On Being and Staying Catholic in the Modern World
Editor’s
note: The following is an address delivered June 7, 2014 to the graduating
class of St. Michael the Archangel High School in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
I love being here at this
school. I love
what you are trying to do.
I am moved
by the faith of your parents, and the generosity of your families, and the
self-sacrifices of your teachers, grade by grade, room by room….
Now a
period of huge decisions hits you in the face. First, what to do after high
school—work? a career? enlist in the Marines? go to college? But then, which
college? You also face the choice of committing yourself to a spouse, your
lifetime-best-friend, over the next few years. It is a wonderful time in life.
But it sure hits hard, and fast.
And
another big choice: You must make your adult commitment either to become a
lifelong Catholic, on your own, or to leave that faith behind. That is a
perfectly normal choice. Every human being must make it. More on that in a
moment.
First, let
me tell you a story. Once, I was given an honorary degree by a well-known
Catholic university, and the class valedictorian said the most important thing
his class had learned in its four years of university education is that
everything is relative.
I could
hear hundreds of parental hearts sink. Why did they spend scores of thousands
of dollars on this smart lad’s Catholic education, when they could have had him
come out a relativist at the much cheaper state university? One thing I assure
you. They did not want him to break from his faith. They love their faith too
much. May I tell you one secret? There is no fear greater in the hearts of the
last two generations of Catholic parents than that the invisible gas of
relativism, of unbelief, will seep into the minds of their children, and steal
from them what we parents consider the most precious inheritance we can pass
on.
May I pry into your personal affairs, dear graduates? Does each
of you know for how many decades your own family has passed on the faith from
generation to generation, even, for how many centuries? Are you going to be the one who breaks
the link?
The iffy
thing about the Catholic faith is this: that it must be chosen afresh in every
generation. It cannot be inherited. It must be chosen. You yourself must choose
it freely. Or you—you by yourself—may reject it. We parents may have broken
hearts about your choice. But we know the rules of the game. Christian faith
must be inalienably personal. It must be personally chosen. The root of all the
world’s freedoms comes from that one. As the great historian of Liberty, Lord
Acton of Cambridge University, concluded: “The history of liberty is coincident
with the history of Christianity.”
St.
Michael’s has respected that liberty. Acts of personal liberty are beautiful
works, as radiant as the best days of June. It is a privilege to be with you,
educated in this most personal of all liberties.
Still, I bet that most of you are not Christians, not yet. There
are two immense dangers in becoming a Christian. First, they put people like us
in prison, make fun of us, taunt us, and kill us. A young woman in Sudan has
been sentenced to 100 lashes. Why? Because she has married a
Christian, and had their child baptized Christian. She has been given a chance
to renounce Christianity before the court and has refused. Therefore, after she
has been whipped 100 times, she must be killed. She has blasphemed Allah,
turned away from Allah.
The last
eighty years have seen by far the bloodiest years for Christians, the most
ruthless persecution, in the history of the Church. Nazism and Communism
recently carried out the deaths of millions of Christians and Jews, often in
most horrible ways. In Nigeria today, young Christian girls are being kidnapped
by the hundreds for sale as slaves. Throughout Pakistan, bombs are set off in
Christian churches, men with machine guns swing church doors open and mow down
everyone in sight. Long, long lines of Christian refugees are being driven out
of their homelands with nothing of their own but their strength of soul.
Don’t you
dare think that the persecution of Christians will never come to America. Oh,
for a long time it will not be that severe. First you will be called names.
Then, when you voice your public beliefs, you will be punished for what you
say. “You are on the wrong side of history,” they will say. “You are a bigot.”
The things you believe must not be said, ever, in an enlightened era. A priest
here and a nun there will be banished when they preach the gospel on
controversial matters—unless they confess the opinions of secularists.
In sum, one reason not to be a Christian today is that it may
bring bad things on your head if you actually believe what Catholics have
always believed, and then say so, even at a dinner party with fellow workers
whom you had thought of as friends. Try it and see.
A second
powerful reason is that television, Hollywood, and music-makers intend with all
their lures to entice you into a way of love and sex that is not only not
Christian, but positively destructive of those who fall into it. The media do
not report the damage.
