A journalist writing for the
Catholic Times recounts opening his lunch box to find the usual egg on
top of his rice, but for some reason it did not look the same as in the
past: the colors were different for both the egg yolk and the white. He
asked his wife and was told that she was not able to buy the organic
eggs as in the past. She also mentioned that the outside of the eggs
were clean in comparison to the organic eggs. Often the natural cuticle
that covers the egg is washed away in cleaning the eggs, he said. These
thoughts made him reflect on the recent opening of the Ecological
Learning Center in the Pusan Diocese on April 6th.
Ecology and environment-friendly living is a frequent topic in the Catholic press.
The diocese of Pusan has done something about living more
conscientiously with the natural environment when they began
construction of the Center in 2011, without any publicity. The intent
was to search for the essence of creation and to see how it is to be
lived in the here and now, and how to do this practically, by
encouraging direct experience.
It will be a place of learning for
those dreaming of going back to the farm, a place for children to
learn about nature, and for all of us to experience what is possible in a
naturally friendly environment. Zero emissions is the goal: energy
sources are to emit no waste products that pollute the environment or
disrupt the climate, and heating is to be all solar. They use Bacteria
Mineral Water and have a building for recycling and an ecological pond.
Plans
are to have a daily Mass, lectures on ecology, retreats, and
meditations for healing. This year they want to begin with the school
for ecology, followed by programs on how to experience what is
presented, setting up a camp for children and providing training for
those who want to return to the farm. The Center will have rice and dry
fields and orchards, where hands-on farming will be possible.
This
is the first such Center in the country, built entirely from the
finances of the diocese. It is an unprecedented effort to put into
practice what many have simply talked about, providing a place where
anyone who desires to do something about the environment can now do so,
finding out first-hand what it means to have a friendly relationship to
the environment.
Behind
the efforts of the Center is their aim to provide the learning needed
to live a simpler life, to anyone interested; which in practical terms
means to live more poorly. But the Center not only intends to
teach us the ways to relate to the environment. It also intends to help
us relate to one another more simply, and with more initiative and
spontaneity.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Monday, April 8, 2013
Presuppositions for Renewal
Hooked
on TV dramas, a columnist in the Catholic Times said he decided recently to watch some old re-runs of dramas
he liked. He tells us about a scene where a brother decides to tell his
younger sister that he was the one responsible, though accidentally, for
her husband's death. Forced by circumstances to tell his sister about
his part in the death, he was prepared to confess but before he could
she yelled "Don't tell me what you are going to say."
The sister had already surmised that her brother was involved and never got rid of the hurt in her heart. She was always playing with the idea of finding the culprit, and kept the resentment in her heart for the last twenty years. If he had confessed, she felt the last twenty years would have been spent in vain. She wanted either to have heard him confess when it happened and been forgiven, or to remain silent without the obligation of asking for forgiveness. The sister did not want to see his burden of guilt diminished, which was the reason for not wanting to hear his confession.
In a population of 60 million, it is not unheard of to hear this kind of story. Although it is necessary that we are sorry for our own faults, the presupposition is that before it is brought to our attention by others, it is necessary to acknowledge what was done and be willing to freely take on the responsibility for the act. When we try to hide and avoid our responsibility, there is less of a chance of our being forgiven and receiving leniency.
The same is true in the sacrament of confession. All sins are forgivable, as long as we are sorry and the sorrow is genuine. We have all had that experience growing up. After doing something wrong and going to our mothers to confess, we often received a smile of approval, knowing all the while what we had done. A response quite different from the one from the sister in our example: "Don't tell me what you have done."
In a recent issue the Catholic Times commented on a survey of theologians, which indicated they saw a need for Church renewal. For a long time, there have been efforts to hide and avoid responsibility for the problems that have recently become public, such as the so-called Vatican Leaks. This is also true in the West concerning the sexual abuse of minors. The efforts to hide and ignore the seriousness of what happened multiplied the seriousness of the problem and helped it to continue, resulting not only in the tragic consequences of making more youngsters vulnerable to abuse but also in the selling of church property in the effort to pay out the huge sums of money in penalty for what was done.
