TRÁI TIM MẸ:  NƠI CON NƯƠNG NÁU - ĐƯỜNG ĐẾN VỚI CHÚA

"Chúa Giêsu muốn dùng con để làm cho Mẹ được nhận biết và yêu mến"

 

 

  November 19/2009 - Thursday 33rd Week of  Ordinary Time 

 

LITURGICAL/THEME MEDITATION:

"You did not know the time of your visitation"

UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENT(S):

On Europe's Cathedrals

SAINT OF THE DAY

Dedication of St. Peter and Paul

 GENERAL MARIOLOGY
Nativity of the Virgin Mary

 DIVINE MERCY

Divine Mercy in My Soul

My Preparation for Holy Communion

 TEACHING/TESTIMONY/CONVICTION:

BELIEFS

 

DAILY LITURGICAL MEDITATION

 
 
Thursday (11/19):  "You did not know the time of your visitation"

Scripture:  Luke 19:41-44

41 And when he drew near and saw the city he wept over it, 42 saying, "Would that even today you knew the things that make for peace! But now they are hid from your eyes. 43 For the days shall come upon you, when your enemies will cast up a bank about you and surround you, and hem you in on every side, 44 and dash you to the ground, you and your children within you, and they will not leave one stone upon another in you; because you did not know the time of your visitation."

Meditation: What is the enemy of peace in our homes, cities, and nations and what keeps us from a good relationship with God and with our neighbor? When Jesus approached the city of Jerusalem he wept over it because it inhabitants did not "know the things that make for peace" (Luke 19:42). Jesus fulfills the beatitude for those who weep and for those who make peace – "blessed are those who mourn ...blessed are the peacemakers" (Matthew 5:4,9). That is why Jesus went to Jerusalem to be crucified not only for the sins of its inhabitants but to reconcile the whole world – all who have sinned – with God. Mourning and weeping over sin and unfaithfulness leads to true peace and reconciliation not only with God but with our neighbor as well. Do you know the peace which makes for lasting friendship, joy, and unity?

Jesus' earthly ministry centers and culminates in Jerusalem, which scripture describes as the holy city, the throne of the Lord (Jeremiah 3:17);and the place which God chose for his name to dwell there (1Kings 11:13; 2 Kings 21:4; 2 Kings 23:27); and the holy mountain upon which God has set his king (Psalm 2:6). Jerusalem derives its name from the word "salem" which mean "peace". The temple in Jerusalem was a constant reminder to the people of God's presence with them.

Why does Jesus weep and lament for this city? It's inhabitants had rejected the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord because of their pride and unbelief. Now they refuse to listen to Jesus who comes as their Messiah – whom God has anointed to be their Savior and Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6). Jesus' entrance into Jerusalem was a gracious visitation of God's anointed King to his holy city. Jerusalem's lack of faith and rejection of the Messiah, however, leads to its devastation and destruction. Jesus' lamentation and prophecy echoes the lamentation of Jeremiah who prophesied the first destruction of Jerusalem and its temple. Jeremiah's lamentation offered hope of deliverance and restoration: "But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies are new every morning ...For the Lord will not cast off for ever, but, though he cause grief, he will have compassion according to the abundance of his steadfast love for he does not willingly afflict or grieve the sons of men" (Lamentations 3:21-22, 31-32). Jesus is the hope of the world because he is the only one who can truly reconcile us with God and with one another. Through his death and resurrection Jesus breaks down the walls of hostility and division by reconciling us with God. He gives us his Holy Spirit both to purify us and restore us as a holy people of God. Through Christ we become living temples of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19).  God has visited his people in the past and he continues to visit us through the gift and working of his Holy Spirit. Do you recognize God's gracious visitation today?

When God visits his people he comes to establish peace and justice by rooting out our enemies – sin and Satan who enslave us to fear and pride, rebellion and hatred, envy and covetousness, strife and violence, and every form of evil. That is why God both judges and purifies his people – to lead us from our sinful ways to his way of justice, peace, love, and holiness. God actively works among his people to teach us his ways and to save us from the destruction of sin and Satan. Are God's judgments unjust or unloving? Scripture tells us that "when God's judgments are revealed in the earth, the inhabitants of the world learn righteousness" (Isaiah 26:9). To pronounce judgment on sin is much less harsh than what will happen if those who sin are not warned to repent. The Lord in his mercy gives us grace and time to turn away from sin, but that time is right now. If we delay, even for a moment, we may discover that grace has passed us by and our time is up. Do you accept the grace to turn away from sin and to walk in God's way of peace and holiness?