In France
seventy years ago (as we remind ourselves this weekend), and on Iwo Jima and
Okinawa and Tarawa, our grandparents did not fight bitter and bloody wars for
liberty, only so that we could live like pigs. Most of the world looks at how
we live, in our films and television shows and during our Super Bowl halftimes
(in the whole world, the largest television audiences of all time), and says in
disgust that we are decadent. Vladimir Putin said that just last week.
Well, you
personally can live however you wish. But think through the consequences. For
yourself. For the world of your friends and families. For the whole of American
society.
Look. The only reason you should choose your Christian faith,
and become more thoughtful and serious about it, is because you judge it to be true. Because you hold firmly
that its vision of who you are, and how great you are called to become, is more
true to your experience than anything else you know. Christian faith speaks
truth, not doubletalk. None of this: “I’m all right, you’re all right. It’s all
good.”
When you examine your conscience, you know exactly where you
have sometimes done things you know you should not have done. And other times when
you deliberately didnot do
what you know you should have done. You know from
experience, and I know from my experience, that Christian faith begins with the
sinner—you, me. Original sin (the fact that every human being ever born
sometimes sins) is one doctrine that no one needs to take on faith. All we need
is to look coolly at some of our own past behavior.
Christian Faith is a Common
Sense Faith
Where would this country be, if it had not been constituted by Christians? For Christians know from experience, their own experience first of all, that no man should be trusted with too much power. Every power must be limited by checks and balances. Why? Because every man sometimes falls. Our Constitution is not written for saints. It is written for us, as from our bitter experience we know ourselves. There is no use for building a Republic for saints. There are not enough saints to fill a Republic. And the few there are, are difficult to live with.
Where would this country be, if it had not been constituted by Christians? For Christians know from experience, their own experience first of all, that no man should be trusted with too much power. Every power must be limited by checks and balances. Why? Because every man sometimes falls. Our Constitution is not written for saints. It is written for us, as from our bitter experience we know ourselves. There is no use for building a Republic for saints. There are not enough saints to fill a Republic. And the few there are, are difficult to live with.
Don’t you
think experience shows Christianity is right about this fact of human life, the
way even those people trying so hard to be good sometimes fall? Christian faith
is just straight about things. No pretending we are better than we are.
As a great Protestant thinker once put it: “Man’s capacity for
justice makes democracypossible, but
man’s inclination to injustice makes
democracy necessary.”
Another
truth on which Jewish and Christian life is based is this: God made us all,
every one of us, to suffer. Even the good people, like Job, suffer. In fact,
the Lord directly tells us, looking right into our eyes, what to expect from
Him: “Those He loves, He makes to suffer.” Look at His Son, the Suffering
Servant Who best shows us what the inner life of God is.
Why does
God do this? Why does He make the good suffer? I remember the sweetest person
in our family, a cousin with a difficult husband and darling children, who
quite young was stricken with cancer, and for months and months wasted away in
front of our eyes. She was as thin as a child when at last she was released
from her pain. Very little left of her.
Are there any families in this assembly that have not experienced pain in the family like
this? Any?
My own
dear, dear wife died in that way, over a period of four years. It was almost
unendurable for her to have her life end so, so many dreams not yet
accomplished, so much painting and sculpting she had planned to get done. Now
those hopes were sliding away from her. She never complained, not once. But at
her side it was extremely hard to watch.
Our God,
the Jewish and Christian God, is not a “nice” God. He treats us like adults. He
expects us to be brave, and to go on loving others even under the lash of great
pain. He set the example Himself. He told us that each of us, too, would have
to take up our own cross, and die with Him. He didn’t beat around the bush. He
told us exactly what to expect.
That’s one thing I really
love about the Catholic faith. It talks straight. It does not sugar-coat. It offers us Christ on the cross
right up front, right up on our school walls, right at the highest point of our
steeples. As if to say quite quietly: “Look, dear ones, this is what the
Christian life is like.”
Why does
our faith speak like that? Because that is the truth. We are made in God’s
image, and when He sent His Son to show us what that ball of fire inside
himself is like, that love which is His inner energy, He showed us His Son
being beaten and cursed on the way of the cross, and then dying, out of love
for us.
Jesus
Christ showed us how a Christian loves, and how a Christian dies. “Not my will,
Father, but Thine.” A Christian dies with love and forgiveness for others. That
sort of love is an odd sort of love. It is a love above every known human form
of love. It is God’s form of love.