We have to learn the virtue of speaking, everywhere and at all times, the truth. Even before we are questioned by others, we have to examine ourselves, acknowledge our faults, and make them known. To make our personal or communal faults known is the presupposition for renewal. Pope Francis is aiming to do this for the Church. Is this not also what the Korean Church has to do? Is this not the time for us as a community to strive for renewal and reformation? And to have this aspiration as an urgent topic for serious discussion?
The sister had already surmised that her brother was involved and never got rid of the hurt in her heart. She was always playing with the idea of finding the culprit, and kept the resentment in her heart for the last twenty years. If he had confessed, she felt the last twenty years would have been spent in vain. She wanted either to have heard him confess when it happened and been forgiven, or to remain silent without the obligation of asking for forgiveness. The sister did not want to see his burden of guilt diminished, which was the reason for not wanting to hear his confession.
In a population of 60 million, it is not unheard of to hear this kind of story. Although it is necessary that we are sorry for our own faults, the presupposition is that before it is brought to our attention by others, it is necessary to acknowledge what was done and be willing to freely take on the responsibility for the act. When we try to hide and avoid our responsibility, there is less of a chance of our being forgiven and receiving leniency.
The same is true in the sacrament of confession. All sins are forgivable, as long as we are sorry and the sorrow is genuine. We have all had that experience growing up. After doing something wrong and going to our mothers to confess, we often received a smile of approval, knowing all the while what we had done. A response quite different from the one from the sister in our example: "Don't tell me what you have done."
In a recent issue the Catholic Times commented on a survey of theologians, which indicated they saw a need for Church renewal. For a long time, there have been efforts to hide and avoid responsibility for the problems that have recently become public, such as the so-called Vatican Leaks. This is also true in the West concerning the sexual abuse of minors. The efforts to hide and ignore the seriousness of what happened multiplied the seriousness of the problem and helped it to continue, resulting not only in the tragic consequences of making more youngsters vulnerable to abuse but also in the selling of church property in the effort to pay out the huge sums of money in penalty for what was done.
We have to learn the virtue of speaking, everywhere and at all times, the truth. Even before we are questioned by others, we have to examine ourselves, acknowledge our faults, and make them known. To make our personal or communal faults known is the presupposition for renewal. Pope Francis is aiming to do this for the Church. Is this not also what the Korean Church has to do? Is this not the time for us as a community to strive for renewal and reformation? And to have this aspiration as an urgent topic for serious discussion?
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Spirituality in the Middle Ages
History
is not a subject that interests most Koreans, says a priest-professor
who teaches spirituality and history. Writing in the Kyeongyang
magazine, he notes that when Korean students select subjects for the
college entrance exams, history is usually at the bottom of the list, which seems strange to the professor since Koreans are well-known for their sensitivity. And yet, though they are not interested, they
want the people of the neighboring countries, he says, to study history
because of the distortions that appear in history books concerning
Korea. The article goes on to deal with the laity's search for
spirituality in the Middle Ages of Europe.
The Koreans, he says, are familiar with the dark ages of Europe. Most Koreans vaguely think that Christianity was the reason for this darkness. Christianity had a great deal to do with this period of history, but the history of Europe itself greatly influenced Christianity, both for good and ill.
During this period, people found it difficult to settle in any one place and to find opportunities for education. With the beginning of the Benedictine monasteries and a more settled life, there is a noticeable change in lifestyle. It was at this time that the Church sent missioners to evangelize the north of Europe.
The monasteries were not like those in the deserts of Egypt, where the interest of the monks was directed toward their own personal spirituality. The monasteries of Europe were dedicated to defending the Church and spreading the faith. They gathered together talented people and the monasteries became well-structured institutions, which led to the disparity between the educated monks and the uneducated laity. The influence of the monasteries did not extend to many of the country areas. The clergy were often taken from the uneducated classes to serve as parish priests, which made the gulf between the educated and uneducated members of the Church even greater.
