable Splendor of Jesus Christ. Is it likely a young person would give up marriage, children, career and comfort to be such a "sign?"

3. Colonialism.  The confident, virile, American, Catholic image of the missioner that attracted us to Maryknoll in 1965 was brutally attacked and deconstructed by the  anti-colonialism of the late 1960s left. Ivan Illich was the most fierce critic of the missionary effort in Latin America as cultural imperialism: assuming superiority, missioners imposed the Irish-American parish structure (Church, rectory, school, convent) as they propagated high technology and disparaged (if unintentionally) the rich, simple religiosity and traditions of native peoples. 

4. Leftwing Radicalism.  Working often with the very poor, Maryknollers saw, of course, the systemic social/political causes of marginalization and so many were drawn to activism, liberation theology, and soft Marxist ideologies to alleviate the suffering. Progressive policy here takes on a highly moralistic, even religious dimension.

5. Pragmatism. As a group, Maryknollers are men of action, doers of good deeds, "Marthas" rather han "Marys." Intelligent, few are metaphysicians; compassionate, few are deeply mystical; quiet, modest witnesses by their lives, they tend to be  mute in regard to evangelical proclamation. And so as a group they lacked the spiritual and intellectual resources to clearly see and combat the anti-Catholic ferocity of progressivism.

Maryknoll post-1965 is a loose association of generous, adventuresome, idiosyncratic, Catholic bachelors. They are a delightful, fascinating group: intelligent, energetic, enthusiastic, positive, gracious, confident. Mostly, they are men of compassion, of action and agency. Their piety is quiet, personal, humble. Their politics mostly leans left; their theology is not entirely orthodox. But they prefer action to argument and are not overly ideological. They are faithful to the Church and devoted to the Eucharist and probably (quietly) to our Blessed Mother. A small number lean to the conservative movements (pro-life, charismatic, Marian, etc.) but more favor liberation theology and liberal politics. They tend to be mavericks, eccentrics, risk takers, humorous, carefree, creative, full of life.

What of the future? For decades now there have been almost no vocations from the States. They are now recruiting from other countries. I myself am skeptical about this direction since their is no shared, communal spirituality welcoming them. 

Nevertheless, I cannot adequately express my admiration, delight and gratitude for the "silent generation" of Maryknollers who are now steadily passing to their reward.

Where are We Today: Glen Ellyn Class of 1969?

Four of us are today Maryknoller priests. They reflect the description above: delightful, entirely different personalities...gifted, generous, intelligent, energetic men of deep (if quiet) faith and exceptional moral character. Jim spent his adult life in Korea and communist China and is now working on the canonization causes of founders Fr. Price and Bishop James Anthony Walsh. John worked for decades in Africa, was leader of Maryknoll, and now teaches at Scranton University, in the local jail, and works at the United Nations as representative of Maryknoll. Scott became a doctor/surgeon, worked in care for AIDs patients in Africa and continues to serve in parish work in the USA. Larry gained a doctorate in spirituality, served Chinese religious studying in the USA and continues to do spiritual direction, retreat work and talks. At 77 they all have their boots on and continue to prod their distinctive paths. We esteem and love each of them.

A special, very special case: unchallenged leader of our class, John Harper, served in Maryknoll leadership for years before leaving to have a family and do amazing work with the homeless, addicted, and mentally ill...all rooted in a deep, fertile 12-step spirituality. An exceptional, fascinating, gifted, humble man! Typical of Maryknoll, a man of action...but at the same time, a quiet mystic.

Two of our classmates are permanent deacons. We all seem to enjoy happy marriages and family life. Perhaps half of us practice our Catholic faith (understood simply as participation in mass on Sunday.) Almost all lean left in theology and politics. Most have found a synthesis of our Catholic and progressive propensities. With the exception of a few of us, there is little connection with evangelical Christianity, the Latin Mass community, the theological legacy of John Paul and Benedict, or Culture War from the pro-life conservative side.

There is, then, a political/theological divide that coexists with a deep, intense mutuality in respect and affection. This divide is perhaps most strongly felt by the few of us who have moved strongly in the opposing conservative/progressive directions.  Ironically, the Harris/Trump debate happened on the Tuesday evening of our reunion. We exchanged views, calmly and respectfully. 

