How the 60s affected the Catholic Church

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Where have you been? See post #19 for the facts.
I see a couple of “facts” there strung together by a lot of personal opinion but none of it points to the highly organized and well-kept secret movement that Ed so often mentions.

Also, are you saying that you are the source of Ed’s information? Hopefully, Ed will clarify at some point.
 
I see a couple of “facts” there strung together by a lot of personal opinion but none of it points to the highly organized and well-kept secret movement that Ed so often mentions.

Also, are you saying that you are the source of Ed’s information? Hopefully, Ed will clarify at some point.
It is not a secret. It is now called the Culture War.

shop.catholic.com/catholic-dvds/catholics-and-the-culture-war.html

shop.catholic.com/catholic-cds/catholic-answers-to-america-s-crisis.html

shop.catholic.com/catholic-cds/good-bye-religious-liberty-how-the-attacks-on-marriage-are-threatening-your-religious-freedom.html

Like I wrote earlier, it’s all documented.

Peace,
Ed
 
felsguy #101
I see a couple of “facts” there strung together by a lot of personal opinion but none of it points to the highly organized and well-kept secret movement that Ed so often mentions.
Learn to distinguish facts from mere opinion.
  1. The modernist errors prior to the Council are documented in Christ Denied, TAN, 1982, by Fr Paul Wickens.
  2. The SIECUS Circle, 1977 gives the facts on the destruction of morals.
  3. The destruction of whole Catholic school systems and religious orders that occurred is given in *The Emperor’s New Clothes *by William Kirk Kilpatrick, 1985, p 149-150.
  4. The importance and fidelity of Vatican II is attested by Cardinal Ratzinger.
  5. The disgraceful public dissent against Humanae Vitae by Rahner and numerous dissenting theologians, Richard McBrien’s *Catholicism *(full of errors) is exposed!
The radicalism of Karl Rahner is described by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI as Cardinal Ratzinger in post #73.

Those are facts, and the dissent was highly organised alright.
 
Ed, you frequently make reference to the existence of this organized movement, dare I say conspiracy, to bring down the Church… Just who were the these people? How were they able to be so well organized? And to fly under the radar for so long? How did you discover it?
Good question!
 
You’re welcome, all. Once the media was mostly our friend. Sadly, that is rarely true today. I was willing to accept authority more casually when I was growing up and, if you look thoroughly, there is still good information out there, but too few who are releasing it to the general public. I thank Catholic Answers for their efforts.

Peace,
Ed
 
Well said, dear brother. You have described the situation with admirable clarity. No, the past, meaning the 1950s and 1960s, were not without many of the things that still plague us today, like crime, death by accident and murder, alcoholism and so on, but we felt real joy. We understood death was a part of life and were not morbid. The pattern of civil society meant understanding what it meant. What was right and wrong and how one should behave and speak in public. Going to Mass was second-nature. I felt good about being as good as I could be. Our parents encouraged us in good things. Yes, there were problems for some but solutions were at hand. Communities - something I sorely miss - existed, not “do your own thing that may be right for you but not for me.” We had a moral compass, a yardstick if you will, to measure our behaviors and thoughts against. But we must not forget the means employed to influence, coerce and eventually force, in some cases, the embrace of evils, great and small.
One could say that the world you describe was simply much more supportive of our feeling “good about being as good as I could be”. And while truth and justice or righteousness (the basic teachings of the Church, IOW) still demand that we strive for that goodness the “new world” we live in no longer agrees or supports us in it to a very great degree if at all. But the reasons for the fragmentation of society away from a wholesome perspective and pursuits is complex, IMO, a consequence of human history as it’s evolved to this point in time, and Vatt II may well have anticipated it, while in any case having nothing to do with precipitating it.
 
Definitely, given calls for independence, political protests, military intervention and war, and other events worldwide, especially during the latter half of the decade.
Unfortunately the sixties brought a lot of bad to the world, there’s good people from the time but morality just decreased fast.
 
One could say that the world you describe was simply much more supportive of our feeling “good about being as good as I could be”. And while truth and justice or righteousness (the basic teachings of the Church, IOW) still demand that we strive for that goodness the “new world” we live in no longer agrees or supports us in it to a very great degree if at all. But the reasons for the fragmentation of society away from a wholesome perspective and pursuits is complex, IMO, a consequence of human history as it’s evolved to this point in time, and Vatt II may well have anticipated it, while in any case having nothing to do with precipitating it.
It’s not complex. The simple fact that chastity was so degraded by the sudden appearance of porn (Adult) Bookstores, which sold magazines with obscene ads inviting anyone to have sex the with women pictured in them, and the sudden appearance of topless bars and strip clubs. No faithful Catholic asked for any of this. It took millions of dollars, was highly coordinated and was protected by high priced lawyers. People did this, not history. Then we had dissidents inside the Church defying Pope Paul VI and his encyclical Humanae Vitae. On top of that, the makers of The Pill had to move product. The media gradually poisoned hearts and minds by slowly giving us bad examples till today.