"Lord Jesus, you have visited and redeemed your people. May I not miss the grace of your visitation today as you move to bring your people into greater righteousness and holiness of life. Purify my heart and mind that I may I understand your ways and conform my life more fully to your will."

Psalm 50:1-9, 14-15

1 The Mighty One, God the LORD, speaks and summons the earth  from the rising of the sun to its setting.
2 Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God shines forth.
3 Our God comes, he does not keep silence, before him is a devouring fire, round about him a mighty tempest.
4 He calls to the heavens above and to the earth, that he may judge his people:
5 "Gather to me my faithful ones, who made a covenant with me by sacrifice!"
6 The heavens declare his righteousness, for God himself is judge!
7 "Hear, O my people, and I will speak, O Israel, I will testify against you.  I am God, your God.
8 I do not reprove you for your sacrifices; your burnt offerings are continually  before me.
9 I will accept no bull from your house.
14 Offer to God a sacrifice of thanksgiving, and pay your vows to the Most High;
15 and call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall glorify me."
 

www.dailyscripture.net
 

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UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENTS

 

On Europe's Cathedrals

"Beauty Is a Privileged ... Way to Approach the Mystery of God"


 
VATICAN CITY, NOV. 18, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of Benedict XVI's address today during the general audience, which was held in Paul VI Hall.

* * *

Dear brothers and sisters,
 
In the catecheses of recent weeks I have presented some aspects of Medieval theology. However Christian faith, profoundly rooted in the men and women of those centuries, did not only give origin to masterpieces of theological literature, of thought and of faith. It also inspired one of the loftiest artistic creations of universal civilization: the cathedrals, true glory of the Christian Middle Ages. In fact, for almost three centuries, beginning in the 11th century, Europe witnessed an extraordinary artistic fervor. An ancient chronicler describes thus the enthusiasm and industry of that time: "It happened that the whole world, but especially in Italy and in Gaul, churches began to be reconstructed, although many, being in good conditions, had no need of this restoration. It was as though one village and another competed; it was as if the world, shaking off its old rags, wished to be clothed everywhere in the white garment of new churches. In sum, almost all the cathedral churches, a great number of monastic churches, and even village chapels, were then restored by the faithful" (Rodolfo el Glabro, Historiarum 3,4).
 
Several factors contributed to this rebirth of religious architecture. First of all, more favorable historical conditions, such as greater political security, accompanied by a constant increase in the population and the progressive development of cities, of exchanges and of wealth. Moreover, architects found increasingly elaborate technical solutions to increase the dimension of buildings, ensuring at the same time their firmness and majesty. However, it was thanks primarily to the spiritual ardor and zeal of monasticism then in full expansion that abbey churches were erected, where the liturgy could be celebrated with dignity and solemnity, and the faithful could remain in prayer, attracted by the veneration of the relics of the saints, object of countless pilgrimages. Thus the Romanesque churches and cathedrals were born, characterized by their longitudinal development along the naves to house numerous faithful; very solid churches, with thick walls, stone vaults and simple and essential lines.

A novelty is represented by the introduction of sculptures. As Romanesque churches were the place of monastic prayer and the faithful's worship, the sculptors, rather than being concerned with technical perfection, took care above all of the educational end. It was necessary to arouse in souls strong impressions, feelings that could incite them to flee from vice and evil and practice virtue, goodness -- the recurrent theme was the representation of Christ as Universal Judge, surrounded by the personages of revelation. In general it is Romanesque facades that offer this representation, to underline that Christ is the door that leads to heaven. The faithful, crossing the threshold of the sacred building, entered a time and space that were different from those of ordinary life. Beyond the main door of the church, believers in the sovereign, just and merciful Christ could -- the artists hoped -- anticipate eternal happiness in the celebration of the liturgy and in acts of piety carried out inside the sacred building.
 
In the 12th and 13th centuries, beginning in the north of France, another type of architecture spread in the construction of sacred buildings: the Gothic. This style had two new characteristics as compared to the Romanesque: the vertical thrust and luminosity. Gothic cathedrals showed a synthesis of faith and art expressed harmoniously through the universal and fascinating language of beauty, which still today awakens wonder. Thanks to the introduction of pointed vaults, which were supported by robust pillars, it was possible to notably raise the height [of these churches]. The thrust to the sublime was an invitation to prayer and at the same time was a prayer. The Gothic cathedral thus wished to translate in its architectural lines souls longing for God. Moreover, with the new technical solutions, the perimeter walls could be penetrated and embellished by colorful stained glass windows. In other words, the windows were transformed into great luminous figures, very adapted to instructing the people in the faith. In them -- scene by scene -- were narrated the life of a saint, a parable or other biblical events. From the painted windows a cascade of light was shed on the faithful to narrate to them the history of salvation and to involve them in this history.
 
