Dominica XXXIII Per Annum,
Anno B
A glorious future awaits
us. We are called to heaven. But God has warned us through the prophet Daniel
of tribulation to come. Our Lord Himself tells us that before His glorious
second coming, there will be tribulation. And “after that tribulation, the sun
will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be
falling from the sky, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken. And then
they will see ‘the Son of Man coming in the clouds with great power and glory.”
(Matt 13:24ff).
But there are many things
that must happen before “heaven and earth will pass away.” We do not know the
time for His coming, but He warns us to be vigilant at all times. “When you see
these things happening, know that he is near” Not only must each of us be
vigilant and open our eyes and ears to these things that are happening, but as
a Catholic people, we must be vigilant, especially when we see that the moral
and spiritual state of American society has fallen and is falling so quickly.
The moral foundation of thousands of years of Judeo-Christianity has all but
crumbled in the last 50 years. These are the signs of the times that we must be
paying attention to. How did this happen? What were the warning signs
and what are the warning signs today?
We need to remember that
“Not everyone in a particular generation will be affected by the particular
generational spirit of that generation.” But we can identify how each
generation has been afflicted and what they have passed on to the next
generation. First, let us “go back to the generation which came of age during
and shortly after World War I; this generation became known as the ‘Lost
Generation,’ a term popularized by Ernest Hemingway…” (35). Some of this
generation “indulged in hedonism…[but] most members of this generation followed
the traditions of their parents, especially in the area of religion” (35).
“(T)his is the generation that could suffer without complaining.” They suffered
through World War I, the Great Depression, and World War II. For this
generation, “suffering was such a part of life that to talk about it was like
talking about the rate of growth of the grass outside. Life was suffering…and
so one simply did not talk about it” (35). Here lies the problem. The generation
spirit can be identified as a “spirit of non-communication.” That generation
simply did not talk to their children or communicate to them the ability to
embrace their cross, nor to appropriate one’s suffering for virtue’s sake, in
the way that they actually did it.
So their children, the
so-called “Greatest” Generation, who grew up in the Great Depression and fought
in World War II, “did not embrace their cross in the manner that their parents
did. They fought the Second World War, but they came back determined that ‘this
would never happen again.” They knew how to deny themselves, but did not want
to pass this on to their children. Their generational spirit was a lack of
mortification” (36). They knew how to work hard. They knew how to sacrifice.
They knew how deny themselves but “their goal was not to attain spiritual
perfection by the perfection of virtue. Rather it was to obtain something
materially better, primarily for their children. They indulged their children”
(36).
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Their children are commonly
referred to as “Generation Z.” These children were born in the 1990s up through
the mid-2000s. “This generation is one that is completely plugged into
technology. It is the generation that has gone without a coherent moral code,
religious doctrine, or societal norms. This generation is also the one that was
left at daycare where no moral training was ever given them. Unlike Generations
X and Y, who may have been spanked or reprimanded when they did something
wrong, even though not much was taught to them as to why it was wrong, this
generation received no moral formation at all from their parents. If
they did receive moral formation, it tended to be what is in the general
culture today where sins are often described more in terms of how one hurt the
environment than how one offended God” (37). “What they consider acceptable… is
the inverse of what the ‘Greatest’ Generation would have considered acceptable,
everything from living together as a norm before marriage to viewing same-sex
‘marriage’ as a ‘non-issue’ because they cannot see why others are hung up with
it. This does not bode well, because the younger members of this generation are
starting to show the signs of a spirit that will become full blown in the next
generation” (37-38).
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I have been describing
broad trends in the secular world around us. We are part of that world; affected
by it, but not bound to it. We are in the world, but not of it. It can be a
discouraging picture out there. But in here, all is bright with heavenly light.
The Holy Spirit is at work among the young generation today. Many who are
coming of age today recognize the truth and beauty of the Catholic faith in all
its richness. They readily see how the rejection of traditional, orthodox
Catholicism has deprived them of their spiritual inheritance, but they are
claiming it back. Each generation is called by God to accomplish certain tasks,
to fight off certain evils, and to achieve certain perfection. The Holy Spirit
is now giving this generation what was not passed down to them. They are
receiving Catholic tradition and they love it. Some among their elders are
dumbfounded. They say, “How can the young generation love what we discarded?”
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For more homilies by Fr. Andersen, click on the tab at the top of the page.
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