Countervailing the barbaric yawps of the blogosphere's sinister
side are the remarkable Good Friday meditations composed by
Archbishop Angelo Comastri, which are worth reading in full. Occasionally the Archbishop succeeds
in identifying exactly the worst of postmodernity's worst ills.
This timely precision is a victory for any religion. It is
particularly so for Catholicism today.
But the rest of us win as well simply by hearing that such as
this is, and can be, still publicly spoken: "our affluence is
making us less human, our entertainment has become a drug, a source
of alienation, and our society's incessant, tedious message is an
invitation to die of selfishness ... Today we seem to be witnessing
a kind of anti-Genesis, a counter-plan, a diabolical pride aimed at
eliminating the family. There is a move to reinvent mankind, to
modify the very grammar of life as planned and willed by God. ...
Today bodies are constantly bought and sold on the streets of our
cities, on the streets of our televisions, in homes that have
become like streets."
I have worried for some time along with the enraged worryworts
of the left -- but I worry about their panic itself. My long
meditation on this Fear is posted here; in short, under the strain of a rude reality
that will not leave us be, we the leisured postmodern West are
headed for a crisis of identity that cannot be treated, as is our
slavish habit, by therapy. Too few seem to understand this; even
fewer seem to speak it. That the heirs of a battered and dissipated
Christianity are among the loudest to speak on that count is
startling as it is heartening.
topics:
Television, Religion, Catholicism
About the Author
James Poulos is a doctoral student at Georgetown and the former Political Editor of Culture11. His writing has been published by The American Conservative, The National Interest, The New Atlantis, Partnership for a Secure America, and The Weekly Standard. In addition to AmSpecBlog, he has blogged at The American Scene, Doublethink, and Postmodern Conservative, which he founded. With degrees in political science and law from Duke and USC, he is currently at work on a dissertation about life after Napoleon. In his spare time he anti-blogs at Pish Tosh.