Another merit of the Gothic cathedrals was the fact that, in their construction and decoration, the Christian and civil community participated in a different but coordinated way; the poor and the powerful, the illiterate and the learned participated, because in this common house all believers were instructed in the faith. Gothic sculpture made of cathedrals a "Bible of stone," representing the episodes of the Gospel and illustrating the contents of the Liturgical Year, from Christmas to the Lord's glorification. Spreading ever more in those centuries, moreover, was the perception of the Lord's humanity, and the sufferings of his Passion were represented in a realistic way: The suffering Christ (Christus patiens) became an image loved by all, and able to inspire piety and repentance for sins. Not lacking were the personages of the Old Testament, whose history became familiar to the faithful in such a way that they frequented the cathedrals as part of the one, common history of salvation. With their faces full of beauty, tenderness, intelligence, Gothic sculpture of the 13th century reveals a happy and serene piety, which is pleased to emanate a heartfelt and filial devotion to the Mother of God, seen at times as a young, smiling and maternal woman, and represented primarily as the sovereign of heaven and earth, powerful and merciful.

The faithful who filled the Gothic cathedrals wanted to find in them artistic expressions that recalled the saints, models of Christian life and intercessors before God. And there was no lack of "lay" manifestations of existence; hence there appeared here and there representations of work in the fields, in the sciences and in the arts. Everything was oriented and offered to God in the place where the liturgy was celebrated. We can understand better the meaning that was attributed to a Gothic cathedral, considering the text of an inscription on the main door of St. Denis in Paris: "Passer-by, you who want to praise the beauty of these doors, do not be dazzled either by the gold or the magnificence, but by the laborious work. Here shines a famous work, but may the heavens allow that this famous work which shines make spirits shine, so that with luminous truths they will walk toward the true light, where Christ is the true door."
 
Dear brothers and sisters, I now wish to underline two elements of Romanesque and Gothic art, which are also useful for us.

The first: the works of art born in Europe in past centuries are incomprehensible if one does not take into account the religious soul that inspired them. Marc Chagall, an artist who has always given testimony of the encounter between aesthetics and faith, wrote that "for centuries painters have dyed their brush in that colored alphabet that is the Bible." When faith, celebrated in a particular way in the liturgy, encounters art, a profound synchrony is created, because both can and want to praise God, making the Invisible visible. I would like to share this in the meeting with artists on Nov. 21, renewing that proposal of friendship between Christian spirituality and art, desired by my venerated predecessors, in particular by the Servants of God Paul VI and John Paul II.

The second element: the force of the Romanesque style and the splendor of the Gothic cathedrals remind us that the via pilchritudinis, the way of beauty, is a privileged and fascinating way to approach the Mystery of God. What is beauty, which writers, poets, musicians, and artists contemplate and translate into their language, if not the reflection of the splendor of the Eternal Word made flesh? St. Augustine states: "Ask the beauty of the earth, ask the beauty of the sea, ask the beauty of the ample and diffused air. Ask the beauty of heaven, ask the order of the stars, ask the sun, which with its splendor brightens the day; ask the moon, which with its clarity moderates the darkness of night. Ask the beasts that move in the water, that walk on the earth, that fly in the air: souls that hide, bodies that show themselves; the visible that lets itself be guided, the invisible that guides. Ask them! All will answer you: Look at us, we are beautiful! Their beauty makes them known. This mutable beauty, who has created it if not Immutable Beauty?" (Sermo CCXLI, 2: PL 38, 1134).
 
Dear brothers and sisters, may the Lord help us to rediscover the way of beauty as one of the ways, perhaps the most attractive and fascinating, to be able to find and love God.
 

 

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DAILY LITURGICAL SAINT

   

Wednesday, November 18, 2009


Dedication of St. Peter and Paul

 

St. Peter’s is probably the most famous church in Christendom. Massive in scale and a veritable museum of art and architecture, it began on a much humbler scale. Vatican Hill was a simple cemetery where believers gathered at St. Peter’s tomb to pray. In 319 Constantine built on the site a basilica that stood for more than a thousand years until, despite numerous restorations, it threatened to collapse. In 1506 Pope Julius II ordered it razed and reconstructed, but the new basilica was not completed and dedicated for more than two centuries.