Peace,
Ed
 
It’s not complex. The simple fact that chastity was so degraded by the sudden appearance of porn (Adult) Bookstores, which sold magazines with obscene ads inviting anyone to have sex the with women pictured in them, and the sudden appearance of topless bars and strip clubs. No faithful Catholic asked for any of this. It took millions of dollars, was highly coordinated and was protected by high priced lawyers. People did this, not history. Then we had dissidents inside the Church defying Pope Paul VI and his encyclical Humanae Vitae. On top of that, the makers of The Pill had to move product. The media gradually poisoned hearts and minds by slowly giving us bad examples till today.

Peace,
Ed
I would disagree Ed with your view of the sixties
as a “cause” and call the sixties the most obvious
“result” instead of that which really took off at the
end of world war II.
You discuss the lovely Rockwell type ambience
of the 1950’s while failing to address the movements
of first Crowley’s Thelema, (occult religion), Jack Parsons
thelemic temple in LA based on the Rosicrucians, moving
into and blending with the stupendous scam of
dianetics from Parson’s partner Ron Hubbard, resulting
and transforming into the enormously popular Scientology
making Hubbard one of the richest guys around at the
time. This was all 1950’s. And who were the people
sending Hubbard 500 dollar checks for his mental
auditing processes? Those veterans of world war II
and their now leisurely stay at home housewives with
three kids.
If you want to know why the 60s were so bad one
just needs to look beneath the surface of the seemingly
Idyllic 50’s for the movement that is a sworn enemy of
Catholicism.
 
I would disagree Ed with your view of the sixties
as a “cause” and call the sixties the most obvious
“result” instead of that which really took off at the
end of world war II.
You discuss the lovely Rockwell type ambience
of the 1950’s while failing to address the movements
of first Crowley’s Thelema, (occult religion), Jack Parsons
thelemic temple in LA based on the Rosicrucians, moving
into and blending with the stupendous scam of
dianetics from Parson’s partner Ron Hubbard, resulting
and transforming into the enormously popular Scientology
making Hubbard one of the richest guys around at the
time. This was all 1950’s. And who were the people
sending Hubbard 500 dollar checks for his mental
auditing processes? Those veterans of world war II
and their now leisurely stay at home housewives with
three kids.
If you want to know why the 60s were so bad one
just needs to look beneath the surface of the seemingly
Idyllic 50’s for the movement that is a sworn enemy of
Catholicism.
I know about all of the above. I was there in the 1950s. I would never call it idyllic but it was a lot better than what we have now. Our government, media and many people in general, respected and reflected Christian values. Newspapers printed beautiful articles about the birth of Christ. We did not lock our doors at night. Sure, there was crime and other issues, like the US and USSR deploying Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles. We didn’t lose a second of sleep over it. My dad was a World War II vet and he and our neighbors knew how to live. Get married, raise your own kids, maintain the family car and work. Plus enjoy some time with your family that did not involve multiple electronic devices.

We were never saints, but our parents and neighbors encouraged good behavior in us kids. Sure, there were a few bad apples, but we were polite and just got out of their way. Yes, it was not perfect but modesty and proper behavior was taught. Even as a boy, I could see my neighbors restrain themselves. Bad language was bad language. If a neighbor threw out a box of old Playboys, the moms would get together and dispose of them by unknown means.

God, a proper sense of guilt, shame and sin were all a part of me and my friends.

When God matters less, all members of society suffer because the other alternatives were bad. And we’re paying the price.

God bless,
Ed
 
It’s not complex. The simple fact that chastity was so degraded by the sudden appearance of porn (Adult) Bookstores, which sold magazines with obscene ads inviting anyone to have sex the with women pictured in them, and the sudden appearance of topless bars and strip clubs. No faithful Catholic asked for any of this. It took millions of dollars, was highly coordinated and was protected by high priced lawyers. People did this, not history. Then we had dissidents inside the Church defying Pope Paul VI and his encyclical Humanae Vitae. On top of that, the makers of The Pill had to move product. The media gradually poisoned hearts and minds by slowly giving us bad examples till today.