Members of the royalty and nobles sponsored many of the monasteries, which sometimes resulted in having married men as abbots of the monastery--with family members in residence--obviously not a good influence on the monks. These abbots were also involved in society, and their presence and status in society, along with their newly appointed status as monastery heads, tended to bring into the monastic setting worldly ideas and pride.
At this time, the Cluny Abbeys appeared on the scene, spreading quickly throughout Europe, and very much helped to elevate the spirituality of the period. However, here again the laity had difficulty in identifying with the liturgy because of its language and individualistic orientation. The mendicant orders also appeared around this time, but the monks had little education and did little to raise the educational level of the Christians. They were not clerics, and the laity were no nearer to understanding the liturgy and what constituted a faith life. The sermons were mostly centered on the humanity of Jesus and directed to the emotions, developing into superstition and far from the teachings of the Church.
Speculative theology, scholasticism, came to the fore but this was little help to the laity. There was a movement of laity that had great difficulty with this intellectual type of spirituality. Around the Rhine River in Germany, there was a movement of people that left the parishes and walls of the monasteries to be closer to the common people. They used the scriptures as the basis for their spirituality and, not understanding the tradition of Christianity as embodied in the theological teachings, began to understand the scriptures as they thought best in search of a more personal spirituality. This gave birth to many aberrations from orthodoxy. They did not follow the traditional spirituality of Catholicism, but they still considered themselves Catholics.
The professor says the problems of the Middle Ages was not only limited to those times. They are present even today when one leaves, as he puts it, "the bosom of the Church," there is a possibility that the spirituality that is sought may not be for the person's good.
Saturday, April 6, 2013
Faith and Reason
The teachings of Jesus when they left the culture of Israel after his death found a new home in Greek culture. Greek philosophy and Plato in particular served as the means by which the Church Fathers, for the most part, used the Hellenistic thought of that time to explain the contents of our faith. It is difficult to convey the teachings of the Gospel within any culture without employing the help of the thinking basic to that culture. These are the words a professor of philosophy at the Catholic University uses in his last article in the Catholic Times on "Walking with Philosophy."
The revelation that we have received has been explained to us with the tools of philosophy; understanding those tools used by the Fathers of the Church, he stressed, makes us more understanding and comfortable with our tradition.
Justinus, Origen, Pseudo Dionysius, Boetius, Gregory of Nyssa, and of course Augustine, among many others, have given us the rich theological treasures we have today. Attempts to understand the Trinity, the two natures of Jesus, the incarnation, the logos (the word of God), without the help of philosophy would have been difficult.
If we hold, he says, that this philosophical attempt at understanding the divinity has changed the teaching or has polluted the teaching, we are wrong. What has changed over the years is our understanding of the teachings. St. Paul says we need milk as babies, but as we grow our need is for more solid food.
As we grow in maturity, says the professor, our thinking and understanding will also grow in maturity: our very being changes. There is no need be upset at the philosophy used to understand our revealed teachings. We need not fear theology and philosophy; they help us to understand the Gospel. If we make efforts to understand, we will understand, says the professor.
In years past, philosophy was considered the handmaid of theology. It was a help to understanding what we believe. Instead of using the word 'philosophy,' we might have less problems if we use the word 'reason' instead. “Faith and reason are like two wings on which the human spirit rises to the contemplation of truth; and God has placed in the human heart the desire to know the truth" (from the encyclical of John Paul II). God gave us our reasoning powers and Catholicism sees no conflict between faith and reason. It may be beyond our reasoning to understand fully, but we have the gift of faith and reason that are to work in harmony. But this is precisely what Catholicism maintains. Because it does have great respect for reason, it holds philosophy in high esteem.