I cannot deny an underlying sadness: we were so close in those years; and now have gone in different, often contradictory directions. The liberal/Catholic synthesis of our childhood and youth did not endure: many of us have gone progressive, a few of us strong Catholic. My own grief is not for my friends; they benefit from their roots in wholesome, if imperfect, midcentury American Catholicism. It is for their children and grandchildren, detached from the sacramental economy, the Mystical Body of Church, and vulnerable in a society gone lonely, rootless, techno-manic, materialistic, and Godless. The impulse to share our faith that brought us together in 1965 burns more intensely today in me; especially in regard to our young. 

As a group, however, we resemble Maryknoll itself. We deeply share Catholic roots and memories; and above all the impetus to do good and serve the suffering. We are different personalities; and have developed a variety of theologies, spiritualities and politics. We enjoyed (in my view), almost 60 years ago, in that tumultuous era, a Catholic Camelot of our own. We share an esteem, delight and affection for each other. In distinct ways, we continue to ride together the currents of Joy, gratitude and generosity that brought us together 59 years ago.

 

 




 

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

A Catholic View of the Democrat/Republican Divide Post-1970

 Age of Trump  Sagely, my oldest granddaughter Brigid observed a few years ago that the only political world she had known is that dominated by Trump. She realized this is not a blessing. He has been at once a symptom of, an aggravation of, and a reaction against the pathologies of our time. In this essay we will ignore this person to consider the political terrain independent of him.

Protestant Background.  The USA has always been, and remains in many ways, a Protestant Christian Nation. The Protestant Reformation (along with the Enlightenment, Freemasonry, etc.) informs the entire social network of our nation in its: idolatry of the Individual in solitary intimacy with Christ and rejection of ecclesial authority, sacramentality of marriage and orders, infallibility of the apostolic hierarchy, confession of sins, the religious life, devotion to Mary and the saints, This legacy and its long, complex historical trajectory has isolated the autonomous, rootless, lonely Self and inexorably destroyed bonds of filial loyalty, fidelity, obedience, authority, family and community at every level. The core social value becomes liberty as isolated individualism, freedom of choice and release from any bond or connection prior to choice. We see this in the economic liberalism of the Right and the sexual freedom of the Left. We see this trend intensified with increasing dependence on the mega-state and global corporations as intermediate, local institutions diminish and disappear. The war of "all against all" that results can only be mitigated by a controlling state; so that the individualism is countervailed by collectivism. The Catholic vision of the person intrinsically, interiorly connected (prior to choice) to family, God, community and the moral order is replaced by the absolute centrality and sovereignty of the Autonomous, Lonely Self,

Prehistory: 1945-65  The American into which I was born and raised was amazingly harmonious and uniform: economic prosperity, a pervasive Protestant/Catholic religious revival, relief at victory in war and the end of the Depression, unity in the Cold War and national confidence that verged on arrogance. There was no real Culture War; no dispute about abortion, gender, or sex. The contest between the two parties was mostly between capital and labor about how to share the expanding pie of economic affluence, This competition was not  a war, but more like a congenial picnic volleyball game. This exuberant period culminated with the triumph of the Civil Rights Movements which elicited the support of all major cultural institutions, excepting racism local to the South.

Cultural Revolution Post 1965  As we boomers entered adulthood, the American Camelot of our childhood/youth was destroyed by the eruption of the multifaceted Revolution: the pill, anti-establishment animus (especially the Vietnam War), rejection of tradition and authority, sterilization and liberation of sex, deconstruction of gender, scientific arrogance, rampant consumerism, the demise of religion, corruption of the family, and triumph of the therapeutic. Politically, the Democratic Party became the vehicle for this revolution; while moral conservatives found shelter with the Republicans. It has been observed that if this revolution were prophesized in 1960, most would assume that the party of change would be the affluent, indulged, selfish, individualistic, powerful Republicans. History is indeed surprising! 

Let us consider six major, and then some minor divides between the parties in our age.

1. Abortion is unquestionably the most defining, substantial difference. This is a binary opposition of absolutes: the reproductive right of the woman and the life of the embryo. There really is no coherent compromise here: the contradiction is unconditional. The rights mutually annihilate each other. Perhaps 60 % or more Americans favor some pragmatic compromise: exceptions, a moderate but random period of time, etc. This is what is happening of course and will prevail in most states. But morally, conceptually this makes no sense: why may a woman kill the fetus at one day less than (say) three months but not one day after? In both cases, the abortion is either a killing of a human or a morally acceptable option: the nature of the act cannot change on that particular calendar date. We see now in the hysteria and passion of the progressive reaction to Dobbs that for them reproductive is an absolute and sacred right, a matter of "life or death."

