Busy young people in the Seoul diocese are looking for peace of mind 
when practicing their religion. The diocese recently made a survey of 
3,773 young people  and compared the results to a survey made after the 
Seoul Synod in 2002. 38.7 percent said their primary desire was to 
experience inner peace, 30.6 percent said family joy. In the 2002 
survey, the desire for health ranked first. Clearly, the change to a 
much harsher reality in today's world has resulted in a change to 
desiring more peace of mind and family harmony.
What seems most 
worrisome for young people, however, is concern for doing well in their 
studies (38.8 percent), concern for money (35.8 percent), and finding 
work (32.7 percent). Ten years before, money was listed as fifth; now it
 has  become second; a sign that materialism has become more prevalent. 
 The social networking  services have become prominent in the world of 
many young people, and interest in books has decreased.
When 
asked about the meaning of religion, 61.7 percent indicated that it 
gives them peace of mind;  ranking second, with 19.2 percent, was the 
belief that religion helped them form a value system. 
Purification/sanctification of life came in third with 10.4 percent. 
Their introduction to the religious life, they said, came from those who
 were close to them; the influence of the mass media was negligible.
The
 editorial in the Catholic Times, commenting on the survey, mentions 
that pastoral programs in the future should work to understand the 
results of  the survey. At first glance, the results are not surprising 
when one sees religion as only something personal, a very natural 
understanding of religion. But with further reflection, when one 
understands the spiritual and the communal aspects of religion, it 
should make us question whether this more comprehensive understanding of
 religion is being overlooked. 
The difficulties that our young 
people are facing today can be seen precisely in this desire for peace 
and stability. However, if their desire for peace of mind is sought 
exclusively in religion then we have a misunderstanding of the meaning 
of Christianity, particularly in its communal and  transcendental 
aspects. Peace of mind is a by-product and not the object of a mature 
Christian life.
 