Friday, April 5, 2013
Living the New Life
"Father,
what is the Resurrection?" This was an unexpected question coming from
one of his parishioners that for a moment confused the priest. He writes
about this experience in a bulletin for priests. The woman wanted a
clear explanation and the priest confesses he was not up to it. He felt
he could not say he didn't know, so he relied on what he had learned in
the seminary for his quick answer. Eternal life, salvation, God's
kingdom, a new heaven and new earth, were the words he put together for
his answer. He only knew the theory.
He went back to his room dejected. Here he was a priest and yet was not able to give a lucid answer to a basic question. Are we waiting for another happier world than the one we are experiencing now? Are we waiting for this new and better life? What is the new heaven and new earth? These were the thoughts that were filling his head.
He remembers an incident in 2006 when he was with a group of young people at a neighboring parish, watching the soccer match between Korea and Togo for the World Cup. Korea was behind in the first half, but went on to tie and beat Togo by one goal, which made him and his friends deliriously happy. On the return to his parish, he heard about the death of one of his altar boys, who had been on his way to see the same soccer match when he had an epileptic seizure and, with nobody there to help, died where he fell on the road.
The priest wondered where he had been when the boy had the seizure. These thoughts began to confuse him. Under the same heaven, he had been drinking beer, laughing and enjoying the soccer game while the middle school boy had fallen down on the ground, dying. This thought left him feeling wretched.
These kinds of incidents are happening all the time, he reminds us. Some people are enjoying their lives, and others are wondering where the next meal will be coming from. He knows that not everyone is living under the same conditions as the fortunate few, but this only makes him feel more upset. He now wonders even more about the promised new heaven and earth that we are dreaming about; he would like to think we all are hoping for the same thing.
We have the words of Jesus that give us hope. We know that working for a utopia on this earth is not going to do it: the attempted utopias have all failed, and often with hellish results. However, we have put on "the new person." Though not yet completed, it is present now, giving us hope for the future. Having put on the new person, and with the graces promised, we try to live this new life and want others to join us. The life begins now and will be completed after death. It is a tragedy to forget this fact. As Paul tells us in Romans 6:4 : "Through baptism into his death we were buried with him, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might live a new life."
He went back to his room dejected. Here he was a priest and yet was not able to give a lucid answer to a basic question. Are we waiting for another happier world than the one we are experiencing now? Are we waiting for this new and better life? What is the new heaven and new earth? These were the thoughts that were filling his head.
He remembers an incident in 2006 when he was with a group of young people at a neighboring parish, watching the soccer match between Korea and Togo for the World Cup. Korea was behind in the first half, but went on to tie and beat Togo by one goal, which made him and his friends deliriously happy. On the return to his parish, he heard about the death of one of his altar boys, who had been on his way to see the same soccer match when he had an epileptic seizure and, with nobody there to help, died where he fell on the road.
The priest wondered where he had been when the boy had the seizure. These thoughts began to confuse him. Under the same heaven, he had been drinking beer, laughing and enjoying the soccer game while the middle school boy had fallen down on the ground, dying. This thought left him feeling wretched.
These kinds of incidents are happening all the time, he reminds us. Some people are enjoying their lives, and others are wondering where the next meal will be coming from. He knows that not everyone is living under the same conditions as the fortunate few, but this only makes him feel more upset. He now wonders even more about the promised new heaven and earth that we are dreaming about; he would like to think we all are hoping for the same thing.
We have the words of Jesus that give us hope. We know that working for a utopia on this earth is not going to do it: the attempted utopias have all failed, and often with hellish results. However, we have put on "the new person." Though not yet completed, it is present now, giving us hope for the future. Having put on the new person, and with the graces promised, we try to live this new life and want others to join us. The life begins now and will be completed after death. It is a tragedy to forget this fact. As Paul tells us in Romans 6:4 : "Through baptism into his death we were buried with him, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might live a new life."
