I didn’t think you Catholics were too keen on ‘modernism’ in the first place, never mind postmodernism!
Not too keen at all. But it’s not just a Catholic problem. Look at the effects of “modernism” and “postmodernism” around you. By “effects”, I mean something very specific, namely, the loss of “community” and reifying the Individual, Man, to the detriment of community, society, and worst of all, God.
If I am a “humanist”, Man is the center of the universe; particularly the Man presently typing this sentence. In all forms – Renaissance, Enlightenment, Haskala, Postmodernism – human-centered philosophy corrodes society and loosens the ties of community.
Compare the Reform movement to the Orthodox / Chasidic and Conservative movements: I live in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh, which is primarily a Jewish neighborhood (I pass 4 synagogues on two streets alone on my way to church every Sunday, and my 2 1/2-year old attends pre-school at the JCC!). I attended a Reform Friday evening Shabbat service with a buddy of mine about 3 weeks ago. The Rabbi played a guitar to accompany the Cantor who sang contemporary Hebrew religious songs. The service followed no particular Siddur but was prepared ad hoc by the Rabbi and Cantor. Apart from the lighting of candles and recitation of the Shma, there was little of the service that would be recognizable to a Jew of 100 years ago. Now – the congregation: Average age in the room was, say 60. Maybe about 20 in the Sanctuary, tops; mostly grandparents. But where were their children and grandchildren? The answer is, they had either moved away, intermarried, or wanted nothing to do with Friday evening Shabbat service. Despite the upbeat guitar strumming, there was odd unsettling unease in the room.
Now, Friday evening at one of the Orthodox shuls (the inside of which I’ve only seen during food festivals and fund-raisers): Floods of people swarming down the street through the doors; women in long skirts, men in hats or kippos, payes, and tallis, donning tefillin as they enter. They all live in the neighborhood, as do their parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren, aunts, uncles, and cousins. They gather together to socialize at the JCC, the Lubavitch center for lectures and klezmer concerts (Chasids), and the Yeshivos. They are a “community”.
In short if your worldview is centered on You and Your relationship with God, or how You can “use” God to “get” you things (or throw God out of the picture entirely), you will experience the anomie and disaffection that postmodernism brings. Having put Yourself at the center, you find that the center cannot hold, and you cannot then wonder why families are scattered, couples divorce, children are not raised properly, civility declines, rudeness increases, etc.
I think that the Second World War in Europe, in particular, led to what might be described as the shattering of certainties. Nothing in the ‘traditional certainties’ had worked to prevent the catastrophe and this, taken together with the truly awful reality of how the previous ‘alternative certainties’ (a vision of liberty and justice in a workers’ state) was turning out, called everything, certainly the certainty of certainties, into question.
Well put. Philosophical discussion of theodicy / the problem of evil was transformed by WWII. I think Susan Neiman summed it up pretty well in her recent book (review here)
ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=1211
And believe me, my Bible is especially dog-eared around the books of Job and Koheles. But I think the loss of faith after WWII was misdirected. In other words, we had put our eggs in the wrong basket. The root of Modernism was empiricism or positivism, namely, the belief that Logic, Reason, and Science would eventually solve all the world’s problems. But they didn’t; and one man’s particular brand of logic, reason, and “science” has especially horrific results.
If the failure of Modernism has taught us anything, it’s that our faith should have been in God, not science, all along.
Baruch atah Adonai Elokeinu melech haolam,
dayan ha’emet.
– N.