Peace,
Ed
All it took was concupiscence: the age-old lust for money, power, sex, etc. Why so many more people were influenced by it all during the 60’s had to do with greater affluence in the west where it all began (people tend to forsake discipline when they have more time and money on their hands), new technology, the impact of modernism/effects of the enlightenment, all converging during this one historical era IMO.
 
All it took was concupiscence: the age-old lust for money, power, sex, etc. Why so many more people were influenced by it all during the 60’s had to do with greater affluence in the west where it all began (people tend to forsake discipline when they have more time and money on their hands), new technology, the impact of modernism/effects of the enlightenment, all converging during this one historical era IMO.
Not at all. We lived in middle-class neighborhoods but we had one thing in common: we were content with what we had. Our parents kept their appliances running and they were not replaced every year with a new model. They ran for a very long time. Tuition to Catholic school for two kids was still a lot, but most us lived in wood-frame homes and had wholesome media and hobbies. A long-distance phone call was a big deal. We only had one black and white TV. The community was centered around the Church and we had lots of fun. If I wanted a certain toy or book, I cut grass or shoveled snow. Kids did chores around the house. I cut the front and back grass with a push lawnmower. People put money in the bank every payday, and we had a reserve for a “rainy day.” We went to local orchards and picked fruit. Some moms did canning so we could have some in the Winter. We had nothing fancy.

No, people called Hippies, anarchists and radicals came into our neighborhoods and preached immoral sex and promoted illegal drug use. A Hippie friend at the time told me, “I don’t need no piece uh paper ta live with my old lady.” Old? Like 21? They had the regulation Hippie hair, Hippie clothes and Hippie-speak. For them, freedom was ‘have sex with whoever,’ ‘shack up’ and use dope. And to do this openly and tell everybody to shut up.

“We’re grown adults !!! We’ll live how we want !!!” We don’t have any authority over us - not God, the Church, Big Business (they hated corporations, as in “Eat the Rich”), our parents, nobody. What schizophrenia. What a lie. They were a tribe that was committed to a way of wrong living, which they did not get from their parents, the Church and legitimate authorities. And profanity - gotta use profanity.

Dad to Hippie son: “If you love the girl, why don’t you get married?”

Son: “You don’t understand. Things are different now. We’re Free!”

Free to sin, especially sexual sin. Which is our current scourge.

Enlightened? They became slaves to their flesh and rejected good counsel. My Hippie friend called fornication “performing natural acts.”

Perverts, deviants - “Do your own thing, man. And whatever your thing is, it’s cool.” Yeah, that thing was no shame, no guilt, no self-respect and open scandal. And the media, year after year, began to indoctrinate the public, slowly, gradually, that this type of “life” was OK.

Now, we’re suffering the consequences.

Peace,
Ed
 
I think there is a lot of over-simplification going on here.

Fixing appliances instead of throwing them out?! A lot of appliances back then were mechanical rather than electronic, so it was easier for a mechanically-minded person to fix them. This has nothing to do with encroaching immorality and the loss of influence of the Catholic Church in the daily lives of Her people.

We need to hold onto our common sense. Next we’ll be saying that the polio vaccine was the cause of the downslide into immorality. :rolleyes:

One thing that comes to my mind when reading edwest2’s posts about life in the 1950s is that for many black families, this wasn’t what life was like. They were segregated into their own neighborhoods and schools, and the laws supported this segregation. It wasn’t idyllic at all for them. It was scary, because they were at the mercy of those who felt that black people were inferiors.

That’s one reason that rebellion broke loose in the 1960s–the U.S. blacks had had enough, and when leaders like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King came along, with the talent and God-given calling to lead them and to influence lawmakers, black people rose up and demanded civil rights. I don’t blame them, and I see no evil in this, but rather, much good.

Their plight gave other groups the courage to speak up, too. edwest2 is extolling the beauty of family life back then, but for many women, life WASN’T beautiful. They had no money and no means of making money and no security at all. Their husbands could do whatever they pleased to them, and the laws protected the husband even if he was a alcoholic, a pervert, or a violent abuser. I personally think that women went the wrong way by trying to negate the differences between the sexes (e.g., fertility and ability to bear children), but I see nothing evil about women rising up and demanding that the laws protect their rights to own property, play sports, land and hold down a high-paying job in any field, prosecute their husbands for abusive behavior, etc.