2. Sterilization of sexuality  is the deeper divide and the actual root cause of the addiction to abortion. The development of contraception was the most revolutionary technological event in human history: it redefined sexuality, gender, family, the nature of the person and the value of (incompetent, defenseless) human life. The integrity, harmony and profundity of God's design for sex, gender, marriage, family, fruitfulness, chastity, and fidelity is replaced by engineered sterility, contraception/cohabitation, pornography/masturbation, abortion-as-backup-contraception, homosexuality and transgenderism. The Democratic Party became "transubstantiated" immediately, in the early 1970s, as it became...interiorly, formally, structurally, substantially, systemically...the party of sexual decadence. This is the "Invasion of the Body Snatchers":  looks like the same party, but it has a different heart and soul. Pro-lifers (Casey, Shriver, Flynn) were purged while the  Kennedys-Cuomos-Bidens-Pelosis fervently embraced the new Progressive Religion and betrayed their Catholic legacy. About 50% of Catholics remain indifferent, in denial, or addicted to antiquated tribal loyalties. The Republican Party, a coalition of often contradictory forces (libertarian, neo-liberal economics, the moneyed class) welcomed cultural conservatives.

3. Religious Faith vs. Secularism.  To be sure, many Democrats have faith and many Republicans lack it. But on the institutional, systemic level, the DNC became the vehicle of Progressivism as hostile to religious faith, tradition, and authority. Religion is privatized and deferential to the the alleged infallibility of science, sexual liberation, the inexorable "arc of history," and identity politics. 

 4. Government: Big or Small?  Progressives look trustingly to the expansive, centralized State to countervail the rich/powerful, to lift up the underprivileged, and to ensure the common good. In this narrative, the villain is the rich, powerful, arrogant, selfish Republican and his corporate wealth. By contrast, the Republican is suspicious of big government as tyrannical, inefficient, repressive of entrepreneurial energy and eventually of freedoms of religion, speech and others. The one side wants to expand government with messianic hopes; the other seeks to shrink it with suspicions of the diabolical.

5. Class Divide. In the age of Trump, we see the culmination of a gradual political inversion: the Democratic Party, formerly defender of the underdog against the wealthy, has become the province of the affluent, educated, sexually liberated elites. Trump channels the rage of the underclass, of poor and broken families, of the less-schooled, of the traditionally religious. With the emergence of J.D. Vance and his partners we see the promise of a Catholic friendly populism that weds the economics of the postwar labor movement and the cultural conservatism after 1970.

6. Masculine and Feminine.  Men, especially those of the underclass, are strongly drawn to the masculine image of Trump and his party: angry, aggressive, decisive, indignant at being victims, macho in style and image.  Women more often favor the party of reproductive rights, defensive in a feminism of private, individual rights untethered by bonds of family, marriage, maternity.

The above are the more profound, defining differences. What follows are important but less essential.

7. Global Warming.  

Why is this reality, which is of great concern to our youth, so important to the Left but not the Right? 

First, the former is more secular, less aware of the supernatural, and therefore more urgent about earthly affairs as there is no eternity in the future. Progressive spirituality tends to an immanentism that finds the true-good-beautiful in the natural realm without reference to the Transcendent. There is a feminist sense of Mother Earth void of a Creator Father. 

Second, the diminishment of paternal religion and wholesome virility leaves a fragile feminism, vulnerable to hysteria and desperate for a a controlling, mother state. On the other side, a confident, aggressive machismo on the Right tends to instrumentalize and disenchant Creation.

 Thirdly, the Left trusts the expansive State and looks to it for protection. By contrast, the Right distrusts the State and leans into its own libertarian individualism and exaltation of the competent agency of the isolated Self.

8. Gun Control.  This issue pits a rural, individualistic traditionalism against an urban collectivism that trusts the State (including the police) for protection from violence. It is in part the big/small government debate; but also a question of lifestyle enjoyments.

9. Law and Order.  Since perhaps the 1968 riots in Chicago, the Left has advocated a freedom from authority and law and a resentment of the masculine posture of tradition, police and the rule of law. The hippy movement is long gone, but we now have open borders and "defund the police." On this issue the Right favors vigorous government, in a role of protection and authority, while the Left is suspicious of the masculine imagery. The male/female binary is prominent here. The Right sees the state in the masculine role of protection as in the police and military; the Left wants to diminish the need for force and develop a nurturing, maternal state.

