As I write this, I am approaching the day when I walk the aisle to get a major educational achievement - I will be receiving my long-awaited Master's degree. This is happening about 43 years after I stepped into a kindergarten class at the age of five in Baltimore, and both of these events inspired my title of this piece.
If you go into downtown Baltimore at the corner of Gilmor and Lombard Streets, there is a massive brick building with white trim called Stuart Hill Academy. In 1975, I was a kindergartener at Stuart Hill, as at the time we lived nearby on Stafford Street where my mother was helping out my great-aunt Ruth. Back in those days, that section of western Baltimore had a lot of West Virginians who had settled in the area, including a large number of our family. The move to Baltimore started for many West Virginians shortly after World War II, when many of the small towns back home started to decline - businesses that once thrived were moving elsewhere, and as a result people needed incomes. Being many West Virginian young men had went through Baltimore on the way to the theatres of war they were sent to fight in as they enlisted in the Army, Marines, and Navy, many saw the glamour of city life for the first time. When they came home from Europe and the Pacific in 1945, many of these young men were able to buy homes with the GI Bill, and they moved their families to the cities where they found work. If you happened to be from northern or eastern West Virginia in those days, you more than likely ended up in Baltimore. And, many of our family ended up there as a result. At the time I had arrived there, it was late 1974, and Mom and Dad had recently divorced and Mom was essentially wanting to bunk at relatives' houses. So, that is what we did, and it was our Aunt Ruth's house. With our arrival, Aunt Ruth (or Pip as we called her) had quite the full house. Aunt Ruth was bedridden from multiple sclerosis at the time, and in return for staying there Mom helped our young cousins, Greg and Gayle, out with her. It was at this point I also started my first year of school at Stuart Hill Academy.
I don't recall much what my actual first day was like when I started kindergarten, because frankly I was too young. However, I quickly adjusted to the elderly teacher, Mrs. Doughty, who was very longsuffering of a precocious five-year-old. I remember though the walk to school, often with my cousin Gayle, and that was interesting. I also remember Mom coming up there to get me, and when she'd get paid on Fridays, we would go downtown and Mom would get me an orange soda at a store owned by a Jewish grocer. Anyway, that was how my academic saga started.
Let's move ahead 43 years - I am living back in Maryland again, interesting enough, but I have finished another aspect of my academic saga at a very different institution. Franciscan University of Steubenville is in Ohio, and is an institution that is over 70 years old and also one of the most dynamic Roman Catholic institutions of higher learning in the country. However, unlike Stuart Hill in Baltimore, which was a few blocks walking from where we lived then, Franciscan University is two states away from us, and my first visit to that campus will happen on my graduation on May 12th. Due to the miracle of cybercommunication, I was able to do my entire degree online over the course of four years, and have never had to be on campus. So, this will not only be my first time visiting the campus, but actually my first time visiting Steubenville itself. I am actually anticipating the experience.
There is a lot to do in the next two weeks before taking off. I have to get a cap and gown (and my Master's hood) and I also have to schedule a visit with the barber, as well as buying a new outfit for the occasion. I am actually, on Barbara's advice, going to coordinate school colors into my outfit - I am thinking mint-green dress shirt and gold tie? That of course is subject to revision, but that is the line of thought. And pictures - many pictures! I plan on getting professional pictures done there, as well as getting a picture with Fr. Sheridan, our university President, and additionally a lot of pictures we will be taking ourselves. The amount of planning that goes into something like this can be a bit overwhelming, but given the accomplishment, this is also a time of celebrating my achievement. So, a lot to do.
Another thing too - Steubenville is not where it ends either, as I also plan on pursuing my doctorate, and plan on starting that in September 2019. There are preparations to be made for that too - I have to schedule a GRE exam, take a French class as an unofficial prerequisite, and fill out lots of paperwork. Ironically, when I finish that, I will be 55 years old, and it will be approximately 50 years at that point since I first stepped into that kindergarten classroom in Baltimore. And, another kicker - my doctorate will be done at Catholic University of America (provided everything falls into place) which is in our nation's capital. So, my final academic achievement will be earned in about 6 years from a university that is only 30 miles from where I went to kindergarten. A lot of interesting parallels with things to be sure.
Good Lord - when I earn my doctorate, I will have been in school (off and on) for over 50 years!! I think starting school at 5 years old and finishing up at 55 years old will be a legacy in itself. But, as we quickly find out, education is a lifelong process for the inquisitive, and the active mind never starts learning. However, the learning will transition to daily life rather than a formal classroom. Just some insights I have had going on over the past several days I thought I would share. At the risk of sounding cliche, for younger readers my encouragement to you is "stay in school," and perhaps you can write your own legacy some day.
I am David Thrower, and this is a collection of snippets of my life. On this page you will find articles about Appalachian heritage, family history, music, and other good stuff. It is a lighthearted page, so hope you will visit often as this is like my virtual homestead, front porch and all.