And we must never forget that a lot of the protesting that happened in the U.S. was over the Viet Nam war, which was a daily reality for the entire decade into the early 1970s. This wasn’t the same war as WWII, where it was obvious who the enemy was and what the consequences would be for failure to win this war. To this day, the reasons for the Viet Nam war are confusing to many Americans. It’s no wonder that young people rose up and said, “hell no, we won’t go” to a war that made no sense and was not being fought to protect the United States. I don’t blame them–my husband missed the draft by only a few years. How horrible that the U.S. forced young men (at least those with no money and no political clout) to leave their families and go off to a country and fight for…what?!

One of the good results of that protesting is that we now have a volunteer army with no draft, and it’s as strong as ever (although President Obama is doing his best to undermine it by reducing its numbers).

All of this unrest was very scary because whenever there are movements of the people, there are extremists who push the movement out towards the fringes and who advocate violence as a means to achieve the desired ends. We see this today with the anti-abortion movement–it is a glorious thing to protest the taking of innocent life, but we all know that there are the very few extremists who take it too far and assume the right to kill the abortionists. These extremists do not make the anti-abortion movement wrong, do they?

On top of everything else, in the 1960s the media technology improved to the point where many families owned a television and were able to actually SEE, on a daily basis, all the violent protests happening. That’s one reason it was so scary.

There are no simple, one-phrase answers to the OP’s question, and going back to a time when we all had one black-and-white TV is not the answer to the continuing downslide of morality in the world.
 
Now, we’re suffering the consequences.
We’re been suffering the consequences of *Original Sin *since it was committed. People are never satisfied, even if they might appear to approach a semblance of it for brief periods in time. Even then it’s shinier on the outside than the inside. Eden and all it entailed wasn’t good enough for Adam; we play out the same pattern-the same rebellion-over and over again in this world.
 
You guys should write autobiographies or a book about the 60s from a devout Catholic perspective. I assume there is enough information to write about. I would read the book! I didn’t grow up even close to the 60s, so this thread is helpful in understanding what happened to society (from a first person perspective) driving that time. It’s quite sad. We haven’t fully recovered from it. But anyway, just an idea! I think it would be an interesting book. 🙂

Have a blessed day (or night!)
 
I think there is a lot of over-simplification going on here.

Fixing appliances instead of throwing them out?! A lot of appliances back then were mechanical rather than electronic, so it was easier for a mechanically-minded person to fix them. This has nothing to do with encroaching immorality and the loss of influence of the Catholic Church in the daily lives of Her people.

We need to hold onto our common sense. Next we’ll be saying that the polio vaccine was the cause of the downslide into immorality. :rolleyes:

One thing that comes to my mind when reading edwest2’s posts about life in the 1950s is that for many black families, this wasn’t what life was like. They were segregated into their own neighborhoods and schools, and the laws supported this segregation. It wasn’t idyllic at all for them. It was scary, because they were at the mercy of those who felt that black people were inferiors.

That’s one reason that rebellion broke loose in the 1960s–the U.S. blacks had had enough, and when leaders like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King came along, with the talent and God-given calling to lead them and to influence lawmakers, black people rose up and demanded civil rights. I don’t blame them, and I see no evil in this, but rather, much good.

Their plight gave other groups the courage to speak up, too. edwest2 is extolling the beauty of family life back then, but for many women, life WASN’T beautiful. They had no money and no means of making money and no security at all. Their husbands could do whatever they pleased to them, and the laws protected the husband even if he was a alcoholic, a pervert, or a violent abuser. I personally think that women went the wrong way by trying to negate the differences between the sexes (e.g., fertility and ability to bear children), but I see nothing evil about women rising up and demanding that the laws protect their rights to own property, play sports, land and hold down a high-paying job in any field, prosecute their husbands for abusive behavior, etc.

And we must never forget that a lot of the protesting that happened in the U.S. was over the Viet Nam war, which was a daily reality for the entire decade into the early 1970s. This wasn’t the same war as WWII, where it was obvious who the enemy was and what the consequences would be for failure to win this war. To this day, the reasons for the Viet Nam war are confusing to many Americans. It’s no wonder that young people rose up and said, “hell no, we won’t go” to a war that made no sense and was not being fought to protect the United States. I don’t blame them–my husband missed the draft by only a few years. How horrible that the U.S. forced young men (at least those with no money and no political clout) to leave their families and go off to a country and fight for…what?!

One of the good results of that protesting is that we now have a volunteer army with no draft, and it’s as strong as ever (although President Obama is doing his best to undermine it by reducing its numbers).

