P
Portrait
Guest
Dear LitttleSoldier,If it were indeed on any debate of modest dress I am sure we disagreed. As we do here.My comment on your post was facetious, as the rest of the post should have made clear.So why don’t we let you decide which books are appropriate (and I remember reading in this thread that you haven’t read the Harry Potter series)? Who is to decide? Is censorship appropriate? Are we to keep our children “in the box,” expose them to explicitly Catholic ideas re morality and homosexual activity exclusively? Are we not responsible to help form their minds? Doesn’t the Church welcome questioning? That’s always been my understanding.
To be honest, Portrait, and certainly with all due respect, I have absolutely no idea of what you mean by “the urgent need of the hour is surely for a discerning literacy” and I have problems with people telling me that they are “sure” I “would agree.” Please don’t be so
what they want to read (within certain parameters; for example, I would not allow my children to read The Devil’s Bible) they quite simply do not read. At all. Except perhaps the instructions for the newest computer game. Nah - they probably wouldn’t read those either. They may not read the Bible. They may not read their school books. But they most likely will learn about Harry Potter from their friends. Certainly it is more appropriate for them to read the actual books and then join in a discussion with their parents as to the messages that are put forth in the books.
Do you believe my Dad’s behavior was appropriate? I think he would have done a much better job in teaching morality to his children by actually letting us watch the episode I mentioned on TV and then turning the TV off, sitting us all down, and telling us why fornication and adultery are wrong. That would have been a much appreciated lesson and one I *never *received from him when I was growing up. All I knew was that most of what I engaged in was probably bad and the chances of my conducting myself in a moral, Christian way were extremely low. All those chances for learning were thrown out with the garbage.
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Cordial greetings and thankyou for your response to my post.
Of course we have a moral obligation to shield our precious children, and ourselves also, from the impurities of the world, for not to do so would clearly be a dereliction of Christian duty. This is what St. James meant when he spoke of keeping oneself “unstained from the world” (1: 27). Now given that we Christians find ourselves in the midst of all the distracting and demoralizing influences of our decadent age, then yes we need to ensure that we keep ourselves pure by continual remembrace of the demands of our all-holy-God.
In the light of this, there certainly ought to be a *self-imposed *examination of films, TV programmes, music and printed matter, even though, alas, there is no longer any official censorship within the Church. Personally speaking I think it was a sad day when our Church ceased to have an ‘index of prohibted books’, for such an index did at least do much to ensure that the faithful were protected from evil and unwholesome literature which could corrupt their faith and morals, thereby hindering their pursuit of holiness. However, that is a topic for another thread. Suffice to say that with the sheer volume of culturally unhealthy reading material, including the Potter series, that is so prevalent in our godless world today, the necessity for official Church censorship was never more urgently needed again. It is surely right to supress that which is likely to corrupt men and cause them to wander from the path of virtue into error and sin. After all, the Church exists to sanctify men and safegaurd them from anything that would be harmful or imperil their immortal souls. She has a duty towards those whom she is commissioned to guide in the way of salvation.
By a “discerning literacy” I simply mean that men must, if they are not to be deceived, be able to differentiate between wholesome and unwholesome literature which, given that we have no official index, has never been more vital. It is all very well leaving it to a man’s ‘prudential judgement’, but what if his powers of discernment have been so severely impaired or even, God forbid, utterly vitiated by a steady assimilation of the spirit of the times? If that is the case, then he will most probably make some very bad decisions and be prey to all manner of misleading argumentation which may sound superficially plausible but is, in actual fact, plainly wrong.
It is hardly my place to comment upon how your father reared you, but he sounds a good man who had your spiritual interests at heart and who sought to protect you from that which he deemed to be unsavoury and harmful. Please God, may their be many more men of his stamp today, for there is lowered public opinion both within and without the Church which desperately needs raising. The widespread acceptance and vehement defence of the Potter series by Catholics is an indication of the want of a discerning literacy amongst us and is jolly sad to behold.
Thankyou for your questions, no need to apologise, and I sincerely hope that the above will help us to “communicate in a more productive way”.
Will respond to your other post soon. God bless you.
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait
Pax