10. International Relations.  In the post-War era, there was largely bi-partisan consensus regarding the Soviet Union: the policy positions of Nixon and Kennedy were very close. More recently, Progressives favor a soft internationalism: confidence in a global order of free trade and democracy, reliance on alliances (NATO, UN), credulity in negotiating with opponents. So, we have seen that Obama/Biden are eager to appease Iran, compromise with China, and call for a cease fire in Gaza. At the core is a mild pacifism that trusts that force can be avoided by the power of reason and good will. This is a striking naivite and optimism and rejection of Realpolitik. Our assistance to Ukraine has been forceful and multilateral but arguably too little too late to ensure that they prevail.  

On the Right we find two contradictory trends: the predominant one is a vigorous internationalism (neoconservative?) that insists that only a muscular Americanism can deter evil actors. The secondary trend is isolationism, a retreat from our role as global power to attend to our own concerns. (Vance).  Strangely, Trump represents both these contraries: he makes America first and disparages adventurism overseas even as he instinctively projects power and force. There is no coherence here. But it cannot be denied that he presided over a world at peace: pure luck?

Catholic Values.  In light of our faith, both parties have pros and cons; but there is no moral equivalence. Since 1970, the DNC is deeply and viciously anti-Catholic in its essential structure or form: abortion, sterilized sexuality, secularism and privatization of religion. The big government it advocates would, obviously, advance these values and repress Catholic practice. It is the religion of a cosmopolitan, secular elite that despises populist religious practices and beliefs. It is a decadent feminism, individualistic, resentful of the paternal and the maternal, and all the natural/spiritual bonds that infuse chaste, Marian Catholicism.

Can a Catholic Vote Democratic?  Possible, but unlikely.

It is like a Jew voting for the Nazi party. We might imagine a mayoral race in Germany in 1932 between two Nazis: one a competent, otherwise decent individual; the other a vicious racist. In that case a Jew would choose the lessor evil of the two.  On issues like climate, guns, taxes, immigration, health care and others Catholics of good will and intelligence may well differ in prudential judgment. 

There is about the Democratic Party in 2024 a striking simplicity: absolute demand for abortion on demand, desecration of sex and gender, aversion to the paternal and maternal, privatization of religion, inflation of the Marxist oppressor paradigm for identity politics, science as religion, cosmopolitanism, and a foreign policy of appeasement that mimics Chamberlain at Munich. 

By contrast, the Republican Party today is a mixed bag: crude Trumpian populism, traditional neo-liberalism, libertarianism, moral traditionalism, wall street and main street, isolationism and neoconservatism. There is much here for the Catholic to fight for and against.

 

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Question: Can a "Catholic" Progressive Convert/Revert to the Catholic Faith, Pure and Simple

 Answer: No! Not really! It is extremely rare, virtually impossible. A decadent pagan, a despairing nihilist, or a violent Marxist is more likely to convert than a true "Catholic" Progressive. Think of the legacy American Progressive Catholic families: Kennedy, Cuomo, Kerry, Biden, Peolosi! Do we hear of family members making a good confession and embarking on a life of chastity, or monastic solitude, or service directly with the poor? Hardly! Of course, we know that all things are possible to God; so we pray for them!

Let's contrast a Progressive and a Catholic and then a Catholic Progressive and a Progressive Catholic!

The Progressive looks for guidance, not to the ancient past, but to recent and especially anticipated future developments in science and technology. The past, as ignorant and deprived, is to be overcome by PROGRESS, which is eventually infallible. Contemporary, post 1968 progressivism, is the merging of five streams: evolutionary Darwinism which posits an inexorable "arc of history" fueled by science, reason, and technology; post-Freudian sexual liberation that locates human flourishing in the release of sterilized sex from marriage-family-children-the moral order, and God's creative and providential purposes; the ever present Marxist dialectic of oppression and liberation; more recently a pantheist infatuation with Mother Nature detached from a Creator-Father;  and above all the Nietzchean sovereignty of the isolated Self. These five views, if articulated clearly, become mutually contradictory, but philosophical depth and lucidity are foreign to feeling-based progressivism.

A Catholic looks for guidance to the person-event of Jesus Christ who revealed the Trinity in Israel two millennia ago and remains in living intimacy with the Catholic Church in prayer, teaching, and life. This is an organic, living, interpersonal, dynamic, and dramatic reality with a distinctive, eventful history. But throughout time there abides a stable, permanent reality that expresses itself creatively and surprisingly. 

