|
By Gretchen Keiser
Contemporary Americans may have lost a sense of the sacred, but
millions of them retain a fascination with the terrifying, the occult and the
vaguely supernatural, said Cardinal James Hickey in a talk prepared
for an Atlanta conference.
For a world caught up in Stephen King novels and nightmares on
Elm Street, the sacramental life of the Church mirrors a radically
different, right relationship between earth and heaven, the cardinals
talk said.
In many popular portrayals, the world beyond is a bizarre
and unfriendly place that only occasionally breaks in upon our everyday world
Troubles start when representatives of that world make forays to Elm
Street or invade the office computer.
Within the Church, however, the sacraments reveal a completely
different relationship between ordinary life and the divine, his talk pointed
out. In the sacraments of the Church, what is human becomes the vehicle
of the divine. Human words and actions as well as basic things such as water,
wine, bread and oil become the bearers of divine life.
The sacraments follow the incarnational logic of
Gods redemptive plan in which Jesus took on human flesh to atone for sin,
bodily and spiritually.
In addition, ordinary things are not overwhelmed or destroyed in
the sacramental order, his talk pointed out. On the contrary, their natural
properties, like water in Baptism, are used to communicate the redeeming
action of Christ in the Holy Spirit.
In popular culture, on the other hand, what is lacking is
the Christian vision that the world and the human person who is the pinnacle of
creation, can have a sustained relationship with the divine.
Also lacking is an awareness of the need to acknowledge God as the
Creator. Many people, he noted, are almost unconscious of their role to
offer to God the fruit of the earth and the work of human hands, an
unawareness that he called a fundamental loss of the sacred.
The archbishop of Washington, D.C., was scheduled to be keynote
speaker at a Sept. 22-24 conference of the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars in
Atlanta on the theme: Recovery of the Sacred: Catholic Faith, Worship and
Practice.
Unable to attend, his prepared talk was delivered by Archbishop
Eugene A. Marino, SSJ.
The Fellowship, whose president is Dr. William E. May of Catholic
University of America, has some 800 members concerned with interdisciplinary
research and publications in accord with the magisterium of the Church.
Thirty speakers addressed the conference theme from the
perspectives of canon law, the social sciences, spirituality, and the natural
sciences, the behavioral sciences, literature and Catholic worship and
practice.
Cardinal Hickeys text noted that as a pastor he is concerned
from a practical perspective. He suggested several ways that the church can
approach a recovery of the sacred.
The first, he said, is to be aware that we preach in a
culture which is in many ways either hostile or insensitive to the relationship
of the world to God. We need to impart to others a whole new way of looking at
themselves and at the world.
His second recommendation was to renew sacramental life. All
preaching, instruction and private counseling must have as their goal to lead
people to the sacraments where the experience of the earthly and divine
interacting can be gained and appreciated.
The cardinal also recommended rekindling and developing popular
piety that connects the sacred with everyday events, such as the changing
seasons, birth and death, holidays and holy days.
|