All of this unrest was very scary because whenever there are movements of the people, there are extremists who push the movement out towards the fringes and who advocate violence as a means to achieve the desired ends. We see this today with the anti-abortion movement–it is a glorious thing to protest the taking of innocent life, but we all know that there are the very few extremists who take it too far and assume the right to kill the abortionists. These extremists do not make the anti-abortion movement wrong, do they?

On top of everything else, in the 1960s the media technology improved to the point where many families owned a television and were able to actually SEE, on a daily basis, all the violent protests happening. That’s one reason it was so scary.

There are no simple, one-phrase answers to the OP’s question, and going back to a time when we all had one black-and-white TV is not the answer to the continuing downslide of morality in the world.
That is a very false but very common response.

It is highly inaccurate. We knew Russian ICBMs were, at most, 30 minutes away, but we did not lose a second of sleep over it. We knew what they could do. Civil Defense signs were on buildings in case a massive attack occurred. Scary? No.

Peace,
Ed
 
I think there is a lot of over-simplification going on here.

Fixing appliances instead of throwing them out?! A lot of appliances back then were mechanical rather than electronic, so it was easier for a mechanically-minded person to fix them. This has nothing to do with encroaching immorality and the loss of influence of the Catholic Church in the daily lives of Her people.

We need to hold onto our common sense. Next we’ll be saying that the polio vaccine was the cause of the downslide into immorality. :rolleyes:

One thing that comes to my mind when reading edwest2’s posts about life in the 1950s is that for many black families, this wasn’t what life was like. They were segregated into their own neighborhoods and schools, and the laws supported this segregation. It wasn’t idyllic at all for them. It was scary, because they were at the mercy of those who felt that black people were inferiors.

That’s one reason that rebellion broke loose in the 1960s–the U.S. blacks had had enough, and when leaders like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King came along, with the talent and God-given calling to lead them and to influence lawmakers, black people rose up and demanded civil rights. I don’t blame them, and I see no evil in this, but rather, much good.

Their plight gave other groups the courage to speak up, too. edwest2 is extolling the beauty of family life back then, but for many women, life WASN’T beautiful. They had no money and no means of making money and no security at all. Their husbands could do whatever they pleased to them, and the laws protected the husband even if he was a alcoholic, a pervert, or a violent abuser. I personally think that women went the wrong way by trying to negate the differences between the sexes (e.g., fertility and ability to bear children), but I see nothing evil about women rising up and demanding that the laws protect their rights to own property, play sports, land and hold down a high-paying job in any field, prosecute their husbands for abusive behavior, etc.

And we must never forget that a lot of the protesting that happened in the U.S. was over the Viet Nam war, which was a daily reality for the entire decade into the early 1970s. This wasn’t the same war as WWII, where it was obvious who the enemy was and what the consequences would be for failure to win this war. To this day, the reasons for the Viet Nam war are confusing to many Americans. It’s no wonder that young people rose up and said, “hell no, we won’t go” to a war that made no sense and was not being fought to protect the United States. I don’t blame them–my husband missed the draft by only a few years. How horrible that the U.S. forced young men (at least those with no money and no political clout) to leave their families and go off to a country and fight for…what?!

One of the good results of that protesting is that we now have a volunteer army with no draft, and it’s as strong as ever (although President Obama is doing his best to undermine it by reducing its numbers).

All of this unrest was very scary because whenever there are movements of the people, there are extremists who push the movement out towards the fringes and who advocate violence as a means to achieve the desired ends. We see this today with the anti-abortion movement–it is a glorious thing to protest the taking of innocent life, but we all know that there are the very few extremists who take it too far and assume the right to kill the abortionists. These extremists do not make the anti-abortion movement wrong, do they?

On top of everything else, in the 1960s the media technology improved to the point where many families owned a television and were able to actually SEE, on a daily basis, all the violent protests happening. That’s one reason it was so scary.

There are no simple, one-phrase answers to the OP’s question, and going back to a time when we all had one black-and-white TV is not the answer to the continuing downslide of morality in the world.
The culture changed rapidly in a very brief span of years, and that promotes these questions and answers which reflect a good deal of the complacency of Catholics and Americans during the '50s. There was little reflection at the time between the difference between morality and conformity – and once the social pressure to conform changed to social pressure to anarchical conformity, many, including many Catholics, easily adapted to the norms of relativism. Many of those who as students plunged into radical movements returned to the suburbs and to self-promotion and complacent surface mores once the winds shifted again. As Vera Brittain observed, as the wife of a Cornell professor in the 1930s, Americans in general always spoke of freedom while practicing excessive conformity (I don’t have the exact quote at hand).
 
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