A Catholic Progressive is a progressive with Catholic flavoring. Interiorly, in heart-soul-form-substance, the defining gestalt is that of progress. Any Catholic baggage that does not go with the flow of sexual/political liberation and "science" is displaced: contraception, heteronormativity, trans-phobia, etc. Such a "cafeteria" or "Catholic lite" progressive retains the elements of Catholicism that are compatible with the underlying paradigm: conspicuous marriage in a beautiful Church, burial, support of liberal social justice initiatives, and such.

A Progressive Catholic by contrast is interiorly Catholic: specifically, in a filial posture of trust, gratitude and obedience to the hierarchical Church. The defining center of ones life remains Christ present in his Church. Such a Catholic might very well be progressive on any number of current controversies in culture and politics: the environment, ecumenism, governmental action for the poor, liturgical reform, doctrinal development, gun control, taxes, immigration, foreign policy and health care. Such would not violate core Catholic values, especially involving the protection of powerless human life, sexuality-gender-family, and the moral limits of science. Clear denial of those principles, as in advocacy for legal abortion or "choice" is a step out of the Catholic into the Progressive religion. Underlying it is a disparaging judgment against the Church.

To understand the progressive resistance to Catholicism let us compare it with Islam. Both are Christian heresies which take elements of Divine Revelation and reject others. Mohammed, in Arabia of  600 AD, was familiar with Judaism and Christianity, especially the Arian form which denied the divinity of Christ. Spiritual genius that he was, he concocted a brilliant synthesis of elements from local paganism, Christianity and Judaism. Particularly, he incorporated monotheism and the moral code of the ten commandments. This is part of the inner core of the religion. It derives from Divine Revelation and is therefore good and true. Now the bad news: he rejected monogamy in favor of a misogynistic polygamy. He strongly employed the use of violence and force to spread his new religion. Implicitly this included an anti-intellectualism and a fundamentalist fideism. He denied the divinity, the crucifixion and the salvation by Christ and also the Trinity. His acceptance of monotheism was iconoclastic and anti-Christian as it disparaged as polytheism the doctrine of the Trinity. We see very few converts from Islam into Christianity. There are many reasons for this: in some countries converts are executed; everywhere converts are rejected by the community. But interiorly or spiritually there is an even stronger resistance: the religion has a powerful, deep, true core to the extent that it honor the Creator God and the moral code of the 10 commandments. From this high ground, it despises Christianity as polytheistic and idolatrous. 

A similar dynamic is at work in Catholic Progressivism. It does not self-define as a rejection of the Church, but as an enlightened, higher expression of it. It condemns the actual, institutional Church as repressive sexually, as misogynistic, patriarchal, reactionary. And so it is inherently immunized against fundamental Catholic truths: binary gender as an image of God, the fertile intentionality of sexuality, moral order, inherent evils, apostolic authority, ecclesial infallibility, and sacramental efficacy.

St. Charles de Focauld labored heroically in the Sahara for decades and was widely revered as a holy man, but he did not have a single convert. Muslim immunity against the Christian Gospel is deep. And so it is with the Catholic Progressive. Both faiths retain aspects of Revelation; both pervert them into an alternative religion, superior to actual Catholicism. And so like Focauld, we live peacefully, patiently in the dessert of Progressivism, commending our neighbors to God's love, extending always reverence and compassion, leaning ever more deeply into our Lord living in the Church. 

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

MUST SEE MOVIES: Letter to my Grandchildren

Not right away...you are all very busy with school, sports and such. But sometime...maybe when I have passed, if you are convalescing in bed, during vacation, on a long plane trip...PLEASE watch these movies. Each is a masterpiece, utterly unique, dramatic in the extreme, radiating a clear-luminous inner form, extravagant with superior writing, direction, action. I cannot rate them as each is its own utterly incomparable treasure.

