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An extraordinary man ("hurrah for the Catholics!")
The Ottawa Citizen ^ | Sunday, July 28, 2002 | David Warren

Posted on 07/30/2002 2:26:16 AM PDT by Int

An extraordinary man

David Warren
The Ottawa Citizen

Sunday, July 28, 2002

All week in Toronto, I've been sharing sidewalk, streetcar, and subway space with the kerchiefed young assembled here, from every part of the world, for the mass at which the Holy Father will preside at Downsview this morning.

I have spent my life trying to read faces, I look at faces wherever I walk, and I have walked by now through so many cities. The human face -- the eyes, and also the hands -- are the portals to the human soul. They communicate, both to knowing friends, and to total strangers. We would not even need language, were we not so close to blind; and in another world, we may see each other directly. "By the age of 50, everyone has the face he deserves," George Orwell noted on his deathbed. Even by the age of five, a face can give its owner away.

I was amazed by all these young, faithful, Catholic faces; including the Canadians among them, mostly from out of town, who mixed in with the foreigners as fellow pilgrims. (At Bathurst station, a Canadian flag on a hockey stick, among a dozen other banners.)

I have seldom seen together so many decent-looking young faces; not angry, not cynical, not posturing, not smartass, not basically unhappy. A general absence of rings and warpaint; but not of that wonderful flush, that rouge, which belongs in the faces of the young and old, that naturally infectious joy in being. Girls and boys mixed together, greeting each other timidly and respectfully: When did I last see that among the young? (Especially in Toronto, where, according to my friend Scott Symons, "There is no blood left to be shed in the battle of the sexes.")

An acquaintance met on the subway by chance, found these kids all too irritating. "It's a cult, they've all been brainwashed," he said. My sincerest congratulations to the parents of all these thousands of kids, for finding a way to brainwash them in the presence of a million others, and the peer pressure that would have set them straight. Not all of my generation failed; not entirely.

I'm an Anglican myself; but hurrah for the Catholics!

They came here because they are Catholics and this is their Pope. They came because he is not merely Pope, but an extraordinary man, a real man, in a world of straw men, victims, and cowards. In a characteristically astute column carried by UPI, the Lutheran writer Uwe Siemon-Netto explained the phenomenon of John Paul II; how he appeals more to the young than to their parents: "Why are they not put off by the fact that he is often barely audible and keeps dabbing spittle from his mouth? Why do they flock to him rather than some snazzy yuppie cleric with a tailor-made dog collar under his immaculately shaved and perfumed chin? ... Because it's springtime for trustworthy old men -- springtime for integrity." (I know: half my readers may now be smirking at the thought of priestly sex scandals, recently exposed; most of them probably unaware, that what the priests are rightly being nailed for, has been happening in every other walk of life.)

The young today are, to a remarkable degree, looking beyond their parents for guidance, for their "role models" -- looking beyond that failed and lost generation of which I am a member. Reaching past their parents to what remains of their grandparents, and to the other old, to get some hint about how to live. They don't want to be "ironical," they don't want to take the easy way out, they don't want something for nothing; they yearn to become fully real.

It is hard for most of my generation to imagine what could possess a person, to put on a kerchief and join the "papal youth." We, after all, took off our clothes, to frolic in the mud of Woodstock; and being religious was so uncool. ("Reality is for people who can't handle drugs.") And the generation immediately after, which signed itself with an "X", didn't even touch the earth at Woodstock.

It is left to the present crop of kids to resume the climb, or continue the descent. So many are looking for handholds above them. Few have anything like the equipment that would normally be needed for the climb. Few were raised in the principles and doctrines, the habits of body and mind, that once held Christian society together.

And yet the first thing to know about these kids -- the ones whose faces I was watching in Toronto -- is that they are not bitter. This is elemental in their hope -- they are seekers, not accusers. So many are hungry, and want to be filled; feel that craving not only for love, but to love and be worthy of love; to stand on their feet and say the word: "forever."

In the Pope they see a mysterious strength -- a strength that is drawn from hidden quarters. They see in his body the conquest of pain, and in his eyes a light through death. Here is a man who is not a fake, who is genuinely holy. They see the father that they never had; and through him sense our father in heaven.

What a mistake it would have been, if this Holy Father had cheapened the Church, by trying to "change with the times": by ordaining women, accepting "birth control," allowing homosexual "marriage," gutting the liturgy, appointing "hip" bishops -- the whole gamut of my generation's minimum demands. Such experiments have been tried in most of the other mainstream churches; they have helped to empty them. The young want something more than convenience from their Church -- or moral support for immoral behaviour. They don't want to sever the roots that are sunk down through the ages, they want to touch the living oak.

In the words of Christ, "One cannot have two masters." We may well fall into sin, and frequently do; we can and must forgive others, and even learn to forgive ourselves; "the law of love transcends the commandments." But we cannot change the definition of sin. That is for God; and God changes nothing.

The Pope has told them, as Mother Teresa and other true heroes have told them, that we can't remake the Church to suit the post-modern world. For after all, it is the post-modern world that isn't going to be around tomorrow.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: catholicism; catholiclist; christianity; pope; youngpeople
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1 posted on 07/30/2002 2:26:16 AM PDT by Int
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To: Int
GREAT ARTICLE! Thanks! Worth repeating...

