Our young people are strong enough to hear about the positives and the negatives. The problem has more to do with delivery. The delivery has to be developmentally appropriate. Some have mentioned Father Corapi. I have never heard him preach to youth, so I can’t say that he does a good job or not. My experiences with him have always been with adults. The style that he uses with adults is fine for that population. That population grew up in a different era when the world spoke differently and they respond to that authoritarian manner. Youth today respond to authoritative, but not authoritarian.
If we look at the youth apostles of our time, especially John Paul II and Benedict XVI, we see an entirely different manner. When these men speak to youth they inspire them to follow Christ. They speak to them of the evils that surround them, but they do not inspire fear in the young. On the contrary, they inspire courage. They tell the young that Jesus is with them, that Jesus does love them and that Jesus is the only way that they can move through a world filled with many temptations and many evils without being afraid.
Our young people live in a world where there are many threats to their welfare. There is terrorism, economic instability, collapsing infrastructures that used to provide protection and security, education systems no longer guarantee that you will be prepared for the workforce, dysfunctional families, rampant consumerism, political and civil leaders who tell youth that they have rights that God did not give human beings and social systems that are constantly being challenged and often collapsing around them do nothing to make the young feel safe… These are new threats.
In addition, our young people do not have the tools that many of us had. Many of us were baby-boomers. We lived in a world where there was a certain amount of security, because families provided that security. We were sheltered form many of the evils in the world. Many of us did not have the economic resources that our young people have today. We had to live with less and work more.
These and other differences in generations require that we learn to speak to this generation. They are not us. They do not understand our experience. How are they going to understand the faith from the same point of view? They don’t share our worldview, much less the same view of the Church and the faith.
I’m not so sure that our view of the Church and the faith is helpful to them, considering that they live in a different world. They need the same doctrine and moral rules that we needed. But the applications are different. If we give them the doctrine and morals that we learned, without the tools to apply them to their reality, we have given them nothing. You cannot work with raw materials. You need the tools to go with them.
This is what has made John Paul II and Benedict XVI popular among the young. They give them the essentials, but they also give them the tools that are most appropriate for their time. Just look at the themes of World Youth Days. Look at the activities such as the music, the celebrations with the Blessed Sacrament, the prayer services such as the Stations of the Cross, the celebrations of the mass that include tradition with contemporary culture. One of the interesting things that we saw in Australia during WYD was the vocation expo. Even cloistered religious were out there marketing to the young using tools that the young understand. The Poor Clares were using videos, music and most of all, they were present. In our day, Poor Clares would never leave their enclosure. They could be excommunicated for doing so.
The Franciscan Friars of the four orders had a rock concert. After the concert the friars walked around with the young people asking the kids questions. They didn’t wait for the kids to ask them questions. They went out to the kids and when asked they explained that they were friars not monks and that their ministry was to wander around like St. Francis before them. That caught their attention.
In Boston, Cardinal Sean attracts youth to the seminary by walking around to youth activities in his brown habit and sandals. He introduces himself to the young as Sean, not Cardinal O’Malley and he tells them that his is their brother. He has increased the seminary population to almost 70 students in this year’s class.
Mother Angelica attracts many young women to the Poor Clares through her use of scripture, pithy lessons and humour. These girls stop and listen to her. Many join her.
Fr. Stan Fortuno of the Franciscans of the Renewal has brought youth back to the mass, to Eucharistic Adoration and to religious life by walking the streets of NY in his grey habit rapping. It attracts the attention of the young.
In my own parish, we have two newly ordained priests, one newly ordained deacon, and 40 Secular Franciscan Brothers and Sisters. All of us are involved with youth in Eucharistic Adorations, retreats, ministries to the elderly, Sunday mass and a growing ministry to families with disabilities. The message that we preach to our youth is that the Church is a community that serves Christ. The kids want to serve Christ. They know that to do so they must stay close to the Eucharist, Reconciliation and the Scriptures.
As we can see, there are many wonderful things happening with youth in many places. The problem is that we need more of this. We who are older have to take the risk of changing how we deliver the same message that was delivered to us. The error that was made in the latter half of the 20th century was that someone thought that the message had to be watered down because the kids wouldn’t understand it. That was dumb. The kids didn’t understand the message, because the delivery was wrong, not the message. We lost the kids.
We have to clean up our delivery and recover the message.
Fraternally,
JR