Family

To Kill a Mockingbird

Princess Bride

Lord of the Rings (trilogy)

Star Wars (especially A New Hope, first one made)

Sound of Music

Truman Show

It's a Wonderful Life

Mary Poppins

Wizard of Oz

Last of the Mohicans

Chariots of Fire


Western

The Searchers

Red River

High Noon

She Wore a Yellow Ribbon

Shane

Big Country

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence


Crime

On the Waterfront

Godfather (1 and 2)

Goodfellas

A Bronx Tale

The Usual Suspects

Jason Bourne movies

The Sting

The Dark Knight


Romance

Quiet Man

Roman Holiday

Casablanca

Lost in Translation

El Cid

Tender Mercies


Religious

Keys of the Kingdom

The Mission

The Apostle

The Passion of Christ

Into the Wonder

Confess (Hitchcock) 

The Bells of St. Mary's

Ben Hur

10 Commandments 


Mature

The Passion of Christ

Fight Club (men only)

Schindler's List

Shawshank Redemption

Cool Hand Luke

Lawrence of Arabia

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

Saving Private Ryan

Gladiator

Cinderella Man

In the Name of the Father

From Here to Eternity

A Beautiful Mind

Terms of Endearment

L.A. Confidential

The list above is entirely personal and subjective. Some choices are admittedly lowbrow and sentimental. Most, however, are artistic treasures and of immense cultural significance. Notably, few are recent, most date from mid-20th century, the years of my childhood and youth. This has been for me a nostalgic exercise. The list represents some of the best of the world in which I came of age. Many are unknown to you, my Grandchildren, I hope you will enjoy them as I have. 

I would love to receive comments on movies I omitted or overrated. 

Let's Bring Back the Order of Penitents!

Since the explosion of the clerical sex scandal at the turn of the millennium, I have often thought:  We need to bring back the "Order of Penitents!" Wouldn't it be wonderful if even one of the hierarchs involved in the scandal, either an actual perpetrator or one who allowed it in negligence, were to publicly proclaim: "I did a serious sin. I repent. I ask pardon from God and the Church. I will spend the rest of my life in penance." Such a contrite soul would retire quietly, to a monastery or such, to live simply, prayerfully, sacrificially in a spirit of reparation. If a McCarrick, Maciel, Law, or any one of the perpetrators would do this, it would be a healing tonic for the entire Church. This has not happened!

The Ancient Order of Penitents

In the ancient Church, a contrite sinner could enter the order of penitents, after a serious sin (murder, adultery, sacrilege) by publicly confessing before the bishop and then entering an extended, serious period of penance. There are, for example, cases of kings repenting after the slaughter of innocents. They would not receive communion; would do public penance involving ashes, hair shirts, public humbling, pilgrimages, reparation of Churches, care for the sick and the needy. 

This spirit and protocol of penance has characterized all the authentic renewal movements of the Church, but some are noteworthy for the pronounced rigor involved. The early hermits, monks and all the monastic renewal movements come right to mind. The early Church lacked the religious orders to which we are accustomed but was structured by "orders:" catechumens preparing, virgins, widows, apostles, deacons, priests and bishops. So we can imagine that the graphic, pronounced nature of the order of penitents would elicit from the entire Church a spirit of repentance, sacrifice and reparation.

The Spirit of our Age: Anti-Penance...Indulgent, Narcissistic, Therapeutic

Perhaps no generation in human history compares with us boomers and our offspring in regard to entitlement, indulgence, narcissism, triumph of the therapeutic, spiritual lethargy, bourgeois mediority and demise of the ideals of holiness and heroism. In plain English, we are spoiled brats. We contrast sharply with our parents and ancestors who were tried and tested by poverty, persecution, warfare, migration, and suffering. Morally/spiritually inferior, we in general presume a progressive superiority of enlightenment, education, science and technology as we disparage the past, tradition, authority and revelation. And so, realities of contrition, humility, reparation, sacrifice, humility, and poverty are largely incoherent to our "enlightened" age...even to many clergy and religious.

The Spirit of Penitence

The core Gospel announcement of Jesus, already anticipated in John the Baptist and the prophets was: Repent! This involves two movements which mutually inform each other: recognition of and disgust for personal sin and evil; and desperate desire to come close to the God of mercy, justice, truth and holiness. The explosion of the Gospel across the Roman world and all subsequent renewal movements and saints have manifested this same co-inherence: aversion to sin and desire for God. 

Our age is not entirely secular, irreligious or non-spiritual. But overwhelmingly it has repressed the sense of sin, contrition, evil and repentance on behalf of the Sovereign-Imperial-Self. It lacks all sense of the supernatural, of the demonic, of the dramatic conflict between the eternity of heaven and that of hell. So we are left pathetic superficialities:  the triumph of the therapeutic, Marxist theologies of liberation, new age pantheism, sexual liberation,  hysteria about global warming, the "ground of being" of Tillich, Jungian archetypes, technological/scientific illusion of faux-Darwinian "progress" a la Teilhard, Fauci and Company. Everything except the humble, contrite, adoring soul!