Jesus taught us to love our enemies. Now no sensible woman or
man even likes his enemies. But the Lord has His own
reasons for emphasizing love. He made every single woman and man in his image.
Even those who choose evil, those who wrong us, even slay us. Even those who
spit in His face. God loves every creature He has
made, even when they raise their arm against Him. He made them free. Their
choice: They reject his friendship. Their hell is their isolation. Which they
themselves have freely chosen.
Well, I
meet a lot of people who hate everything I fight for. It doesn’t seem they like
me much, either. In fact, some have moral contempt for me.
Because God said so, I believe that each of them is made in the
image of God, and that God sees something in each of them that He loves. So I
study all my critics carefully. Sometimes things they say actually help me, and
I change course. Sometimes I can’t seea thing in them to love. So I take it
on faith. Sometimes, I just don’t see what God loves in some of the people I
meet. But, I figure, God doesn’t say I have to like them. He just says I have to
“love” them, with His love and His insight into their worth.
So I just leave it up to Him. I don’t see your image anywhere in him, Lord, so
you just go ahead and love him for me. I think that is called an “infused”
virtue. It doesn’t come from our own power.
Why God Allows Suffering
But why on earth is the world made this way, not some nicer way, without evil persons,without some horribly evil outcomes? Without so much suffering? Without little girls sobbing in their beds all night? That’s what Ivan Karamazov asked.
But why on earth is the world made this way, not some nicer way, without evil persons,without some horribly evil outcomes? Without so much suffering? Without little girls sobbing in their beds all night? That’s what Ivan Karamazov asked.
I notice
this in all literature and in all history: Heroines and the heroes suffer
greatly. Often, to prove the height and depth of their humanity, they have to
die.
Our lives are a little like a smoldering twig fallen down inside
a fire. Sometimes the ember has to die, to give out one last brilliance, before
going cold forever. As the priest-poet writes—the poet I love best—in our
fireplace we watch “blue-bleak embers fall, gall themselves, gash
gold-vermillion.” To show a very great beauty, to prove an overpowering love,
to force up a goodness refined by fire as gold is fired, the hero, the saint,
the lover cannot—cannot—“gash gold-vermillion”—except in suffering and death.
That is
certainly the rule that God Himself follows, that He laid down for His own Son,
that nearly every great love has proved. That is the only way the Lord Creator
could see a way to teach us that the inner secret of all of creation, the way
that creation “shows forth the glory of God,” is by suffering love, by death.
In dying, beauty “gashes gold-vermillion.”
According to our Catholic faith, clasped tight, held onto down a
thousand years, and taught to others by the way true lovers live, life’s
deepest secret is to spread everywhere the news that God is Love, that all
things that are, begin in love, and end in love. All things spring from
God. All things end in God. And God is suffering love.
Not even
abandonment, and emptiness, and painful death are what they seem to be. By
God’s own love flaring out from within them, even desolation and death are
transmuted into unspeakable beauty.
Dear, dear
graduates, it is normal to think about abandoning this faith. For it must be
free. It must be tested. No one else has been exempt from testing. Why should
you be?
Last word:
Think twice before abandoning this great teacher of reality, this faith of
ours. It is trustworthy. It holds up against all hardships, all darknesses, all
sufferings. Compared with it, everything else is cheap.
Therefore, no matter what anybody else in your family does, or
how many around you turn away from God’s friendship, don’t you break the long line of faithful
suffering servants in your family’s history. You will suffer for this faith.
But keep the sap of life—the zest of love—going through you, so it can flow on
to the next generation, and the next. On you depends the faith of thousands yet
unborn.
God bless
you very, very much! All the days of your life.
You are
very lucky to have graduated from here.
Michael Novak held for many years the George
Frederick Jewett Chair in Religion and Public Policy at the American Enterprise
Institute and is now a trustee and visiting professor at Ave Maria University.
He is a philosopher, theologian, and author, as well as the 1994 recipient of
the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion. He has been an emissary to the United
Nations Human Rights Commission and to the Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe. He has written over twenty-seven books on the philosophy
and theology of culture, especially the essential elements of a free society.
He also founded Crisis Magazine with Ralph McInerny in 1982.
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