In the words of Christ, "One cannot have two masters." We may well fall into sin, and frequently do; we can and must forgive others, and even learn to forgive ourselves; "the law of love transcends the commandments." But we cannot change the definition of sin. That is for God; and God changes nothing.

The Pope has told them, as Mother Teresa and other true heroes have told them, that we can't remake the Church to suit the post-modern world. For after all, it is the post-modern world that isn't going to be around tomorrow.

So many of my Catholic friends have been hurt by the small minority of perverts who have tried to redefine the Church so that it better suits their sins rather than to serve God. I have been compelled to support this purge of leadership of all Christian sects which choose the enemies over our Lord.

No one more than the Catholics want to see these freaks and sickos kicked out of the Church and cleansed altogther. Really, there is no such thing as a "Homosexual or Pedophile priest. If they are engaged in such an activity that defines them as such they have long sensed abandoned serving God and instead given in to the enemy.

It's heartbreaking for good Christians of all groups to see.

2 posted on 07/30/2002 3:48:54 AM PDT by Caipirabob
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To: Int
"'"The young today are, to a remarkable degree, looking beyond their parents for guidance, for their "role models" -- looking beyond that failed and lost generation of which I am a member. Reaching past their parents to what remains of their grandparents, and to the other old, to get some hint about how to live. They don't want to be "ironical," they don't want to take the easy way out, they don't want something for nothing; they yearn to become fully real."'"

3 posted on 07/30/2002 5:05:06 AM PDT by SMEDLEYBUTLER
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To: Int
They came because he is not merely Pope, but an extraordinary man, a real man, in a world of straw men, victims, and cowards...In the Pope they see a mysterious strength -- a strength that is drawn from hidden quarters. They see in his body the conquest of pain, and in his eyes a light through death. Here is a man who is not a fake, who is genuinely holy.
4 posted on 07/30/2002 5:13:15 AM PDT by wimpycat
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To: Int; Salvation
What a teriffic, uplifting article!

But what does the comment about Gen X not even touching the ground at Woodstock mean? I guess I'm thick headed on only 4.5 hours of sleep :-)

Somebody please 'splain! Thanks. (Yes, I'm a GenXer)
5 posted on 07/30/2002 5:36:08 AM PDT by Marie Antoinette
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: Int
a real man, in a world of straw men, victims, and cowards.

Well said.

7 posted on 07/30/2002 6:32:16 AM PDT by Steve0113
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To: *Catholic_list
Index Bump
8 posted on 07/30/2002 8:10:05 AM PDT by Free the USA
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To: Free the USA
For after all, it is the post-modern world that isn't going to be around tomorrow.

Our generation saw God take down marxism as a viable philosophy. We may live to see God discredit Islam. However, secular humanism is in line, too, as an idol for destruction.

9 posted on 07/30/2002 8:21:45 AM PDT by TomSmedley
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To: Polycarp; patent; Salvation
Please ping the faithful for me. Ago gratias.
10 posted on 07/31/2002 7:53:13 PM PDT by Siobhan
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To: Siobhan; patent; sitetest; JMJ333; narses; Catholicguy; *Catholic_list; Notwithstanding; ...
pinging as requested...
11 posted on 07/31/2002 8:29:54 PM PDT by Polycarp
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To: Int
Thank you for a wonderful post.

The Pope has told them, as Mother Teresa and other true heroes have told them, that we can't remake the Church to suit the post-modern world. For after all, it is the post-modern world that isn't going to be around tomorrow.

:-)

12 posted on 07/31/2002 8:34:04 PM PDT by american colleen
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To: Int; Siobhan; Polycarp; american colleen; nickcarraway
I couldn't find the best lines to quote ... this brought me to tears and I pray for all of the youngsters that we are raising among us that we can instill in them the love of Christ and love of sheer Goodness that these young people reflect.

There is always this gift of Hope and our young, whether children, grandchildren, nieces, nephew or friends' children are our greatest achievement or our biggest folly ... may the Holy Spirit fill us with the Spirit to share with them all and fan that Hope into Righteous thoughts, words, deeds and lives!
13 posted on 07/31/2002 9:04:52 PM PDT by AKA Elena
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To: AKA Elena
Yes,there are so many quotable lines,some how I was drawn to "to stand on their feet,and say the word 'forever'".

Often,I just repeat "Glory be to the Father,the Son and the Holy Spirit.As it was in the beginning,is now,and ever shall be,world without end.Amen".To be a part of that foreverness is riveting and the source of great hope and promise.Forever.

14 posted on 07/31/2002 9:46:34 PM PDT by saradippity
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To: AKA Elena
Bump
15 posted on 07/31/2002 9:56:10 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: Int; dansangel
THanks forthe bump great reading. It's nice to read something positive once and a while......
16 posted on 08/01/2002 12:58:56 AM PDT by .45MAN
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To: Int
Very good article. Particularly surprising coming from the secularized Northland!
17 posted on 08/01/2002 4:43:19 AM PDT by livius
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To: Int
Bump
18 posted on 08/01/2002 4:51:52 AM PDT by Phaedrus
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To: Int
The young want something more than convenience from their Church -- or moral support for immoral behaviour. They don't want to sever the roots that are sunk down through the ages, they want to touch the living oak.

They aren't alone in desiring such, and I welcome them to the fray. Their presence, their prayers, their Faith, and their actions are greatly appreciated. "The few, the proud, the Church Militant!"

AB

19 posted on 08/01/2002 6:25:50 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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