Types of Penitents

Let's imagine different types of penitents. The first would be, as noted above, important people (especially clergy and religious, but also celebrities, politicians, etc.) who have gravely violated public trust and caused scandal by disloyalty, unchastity (especially abuse of the young and vulnerable), and such. Others would include:

Irregular Relationships. This group would welcome Catholics who find themselves in irregular quasi-conjugal situations: those divorced-remarried-without-annulment, homosexual unions, cohabitation without marriage. Such might find themselves in accord with the Church's disapproval of their situation but unwilling or unable to change it. They might well have some sound reasons for this: imagine for example the care of children of the union. By joining the order of penitents they would be acknowledging the objective disorder entailed, but seek the support of the Church and others struggling with similar situations to bring God's grace and wisdom to bear. They would clearly be humble and deferential to Church authority, rather than judgmental and superior. They would, of course, abstain from reception of the Eucharist, practicing a spiritual communion. The reception of absolution would be a prudential decision of the confessor but for sure they would receive spiritual support, blessings and guidance within the context of an urgency to convert and amend for sin.

Addicts and Co-Dependents who are enslaved by compulsivity but unable to free themselves. Here we imagine alcoholics, drug addicts, gamblers, sexaholics, workaholics, and such. This might also include emotional disorders of depression, anxiety, anger, mania and others. Obviously, this order of penitents would be well complimented by 12-step and Recovery (of Dr. Lowe) and similar groups, as well as counseling and therapy. As with the prior groups, these would be guided in spiritual direction in regard to the reception of absolution and communion. Since the disorder here is more subjective than objective and overt, there might be greater freedom in the inner forum of confession and spiritual direction.

Converts and Reverts who come into the Church from a serious life of sin would clearly cherish this more intense path of penance along with the Catechumenal Way.

Ordinary-Temporary penitents would be those of us who are moved by the Holy Spirit to endure a period of intense penance, possibly aware of our own sin or of the evil around us. This is currently being done by many men in Exodus 90, a 90-day spiritual boot camp, a rigorous-vigorous path to virility and freedom from addictions/pornography/lethargy/passivity entailing serious fasting from  sweets, alcohol, tv, video games, soda, snacks, unnecessary purchases and use of cell phone, meatless Wednesdays and Fridays, weekly fraternity meetings, anchor-partnership,  prayer including daily holy hour, cold showers, This stuff is not for sissies! I think all of us men (I am first on list) DESPERATELY need this! It seems to me that most women I know don't need this as they live sacrifice every day in care for family, career, home, and those needy and infirm close to them.

Conclusion

In light of these thoughts, I pray first for myself and secondly for those close to me (including you, dear reader): 

May we become inflamed, in the Holy Spirit, with a fire of humility, zeal, hatred of sin,  fraternal love, chastity, interior freedom, tender reverence for women, paternal confidence and thirst for God!


Sunday, August 11, 2024

Bohemian Catholic?

When I heard that a friend had described our family as "Bohemian Catholic" I was flattered. We do not deserve that accolade, but it has always been an aspiration of mine.

"Bohemian"

The word often refers to countercultures of artists, eccentrics, anarchists and others who reject mainstream, middle class or bourgeois culture and gather in places like Greenwich Village or the East Village of NYC. The word has a complicated relationship to the literal Bohemia, now  the Czech Republic, ethnically German/Slav, formerly part of the Holy Roman and then the Habsburg empires. The word was first used in France to designate the Gypsy or Roma people, an entirely alternative or "other" group, who had come from Bohemia. At a point in the middle ages, a gracious Bohemian king had welcomed the Roma and so many settled there as they were not welcome elsewhere. The origins of this ethnicity are unclear but it is thought that they migrated 1,500 years ago from India into Europe. Eventually the French expanded the word to refer to Gypsy-like groups, alternate countercultures. 

Can a Catholic be Bohemian?

Yes, but only with strict scrutiny. The word connotes (but does not denote): free love and sexual license, indulgence in drugs and alcohol, weak work ethic, an anarchic and iconoclastic sensibility. Perhaps more spiritually toxic is an underlying arrogance, superiority and condescension towards the ordinary. We see these clearly in the beatniks and hippies. Such are anti-Catholic. 

On the positive side, the expression suggests: poverty of spirit and identification with the poor, pursuit of the true-good-beautiful for itself, freedom of spirit, release from toxic social pressures, and rejection of the "bourgeois" as materialistic, careerist, consumerist, status obsessed, privileged, secure in wealth accumulation and its accoutrements, confident in the omnipotence of science/technology.