St. Paul’s Outside the Walls stands near the Abaazia delle Tre Fontane, where St. Paul is believed to have been beheaded. The largest church in Rome until St. Peter’s was rebuilt, the basilica also rises over the traditional site of its namesake’s grave. The most recent edifice was constructed after a fire in 1823. The first basilica was also Constantine’s doing.

Constantine’s building projects enticed the first of a centuries-long parade of pilgrims to Rome. From the time the basilicas were first built until the empire crumbled under “barbarian” invasions, the two churches, although miles apart, were linked by a roofed colonnade of marble columns.
 

Comment:

Comment: Peter, the rough fisherman whom Jesus named the rock on which the Church is built, and the educated Paul, reformed persecutor of Christians, Roman citizen and missionary to the Gentiles, are the original odd couple. The major similarity in their faith-journeys is the journey’s end: Both, according to tradition, died a martyr’s death in Rome—Peter on a cross and Paul beneath the sword. Their combined gifts shaped the early Church and believers have prayed at their tombs from the earliest days.

 
Quote:

Quote: “It is extraordinarily interesting that Roman pilgrimage began at an…early time. Pilgrims did not wait for the Peace of the Church [Constantine’s edict of toleration] before they visited the tombs of the Apostles. They went to Rome a century before there were any public churches and when the Church was confined to the tituli [private homes] and the catacombs. The two great pilgrimage sites were exactly as today—the tombs, or memorials, of St. Peter upon the Vatican Hill and the tomb of St. Paul off the Ostian Way” (H.V. Morton, This Is Rome).

 

http://www.americancatholic.org/Features/SaintofDay

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GENERAL MARIOLOGY

 

 

Nativity of the Virgin Mary


The Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew
Translation by Saint Jerome

CHAP. 8. -- Now it came to pass, when she was fourteen s years old, and
on this account there was occasion for the Pharisees' saying that it was
now a custom that no woman of that age should abide in the temple of God,
they fell upon the plan of sending a herald through all the tribes of
lsrael, that on the third day all should come together into the temple of
the Lord. And when all the people had come together, Abiathar the high
priest rose, and mounted on a higher step, that he might be seen and heard
by all the people; and when great silence had been obtained, he said: Hear
me, O sons of Israel, and receive my words into your ears. Ever since this
temple was built by Solomon, there have been in it virgins, the daughters
of kings and the daughters of prophets, and of high priests and priests;
and they were great, and worthy of admiration. But when they came to the
proper age they were given in marriage, and followed the course of their
mothers before them, and were pleasing to God. But a new order of life has
been found out by Mary alone, who promises that she will remain a virgin to
God. Wherefore it seems to me, that through our inquiry and the answer of
God we should try to ascertain to whose keeping she ought to be entrusted.
Then these words found favour with all the synagogue. And the lot was east
by the priests upon the twelve tribes, and the lot fell upon the tribe of
Judah. And the priest said: To-morrow let every one who has no wife come,
and bring his rod in his hand. Whence it happened that Joseph (1) brought
his rod along with the young men. And the rods having been handed over to
the high priest, he offered a sacrifice to the Lord God, and inquired of
the Lord. And the Lord said to him: Put all their rods into the holy of
holies of God, and let them remain there, and order them to come to thee on
the morrow to get back their rods; and the man from the point of whose rod
a dove shall come forth, and fly towards heaven, and in whose hand the rod,
when given back, shall exhibit this sign, to him let Mary be delivered to
be kept.

