Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

"[L]ousy pop music and a gutted Mass"

Here is Francis Beckwith, a prominent (until recently) Evangelical theologian, commenting on his decision to return to full communion with the Roman Catholic Church:

Looking back, and knowing what I know now, I believe that the Church’s weakness was presenting the renewal movements as something new and not part of the Church’s theological traditions.

For someone like me, who was interested in both the spiritual and intellectual grounding of the Christian faith, I didn’t need the “folk Mass” with cute nuns and hip priests playing “Kumbaya” with guitars, tambourines and harmonicas. And it was all badly done.

After all, we listened to the Byrds, Neil Young and Bob Dylan, and we knew the Church just couldn’t compete with them.

But that’s what the Church offered to the young people of my day: lousy pop music and a gutted Mass. If they were trying to make Catholicism unattractive to young and inquisitive Catholics, they were succeeding.

What I needed, and what many of us desired, were intelligent and winsome ambassadors for Christ who knew the intellectual basis for the Catholic faith, respected and understood the solemnity and theological truths behind the liturgy, and could explain the renewal movements in light of these.

Alright, I admit it.  This post has absolutely nothing to do with "legal theory."  But, just in case there are any parish liturgy coordinators out there . . .

https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2007/05/lousy_pop_music.html

Garnett, Rick | Permalink

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