Monday, April 16, 2018
Tuesday, April 3, 2018
Dealing with Antisemitism and Conspiracy Theories Among Fellow Traditionalists
I make no apologies about being a Traditionalist in the truest sense - those who know me will attest to that. I have the following credo I subscribe to in regard to my personal worldview:
Politically Monarchist
Philosophically Thomist
Economically Distributist
Religiously Catholic
Morally Traditionalist
As all of this, I am also culturally American and that necessitates realizing that a diversity of ethnicities and cultures makes up not only America, but also the Church - the Church is an institution that embraces all ethnicities and cultures, and thus this means there is only one race - HUMAN!! Therefore, it has always been inconsciable to me for someone who claims to be a Catholic Traditionalist engaging in behavior that contradicts the mission of the Church. Recently, I have seen this behavior displayed on certain social media outlets where Traditionalists have pages and groups, and the behavior I have seen has been shocking. I have heard some of these people actually make derisive comments about Jews in particular as "big-nosed power grabbers" and other derogatory terms, language that is more suitable to a follower of Hitler than for a follower of Christ. I have also heard expressions of the "Two-Percent Control" conspiracy - the same old "Zionist conspiracy" theory that asserts that because 2% of the most powerful echelon of humanity control 98% of the wealth and power are somehow culturally Jewish (which is also a myth), that implicates the whole Jewish nation as being somehow "evil" and thus an object of hatred. The people who advance this myth are functional idiots honestly, despite how "Catholic" they sound, and for them to actually believe this garbage means that their Catholic faith is to be called into question. I also feel the same way about some who advance the "Vatican control" conspiracies too. Anti-Catholicism and antisemitism are both evil, immoral, and sinful, and no professing Christian of any confession needs to be giving these myths any credibility. After watching a documentary series about the "inner circle" of Hitler's henchmen, I also have reaffirmed that antisemitism is at its root satanic and pagan, and thus has no place in traditional Catholic worldview. For professed Catholics therefore to embrace such nonsense calls into question the sincerity of their Christianity. That is why I feel compelled to address this issue.
Christianity - and Catholic Christianity in particular - owes much to the Jewish people. After all, it was the Jewish nation that gave us the Savior we worship, and it also has given us a lot of the patrimony of our own Tradition. That being said, Judaism and Christianity both have contributed to the betterment of Western civilization, although Christianity has the fullness of Revelation which perfects civilization. Therefore, the Church has historically maintained that God has not forgotten the Jewish people, and indeed we as the Church are to love them and pray for their conversion. It is the Church who then, in true Traditionalist understanding, becomes the protector and preserver of the Jewish nation, in that God's plan is to have a future "ingrafting" of natural Israel (the Jews) into spiritual Israel (the Church). This means therefore that antisemitism from a traditional Catholic viewpoint is pointless, illogical, and at its core anti-Christian. And, this is why it must be rejected by those professing Christianity.
Now, love and respect for the Jewish nation does not equate with Christian Zionism, nor does it mean that there is some antinomian grace that Jews have by their status, as some misguided Protestant Evangelicals have wrongly proposed. Jews, like the rest of humanity, are prone to sin and some do sin. The person who subscribes to ridiculous conspiracy theories has to, however, understand two important things First the sin of the individual does not implicate the nation. Secondly, many people who possess Jewish heritage (George Soros comes to mind) yet engage in anti-Christian activities with great influence actually do so in spite of their heritage and not because of it. Freud, Marx, and Spinoza may have been ethnically Jewish, but what they did was based on individual choice and was not in part due to their heritage. Every ethnicity has good and bad people - not every German, for instance, is Hitler, and not every Black person is Al Sharpton or Louis Farrakhan. That same consideration equally applies to the Jewish people as well. And, not every Traditionalist is an anti-semite either - as a matter of fact, a self-professed Traditionalist who embraces antisemitism does so in spite of his or her faith, and not because of it. It is time we start to accept that fact.
That leads to my final point. The modern nation of Israel exists because God allowed it to, and it I believe exists for the purpose of the "ingrafting," the great conversion of the Jewish people to the fullness of Christian truth. That then means that we cannot sanction everything the state of Israel does as "good" (despite what some Evangelicals think) because Israel is led by fallible human beings just as any other nation is, and thus they will get things wrong. Therefore, you can support Israel without endorsing everything Israel does as a nation. That is a fresh perspective you won't hear a lot either.
This also means that a self-professed Traditionalist Catholic needs to do some self-examination as well. Many of these people are sticklers for doing things "liturgically correct" - they think it is "blasphemy," for instance, to receive Communion in the hand rather than on the tongue, and many outside this community do not realize what a big issue of debate this really is. Yet, those who decry Communion received in the hand as somehow "blasphemous" often commit the greater blasphemy of receiving Communion properly in external action without allowing Christ to utilize supernatural grace to transform them within. They are dutifully taking Communion while their minds are far from Christ, and that is a serious problem. Given that is theological in scope, more will be said on that at some future point on my other blog site. However, Traditionalists need to exercise care to not be inconsistent.
I have said my piece for today, and will see you again soon.
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