    On the following day, then, all having assembled early, and an incense-
offering having been made, the high priest went into the holy of ho-lies,
and brought forth the rods. And when he had distributed the rods, (2) and
the dove came forth out of none of them, the high priest put on the twelve
bells (3) and the sacerdotal robe; and entering into the holy of holies, he
there made a burnt-offering, and poured forth a prayer. And the angel of
the Lord appeared to him, saying: There is here the shortest rod, of which
thou hast made no account: thou didst bring it in with the rest, but didst
not take it out with  them. When thou hast taken it out, and hast given it
him whose it is, in it will appear the sign of which I spoke to thee. Now
that was Joseph's rod; and because he was an old man, he had been cast off,
as it were, that he might not receive her, but neither did he himself wish
to ask back his rod. (4) And when he was humbly standing last of all, the
high priest cried out to him with a loud voice, saying: Come, Joseph, and
receive thy rod; for we are waiting for thee. And Joseph came up trembling,
because the high priest had called him with a very loud voice. But as soon
as he stretched forth his hand, and laid hold of his rod, immediately from
the top of it came forth a dove whiter than snow, beautiful exceedingly,
which, after long flying about the roofs of the temple, at length flew
towards the heavens. Then all the people congratulated the old man, saying:
Thou hast been made blessed in thine old age, O father Joseph, seeing that
God hath shown thee to be fit to receive Mary. And the priests having said
to him, Take her, because of all the tribe of Judah thou alone hast been
chosen by God; Joseph began bashfully to address them, saying: I am an old
man, and have children; why do you hand over to me this infant, who is
younger than my grandsons? Then Abiathar the high priest said to him:
Remember, Joseph, how Dathan and Abiron and Core perished, because they
despised the will of God. So will it happen to thee, if thou despise this
which is commanded thee by God. Joseph answered him: I indeed do not
despise the will of God; but I shall be her guardian until I can ascertain
concerning the will of God, as to which of my sons can have her as his
wife. Let some virgins of her companions, with whom she may meanwhile spend
her time, be given for a consolation to her. Abiathar the high priest
answered and said: Five virgins indeed shall be given her for consolation,
until the appointed day come in which thou mayst receive her; for to no
other can she be joined in marriage.

    Then Joseph received Mary, with the other five virgins who were to be
with her in Joseph's house. These virgins were Rebecca, Sephora, Susanna,
Abigea, and Cael; to whom the high priest gave the silk, and the blue, (5)
and the fine linen, and the scarlet, and the purple, and the fine flax. For
they cast lots among themselves what each virgin should do, and the purple
for the veil of the temple of the Lord fell to the lot of Mary. And when
she had got it, those virgins said to her: Since thou art the last, and
humble, and younger than all, thou hast deserved to receive and obtain the
purple. And thus saying,  as it were in words of annoyance, they began to
call her queen of virgins. While, however, they were so doing, the angel of
the Lord appeared in the midst of them, saying: These words shall not have
been uttered by way of annoyance, but prophesied as a prophecy most true.
They trembled, therefore, at the sight of the angel, and at his words, and
asked her to pardon them, and pray for them.

 
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DIVINE MERCY

 

Divine Mercy In my soul
 

The Mercy of the Lord I will sing Forever.
Divine Mercy in my soul.
Sr. Faustina, Diary
 

My Preparation for
Holy Communion

J.M.J.
 

Today, my soul has the disposition of a child. I unite myself to God as a child to its father. I feel completely like a child of God.

When I had received Holy Communion, I had a deeper knowledge of the heavenly Father and of His Fatherhood in relation to souls.

Today I live, glorifying the Holy Trinity. I thank God that He has deigned to adopt us as His children, through grace.

Today, I want to be transformed, whole and entire, into the love of Jesus and to offer myself, together with Him, to the Heavenly Father.

During Holy Mass, I saw the infant Jesus in the chalice, and He said to me, I am dwelling in your heart as you se Me in this chalice.

After Holy Communion, I felt the beating of the heart of Jesus in my own heart. Although I have been aware, for a long time, that Holy Communion continues in me until the next Communion, today – and throughout the whole day – I am adoring Jesus in my heart and asking Him, by His grace, to protect little children from the evil that threatens them. A vivid and even physically felt presence of God continues throughout the day and does not in the least interfere with my duties.

Today, my soul desires to show, in a special way, its love to Jesus. when the Lord entered my heart, I threw myself down at His feet like a rosebud. I want the fragrance of my love to rise continually to the foot of Your throne. You see, Jesus, in this rosebud, all my heart offered to You, not only now when my heart is burning like a live coal, but also during the day, when I will give you proofs of my love by faithfulness to divine grace.

Today, all the difficulties and sufferings that I will encounter, I will quickly seize, like rosebuds, to throw at the feet of Jesus. Little matter that the hand, or rather the heart, bleeds…



 

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 CATHOLIC  TEACHING/CONVICTION/TESTIMONY

   

BELIEFS

Many young Catholics stay with the church despite disagreeing on some issues, a study finds.
 

By Peter Steinfels

Y

oung Catholics are different. Everyone has been saying that for years, and with good reason.
 

Roman Catholicism has undergone enormous changes since the early 1960's when the Second Vatican Council authorized major changes in rituals and a recasting of venerable practices and teachings. Common sense dictated that Catholics coming of age since then would be different.
 

