Thank you for your reply, Edwin. Assuming things about what I write is never a good thing, asking for clarification is.
Your “nice, pristine society” assumption is uncalled for. And assuming that at least one poster here believes something, not you, that he knows nothing about, or the past was pristine - which I never said it was, then I respectfully encourage all involved to please stop it.
If the Catholic community knew more then things would have been hunky-dory, or better yet - perfect, or 99% better. Or that the past was, you know, like some posters here claim, different than what I describe, or backward, unlike our Modern so-called society.
I’ve got bad news about “modern society.”
"A 2004 U.S. Department of Education report reported that “the most accurate data available” reveals that “nearly 9.6 percent of [public school] students are targets of educator sexual misconduct sometime during their school career.”
This result prompted Hofstra University’s Dr. Charol Shakeshaft, the author of the study, to opine in 2006, “[T]hink the Catholic Church has a problem? The physical sexual abuse of students in schools is likely more than 100 times the abuse by priests.”
Some people will write anything to cast Catholic life during the period I grew up in in a certain - very narrow - light. We knew there were people who were not Catholics, and people who were abused. Every Lent, the nuns told us about the poor and desperate in detail and asked us to give up something and fill a container with money so as to help them. Once again, it
was not perfect, but here are a few facts:
- We did not lock our doors at night.
- We knew what an ICBM was and we knew about its destructive power, In 1962, I watched President John F. Kennedy on TV telling the American people that Medium-Range Ballistic Missiles had been deployed on the island of Cuba, and he warned the Russians that any nuclear attack anywhere would be viewed as an attack on the United States and result in an immediate response.
**3) We didn’t lose a second of sleep about ICBMS. We had great times in the late 1950s and 1960s. **
- My sponsor at my Confirmation was an usher at our Church. One day, I came over to his garage because he had a work bench there and he was doing something. We started talking and I noticed a box of books by one wall. I asked him about the books. He said, he bought the books at garage sales and took them to people in old folks’ homes to read. Each person was offered one book of his or her choosing. He even offered me one.
Now, today, the graphic ugliness of CSI, Dexter and other programs is right in our faces. Did Catholics ask for this? No.
Peace,
Ed