Yes, but I mean I think it is OK if I as a teen would rather not use the Youcat! I personally want more answers! Is that not OK? Thats not “intellectual superiority over the weak” thats just looking for answers.
I think it’s just fine that you prefer not to use the Youcat. When I was a teenager, I routinely read Shakespeare for fun.
It only becomes a problem when a teenager or adult thinks that ALL teenagers should abandon the YouCat and use only “higher” documents.
Since you enjoy a good discussion, think about these things:
I think the phrase “dumbed-down” is a troubling one. The facts are that the majority of people in the United States read at a sixth-grade reading level.
And I’m not talking about sixth-grade of 150 years ago, when children of that age were reading Chaucer and Shakespeare and Homer (that’s what having no TV or radio does to society!).
I’m talking about the sixth-graders of today, 2014, who find People Magazine a challenge.
So we are not “dumbling down” a piece of writing if we make it understandable for the average sixth-grader.
Instead, we are “smarting up” a piece of writing if we make it challenging for that sixth grader to understand.
I have written six novels for the “juvenile” target audience (three are published). The reading level of these novels is “eighth grade” Although many kids and adults enjoy my novels, the criticism that I receive most often is that “no kids talk like that.”
Well, that’s true in most American circles. My daughters grew up in skating rinks and private schools, and YES, kids DO “talk like that” in these venues. I chaperoned a group of teenagers from my daughters’ school to a Sondheim concert at Ravinia one year, and during the drive, they discussed the merits of Sondheim’s music compared to the music of other composers.
I was fascinated, and I kept thinking, “Most teenagers have no idea that Sondheim exists and what he has done, and these kids are discussing his merits as a composer, using the most technical of musical terminology. For that matter most teenagers wouldn’t be caught dead at a Ravinia concert!”
So yes, in the skating/private school world, kids DO talk like that, and I feel justified in exposing other kids to that world. That’s what novels do–they take us to places that we do not live in and introduce us to people that we do not associate with in our daily lives. I don’t want to read novels about me and my boring life!
One of the biggest problems in the Catholic Church today is “lack of catechesis.” I see it over and over again on these forums, and I hear about it in my real-life parish.
Think about it–many teens and ADULTS have no idea what the word “catechesis” means.
Some of you seem to think that the answer is exposing these people to “higher” literature and music.
I don’t understand your thinking. I’ve already pointed out that many people can’t even comprehend a newspaper. You think that handing them one of Pope Benedict XVI’s encyclicals is going to help catechize them?!
I don’t agree. I think we need to start way back at the basics. One of the things that made Evangelical Protestantism grow like weeds is the very simple, straightforward writing/teaching that was done in the 1960s and 1970s.
Dr. Bill Bright wrote a small little pamphlet called “The Four Spiritual Laws” that reduced Christian theology down to a few short paragraphs. It is still in use today. If you want to understand what Evangelical Protestants believe and teach, get hold of a copy.
I’ve seen the same kind of pamphlets written by Catholics, and I love them. I fear that many of you would turn up your noses, but I think you’re wrong. This is just what many Catholics need today–a starting point, something simple and basic that they can grab hold of.
Another piece of writing that came out of the Evangelical Protestant movement was John R.W. Stott’s masterpiece,
Basic Christianity. This book is a classic, and again, if you want to understand Evangelical Protestantism, read it.
It’s not the same as C.S. Lewis’
Mere Christianity, which is a great apologetic work that all Christians, Catholic and Protestant, can embrace.
Basic Christianity is just what the title says–an explanation of what we believe and what those beliefs should produce in our daily lives.
And I think that’s what’s missing from a lot of Catholic catechesis–the “application” of our theology. What does it actually MEAN in our lives on a day-to-day basis? What effect will it have on our choices of recreation, romance, professions, habits, money use, etc.?
The main reason why young people stop attending church is “lack of relevance.” We need to somehow communicate with them, at their level, why and how Christianity is “relevant.” Many of the intellectuals despise this line of thinking and insist that we need to bring people UP to the Church, not bring the Church DOWN to the people.
Well, whatever works. I suspect that both approaches should be used, and hence my comment to ialsop that it’s fine for them not to use YouCat. But it’s also fine for teenagers to use YouCat. There’s no shame in reading at your reading level.