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Natural Procreative Technology
A
conference in Seoul on infertility and NaPro (natural procreative)
Technology, recently discussed in the pages of the Peace
Weekly, reviewed the present state of assisted reproductive technology
in Korea. The archbishop said in his introductory talk at the conference
"We are not only called to love the child who is born but the process
of conception and pregnancy is also important. The husband should be
present at the birthing process, and respect should be shown for the
dignity of the child throughout the birthing process." He added that he
hopes they will be able to make the act of marital love the foundation
from which to develop any natural procedures.
According to current standards, if during a year of marital relations there is no pregnancy, the couple is considered infertile. 10 to 15 percent of couples of child-bearing age are infertile; 30 to 40 percent of the time the man is responsible for the infertility, 45 to 50 percent of the time the woman. For the man, the problem resides in the formation of sperm, and for the woman ovulation, tubal or uterine problems.
NaProTechnology is described as "a health science that not only helps facilitate or avoid birth but to care for the woman's health and to promote the marital relations of the couple." It provides medical and surgical treatments that cooperate completely with the reproductive system. It is a natural way of respecting the body and maintaining the marital act in the birthing process. Korea is one of the countries that have recently begun working with the new technology.
Sister Arlene Te of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart, a family doctor, at the Cardinal Tien Hospital in Taipei, Taiwan, spoke at the conference on her successful use of NaPro Technology in providing infertility treatments at the Taiwan hospital. The fertility methods used there are in accord with the teachings of the Catholic Church. Dr. Thomas Hilgers, developer of the method in 1976, said, "Approaches that do not separate love from life are the methods that are in accord with the teachings of the Catholic Church." They do not include artificial means, he added.
Sister Arlene reports that NaPro Technology was introduced to Taiwan in 2005. At the Cardinal Tien Hospital 120 previously infertile couples have given birth by natural means. The program is used in the United States, Poland, Australia, Malaysia, and other countries. In Taiwan the success of the NaPro Technology method, says the sister, has a better success rate than in vitro fertilization methods.
Sister Arlene laments that in Taiwan the Catholics only number 2 percent of the population which makes it difficult to spread natural procreative technology. Those without religious beliefs will try any method to have a child; natural methods hold no attraction. She is hopeful, nonetheless, that NaPro Technology will ultimately be so successful that its method simply cannot be ignored by anyone, regardless of religious beliefs.
According to current standards, if during a year of marital relations there is no pregnancy, the couple is considered infertile. 10 to 15 percent of couples of child-bearing age are infertile; 30 to 40 percent of the time the man is responsible for the infertility, 45 to 50 percent of the time the woman. For the man, the problem resides in the formation of sperm, and for the woman ovulation, tubal or uterine problems.
NaProTechnology is described as "a health science that not only helps facilitate or avoid birth but to care for the woman's health and to promote the marital relations of the couple." It provides medical and surgical treatments that cooperate completely with the reproductive system. It is a natural way of respecting the body and maintaining the marital act in the birthing process. Korea is one of the countries that have recently begun working with the new technology.
Sister Arlene Te of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart, a family doctor, at the Cardinal Tien Hospital in Taipei, Taiwan, spoke at the conference on her successful use of NaPro Technology in providing infertility treatments at the Taiwan hospital. The fertility methods used there are in accord with the teachings of the Catholic Church. Dr. Thomas Hilgers, developer of the method in 1976, said, "Approaches that do not separate love from life are the methods that are in accord with the teachings of the Catholic Church." They do not include artificial means, he added.
Sister Arlene reports that NaPro Technology was introduced to Taiwan in 2005. At the Cardinal Tien Hospital 120 previously infertile couples have given birth by natural means. The program is used in the United States, Poland, Australia, Malaysia, and other countries. In Taiwan the success of the NaPro Technology method, says the sister, has a better success rate than in vitro fertilization methods.
Sister Arlene laments that in Taiwan the Catholics only number 2 percent of the population which makes it difficult to spread natural procreative technology. Those without religious beliefs will try any method to have a child; natural methods hold no attraction. She is hopeful, nonetheless, that NaPro Technology will ultimately be so successful that its method simply cannot be ignored by anyone, regardless of religious beliefs.