We are directed by Jesus to be "in the world but not of it." And so the discerning Catholic may find a prophetic element in the bohemian critique of society. Many of the important renewal movements were similarly disruptive in their times: hermits, monks, friars, active religious orders, and such.

Bohemian Catholics Today

1. Catholic Worker is a pure example. Dorothy Day herself lived a bohemian NYC life prior to her conversion to Catholicism and her encounter with the eccentric, exceptional Peter Maurin. Their poverty of life style, care for the poor, pacifism, consistent anarchism, political advocacy for the disadvantaged (farm workers, civil rights, etc.) and wholehearted rejection of "the system" together constitute a flourishing, vigorous Bohemian Catholicism. I myself have emulated their care for the poor and radical simplicity of life but not their anarchistic/pacifistic political ideology.

2. Neocatechumenal Way has its origins when Kiko Arguello literally buried himself with his Bible, guitar and (was it 10?) dogs with the Gypsies in a ghetto of Madrid, Spain. It would not describe itself this way but it is radically bohemian in the sense used here: an alternative Catholic culture given over to simplicity/poverty/community/praise/Eucharist/Scripture and an exhaustive critique of modern society as dystopian and apocalyptic. It cultivates its own habits, music, art, and patterns of life as it detaches in many ways from modern culture and much of the contemporary Church.

3.Others: In my own college years (1965-9) I was myself influenced by radical left critiques of society: Goodman, Illich, Day/Maurin, Schumacher, Ellul, Freire, Holt, King, Chavez, Rieff, Alinsky, Marcel, Maritain and others. I received these, especially Illich, as a deepening and clarification of my Catholicism. Later, immersion in the Charismatic Renewal brought an entirely new dimension. The Cultural Revolution elicited an further intensification of my Catholic resistance.  This was followed by exposure to the theology of Balthasar, John Paul, Ratzinger, the Schindlers and a more distinctively Catholic and philosophical critique of American modernity. 

Recent developments express aspects of a Bohemian Catholicism:  the "Benedict Option" of Rod Dreher, home schooling, staunch Catholic colleges (Franciscan, Benedictine, Ave Maria, etc.), Latin mass communities, and a new "post-liberal" Catholicism (Vance).

4. John Rapinich, my best friend, was a certified, authentic Bohemian Catholic in the league of Kiko and Dorothy Day. His Jewish mother spent her entire adult life in a mental hospital, where John worked later, and where she was later reconciled to his father. They were both baptized and married in the Church. We were there. John was raised by his father, a tough, non-religious Slavic sailor. John suffered nervous breakdown and shock treatments in the military. He opened a coffee shop which was the gathering spot for Kerouac, Ginsburg and his other beatnik friends. He travelled with Kerouac and became a character in "On the Road." He ends up in Mexico and has a powerful conversion into Catholicism. We met in our charismatic prayer group. He lived in our house: he was uncle to my children, little-big-brother to me as I was big-little-brother to him. He worked in the mental hospital where his parents lived; went on mission with a charismatic Jesuit priest to slums on the Mexican border; worked with Hawthorne Dominicans in care of the poor dying of cancer. His last decades he was passionately (everything John did was passionate!) involved in the first Neocatechumenal community in this country. His was an extraordinary intellect and heart. He inflamed my own bohemian tendencies. I was honored to be his friend.

Conclusion

The biggest temptation for the aspiring Bohemian Catholic is an aesthetic/moral arrogance that looks down upon the mainstream and the ordinary. Catholic and "catholic" instincts will countervail this tendency and strengthen Christlike friendships across cultures and classes, appreciating the good in all things!

I am currently rereading Myles Connolly's Mr. Blue, a favorite and formative read from my high school years. Blue is the ultimate Bohemian Catholic: a modern-urban St. Francis, madly in love with God, deliriously delighted with his Creation, militantly anti-bourgeois and absolutely impractical. I am motivated to emulate this Don Quixote. My wife thinks the book is a bad influence, intensifying my worst non-pragmatic and idealistic tendencies. She is herself a good balance to me with her own blend of the bohemian and the mainstream. Countervailing my intellectual abstraction, she is an artist, a superb cook, a gardener, an earth mother with a deep faith and a heart of gold. Together we have enjoyed an ordinary middle class Catholic life, with a delicious bohemian flavoring.