But how different? In what ways different? Roughly 20 million American Catholics are in their 20's and 30's - 40 percent of the adult Catholic population - and most opinions about them have been based largely on anecdotes and impressions.
 

From now on, those opinions will have to be checked against "Young Adult Catholics," recently published by the University of Notre Dame Press. Using the records of urban, suburban and rural parishes, four scholars identified individuals who as adolescents had been confirmed in the Catholic Church in the 1970's and 80's and, by 1997, would be between the ages of 20 and 39.
 

They tracked down a representative sample of more than 800 of these men and women and interviewed them about their religious histories and their beliefs and practices. And in view of the swelling number of Latino Catholics, the sampling was designed to allow accurate comparisons between Latinos and non-Latinos who had been confirmed.
 

The authors offer an important proviso: Probably 30 percent to 40 percent of non-Latino Catholics and 60 percent to 70 percent of Latino Catholics in this age group were never confirmed. Despite the book's title, then, the sample does not represent all young adults who were reared Catholic but rather a group that appears somewhat above average in education and exposure to church life.
 

Some of the results were surprising. "Since we had read so much about Latinos leaving the Catholic Church, we expected that more Latinos than non-Latinos would have left," the authors write. "But this is not the case. The rates of leaving were nearly the same."
 

In fact, the rates of leaving for both groups were relatively low - approximately 10 percent.
 

"The vast majority have remained Catholic and probably will stay Catholic," the authors conclude, "even if they're unhappy and even if they're disconnected entirely from parish life."
 

At least compared with the confirmed mainline Protestants that one of the authors had previously studied, "Catholics have a kind of glue holding them closer to their church."
 

Furthermore, when it came to core beliefs about the divinity of Jesus, the presence of God in the sacraments and a life after death involving judgment, reward and punishment, 80 percent to 90 percent of these young adults adhered to the church's traditional teachings.
 

Indeed, most of those who no longer considered themselves Catholic had not gone in a secular direction. They were actually more religiously observant and more traditional in their beliefs than those who remained Catholic. Generally, they had left Catholicism not because of objections to it but because of intermarriage or an attraction to another church.
 

The study also found that these Catholics overwhelmingly supported expanded roles for women and lay people in the church - more or less the liberal position in many church disputes - and that this was even more true of those who attended church regularly, were active in their parishes and held more traditional beliefs than of those who did not.
 

Active and inactive alike, these Catholics tended to give their parishes high ratings, which surprised the researchers, who had heard many complaints about parishes in focus groups and intensive interviews.
 

But other findings augured less well for the future of American Catholicism, especially when one keeps in mind that the group surveyed is above average in its religious upbringing.
 

The study confirmed evidence of widespread disagreement with church teachings on sexual issues and of distancing from church authority and parish life. Many of these young adults echo the popular mantra of being spiritual but not religious. They are not angry at the church, like some of their elders, but detached.
 

Most fundamentally, only about one in five of these self-described Catholics was attending church weekly, raising the question whether their adherence to Catholic emphasis on sacraments was more theoretical than real.
 

The authors estimate that only 10 percent of their sample constitute "core Catholics," who attend Mass regularly, pray daily, are involved in their parishes, take papal teachings seriously (even when sometimes disagreeing with particulars) and do not separate their spirituality from the institutional church, its symbols and disciplines.
 

Many others continue to hold their Catholicism as "something very special" without seeming able to identify that "something" or provide much evidence that they can hand it on to their children.
 

The authors are not passing judgment. They note the turmoil that has affected the church internally and the pressures in the United States to affirm all faiths as equally true and good.
 

The result, they conclude, is that "many young adult Catholics have a difficult time articulating a coherent sense of Catholic identity."
 

While these young Catholics like being Catholic, the authors continued, "they are not sure what is distinctive about Catholicism."
 

"Young Adult Catholics" is rich in other findings, not a few of them seemingly contradictory and hard to interpret. Perhaps because there are four authors - Dean R. Hoge and William D. Dinges from Catholic University of America in Washington, Sister Mary Johnson from Emmanuel College in Boston and Juan L. Gonzales Jr., from California State University at Hayward - the text sometimes swings between seeing the glass half-full and half-empty.
 

In a phone conversation this week, Professor Dinges, who teaches religious studies (the other authors are sociologists), admitted to belonging to the half-empty school.
 

"Our study is a flashing yellow light," he said, a warning that the church must pay more attention to the young.
 

Maybe their findings - and that warning - can be captured in a paraphrase of the line made famous by Gen. Douglas MacArthur: "Young adult Catholics never leave; they just fade away."
 

 

 

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