In Pro-Life Thought:
(1) In First Things, Nora Calhoun writes about how her
experiences as a midwife and as a caretaker for the elderly have shaped her
convictions about the value of human life. She speaks to the importance
of human embodiment, writing that “there are things that can be learned – can be
said – only in the language of bodies.” The bodies of babies reveals that
“it doesn’t matter how early the human heart beats. . .Being of human descent
is enough,” and the bodies of women in labor teach that women “don’t need to be
protected from the children conceived within their bodies.” She urges pro-life
Christians not to “confine [themselves] to ideas” and to engage in actual “corporal works
of mercy” – acts of mercy based not on theoreticals but on the act of caring
for physical bodies. Otherwise, she says, we risk “los[ing] the riches
vocabulary of human dignity, one better expressed in embraces and diaper
changes than in words.”
(2) It is a commonplace concept in modern Western
culture to suppose that birth control is a necessary concomitant to economic
development and environmental protection. We are told that the world is
“overpopulated” and that this is wreaking havoc on the economic growth of
third-world countries and on the natural world. This assumption has
trickled down into our personal lives, as many couples forego having large
families for the sake of “financial security.” But in Ethika
Politika, Artur Rosman writes of the dangers of
this assumption, arguing that as a culture we have replaced a concept of
fertility as the reproduction of children with a concept of fertility as “an
endless multiplication of stuff." Such a culture, he
warns, “will not prove. . . to be kind to each other, the rest of the
world, and the environment.” He argues that Catholicism can be a sign of
contradiction against this cultural trend, “reconfigur[ing] the parish as a
site of fertile resistance to capitalist (in-)fertility.”
In Politics:
On the Liturgy:
The New York Times reports that “houses
of worship” are becoming increasingly informal: “More and more Americans
worship in congregations where drums are played, words or images are projected
on screens, and praise is expressed via upstretched hands.” On the one
hand, some such as Fr. Thomas Reese argue that the Catholic
Church should get on board with these changes, “revis[ing] liturgical practices
to allow people to celebrate their Christian faith in ways that better fit
contemporary culture.” On the other, however, some like Rod Dreher in The American
Conservative argue that liturgy is about transcendence of (not
capitulation to) culture, and that liturgical reform should not be based on a
desire to empower the community to express not its own culture but rather its
conception of “the transcendent and eternal.”
In Philosophy/Theology:
In The Week, Damon Linker
takes on popular scientific atheist Sam Harris’ new book Waking Up: A Guide
to Spirituality Without Religion for rejecting the Western philosophical
and theological tradition in his search for spirituality, turning instead to a
modified form of Eastern spiritual practices.
Linker specifically questions Harris’ rejection of the concept of a
soul, which Linker feels is a key component of Western philosophy’s attempts to
answer questions about the meaning of life and “lasting fulfillment.”
Opinion:
As evidenced by the news, as in any big family, Catholics disagree and even argue all the time. Have you ever found yourself frustrated by fellow Catholics? Fr. Dwight Longnecker has some advice.
As evidenced by the news, as in any big family, Catholics disagree and even argue all the time. Have you ever found yourself frustrated by fellow Catholics? Fr. Dwight Longnecker has some advice.
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