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Slaves to Smart Phones
"Your God is a hidden God and does not always answer. However, I answer quickly on the day and time you want, and I will give you this godlike quality at your fingertips." This could be the reason persons have their smart phones with them, like an amulet, says a religious sister, who has studied media ecology and lectures on the subject, as she begins her article in the Kyeongyang Magazine.
She mentions that the word 'ubiquitous'--from the Latin meaning 'existing always and everywhere'--has meaning in theology and philosophy and is now appropriately used for our smart devices. We become one with our electronic devices, and with them we can get what we want and need, making us busier than we need to be. Could this relationship be one of master and slave? she asks. Could we be the one ending up as the slave?
The knowledge that is currently available to humanity is staggering; within a few seconds and knowing only a few words we are usually able to find the knowledge we are looking for, and found quite literally at our fingertips. What difference is there in drawing information from our brains or from our smart device? she wonders. With the smart device, she feels we no longer need to go deeply into what we intend to know, no need to read as in the past. If we only remember a few words, that is enough, she says, to make us feel as if we can know everything there is to be known.
With the right software application, we can even find such mundane things as a department store, any public building, any place we would like to visit; there is no need to ask anybody for a location. There are programs that will tell you the merits of what you want to buy. No longer do we need to be afraid when traveling. With our smart phone, we can contact anyone, even text messaging and e-mail, in comparison, are time-consuming.
We also have what she calls 'telepresence.' The ego becomes all important. The social network services (SNS) have allowed us to see those we want to speak and relate with, but the other side of this ingenious service is that our receptivity and absorption in what we do is more difficult to achieve. Personal relationships and dialogue become less important. We become the center, seeking to satisfy our wants and needs.
God can be found "not in speed but in depth," as she puts it. The smart phone is not solely an instrument we use to enjoy its many wonders and then can put aside as if it no longer affects our lives. It can become, she warns, our alter ego or avatar, and SNS can become our home, a place where we reflect and express our real feelings, a place where we relate with only those we want to and in a manner we choose. The danger is that we become closed in on ourselves and not very Christian. On the day we do change to a more human use of these devices, she feels, we will experience the thrilling sense of freedom.
She mentions that the word 'ubiquitous'--from the Latin meaning 'existing always and everywhere'--has meaning in theology and philosophy and is now appropriately used for our smart devices. We become one with our electronic devices, and with them we can get what we want and need, making us busier than we need to be. Could this relationship be one of master and slave? she asks. Could we be the one ending up as the slave?
The knowledge that is currently available to humanity is staggering; within a few seconds and knowing only a few words we are usually able to find the knowledge we are looking for, and found quite literally at our fingertips. What difference is there in drawing information from our brains or from our smart device? she wonders. With the smart device, she feels we no longer need to go deeply into what we intend to know, no need to read as in the past. If we only remember a few words, that is enough, she says, to make us feel as if we can know everything there is to be known.
With the right software application, we can even find such mundane things as a department store, any public building, any place we would like to visit; there is no need to ask anybody for a location. There are programs that will tell you the merits of what you want to buy. No longer do we need to be afraid when traveling. With our smart phone, we can contact anyone, even text messaging and e-mail, in comparison, are time-consuming.
We also have what she calls 'telepresence.' The ego becomes all important. The social network services (SNS) have allowed us to see those we want to speak and relate with, but the other side of this ingenious service is that our receptivity and absorption in what we do is more difficult to achieve. Personal relationships and dialogue become less important. We become the center, seeking to satisfy our wants and needs.
God can be found "not in speed but in depth," as she puts it. The smart phone is not solely an instrument we use to enjoy its many wonders and then can put aside as if it no longer affects our lives. It can become, she warns, our alter ego or avatar, and SNS can become our home, a place where we reflect and express our real feelings, a place where we relate with only those we want to and in a manner we choose. The danger is that we become closed in on ourselves and not very Christian. On the day we do change to a more human use of these devices, she feels, we will experience the thrilling sense of freedom.
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