Thursday, March 28, 2019

#TreatYoShelf: 03/28/19

by Dan Masterton

Almost halfway through Lent! Hope your resolve in good and strong, and your temptations remain a welcome invitation to Lenten prayer. My fast from alcohol has been enjoyable and refreshing while my daily caffeine limit has come with its struggles. I appreciate the chance for intentionality and feel like its been a good rooting in moments of prayer.

On to some links!

"Human Contact Is Now a Luxury Good" by Nellie Bowles via the NYTimes

This is fascinating. There's ton of interesting trends identified and analyzed in here, not least among them the flip in perception of technology. Whereas previously, technology was seen as a signifier of wealth and advantage, it's now often felt to be that a lack of technology indicates one's freedom to choose. This is a great taking-of-stock for where we're at with processing technology.

"E.U. Sets Standard With Ban on Single-Use Plastics by 2021" by Hillary Leung via Time

Per usual, the US will lag behind other places that are more willing to acknowledge human agency in ruining the earth. Capitalism has its benefits, but ecological and environmental concerns are not given much weight when it comes to making money. Kudos to the EU for this first step and a continued emphasis on polluter-pays. Hopefully, they see success while not sacrificing much economically and more places in the US will follow and put pressure on the federal standards here. Hopefully, people with disabilities, young kids, and others who depend on straws can gravitate to alternative reusable options.

"How Theo Epstein has changed from Boston to Chicago" by Jesse Rogers via ESPNChicago

Let me sneak a sports story in here. Theo Epstein is the President of Baseball Operations for my favorite team the Chicago Cubs, meaning he oversees all executives involved with personnel, player development, etc. He is lauded within the industry and in other sectors for his leadership style, which is founded on communication, transparency, and getting ahead of the curves. Here, this profile talks about how he's matured since getting his first big job in his late 20's, inviting the influence of being a husband and dad into his work philosophies and taking a different approach to how he manages people and his role. Cool read.

"Why the 'Mormon' church changed its name. (It's about revelation, not rebranding.)" by Daniel Burke via CNN

This one is a cool study in modern religion. It covers a lot of neat angles into the Church of LDS, from religious leadership to prophecy to semantics and more. This religion has long been fascinating to me for their claims of new revelation, their unique cosmology, their differing practices, and most of all, their excellent strong family life. This article is sort of a where-things-are-at report that digs into some of the current developments.

"Pope Francis ring-kissing controversy draws confusion over the long-standing tradition" by Christopher White via Washington Post

I'm not real into this controversy, as it's sort of just a way to fight a culture war within the Church. However, this article and this journalist do a solid job of laying the groundwork for why this is a tradition and how Francis is handling it. Regardless of what you think or don't think, this is a solid read if you just want to become more informed surrounding this issue.

Monday, March 25, 2019

TRH on Catholic Normalcy No. 1: Achievement and Success

by Laura Flanagan

The Restless Hearts have been reflecting a little on how “normal” a Catholic can and should be, and how countercultural our faith challenges us to be. I think it’s always a valuable start to look to Mary, model of the Church. In a homily from earlier this year, Fr. Hugh Barbour describes Mary as “a perfectly normal woman with perfectly normal human sensibilities and manners who also possesses the knowledge and the power of a hidden mystery that utterly outstrips any normal human expectations.”1

The lack of knowledge of this hidden mystery seems to me to be the saddest aspect of the recent bizarre (and yet unsurprising) college admissions scandal. Whatever the cost to their integrity, whatever the desires of their children, whatever the impact on other prospective admits - the only acceptable path forward for these people’s children was admission to a certain level of university.

This secret network of privilege brought to mind a fictional example; a few months ago I ended up reading Emily Giffin’s recent pop fiction contribution, All We Ever Wanted. Brace yourself for spoilers ahead.

At the beginning of the book, a photo surfaces of the wealthy main character’s son sexually assaulting a fellow student at their prestigious high school. The mother begins to wonders how they must have formed their son that he would choose to behave so despicably. The events of the book primarily spiral from that self-reflection.

Her husband and best friend (whose son was also involved), ostracize and undercut her when she doesn’t seem totally on board with doing everything possible to erase the crime. They both recognize her internal conflict and see it as dangerous to their “saving” the boys from the ramifications of their actions, which will no doubt echo through their lives. Meanwhile, she forms a motherly relationship with the girl victimized by her son. Eventually, she leaves her son to the consequences as a final act of re-formation, while letting him know that she still loves and always will love him. Several years later, the young man tells the young woman: “She saved me.”

The book is obviously meant to bring up the issue of privileged families using all their resources to protect their own from what would ordinarily change the entire course of a less privileged person’s life. If your god is prestige or wealth, as it seemed to be for the families caught up in this college admissions scandal, these are the lengths it makes sense to go to, if you can. This masquerades as “the best possible life for my child.”

The best possible life for your child is one in which they really know the hidden mystery that Mary knew: that God’s humility and love for us overflows, and He calls us to imitate him. When that mystery is the foundation of everything for which your child strives, and focuses how they respond to whatever may come - that’s when they’ve succeeded.

So what actions should set apart the Christian from the non-Christian? How are those of us still in the Church any different from the growing number of “nones” in the country, those with no religious affiliation at all?

People often take the same action with differing motivations. Why would someone support an abuse survivor and value justice for perpetrators, even when the victim is unknown to you and the offender is your own son?

Giffin’s protagonist was a sexual assault victim in college. She sees herself in the victim, and attempts to value this girl in the way that no one had helped her. Others, with no personal experience of that particular sin, see acknowledgement of and justice for assault as necessary in forming everyone - including the perpetrator - in valuing a humanist view of human dignity.

Each of those previous two people show a partial knowledge of the hidden mystery. Catholics take this action because of God’s complete revelation of the human person - created in the image of God, beloved by Him even unto death, not to be abused by the desire and power of the strong and the privileged. That’s a far stronger image than the humanist view. And then we have to say that’s why we did it, when asked.

Towards the end of her life, Dorothy Day said, "If I have accomplished anything in my life, it is because I wasn't embarrassed to talk about God." A Catholic mother in Giffin’s fictional situation might also choose to allow her son to meet the justice system. She might humbly admit her failure in formation (although perhaps not publicly, as that could harden him, and may be more virtue signaling than ongoing virtue formation). She might state her hope that these repercussions would correct the course of entitlement and self-involvement that led to this terrible sin. She would pray that her son would allow Christ into his heart to change it. Such sins are an opportunity for the spiritual work of mercy, “admonish the sinner” - and that work of mercy goes directly against the gospel of prestige and wealth.

What do you do with success if you do come by it honestly?

I enjoy hearing about the family of long-time NFL quarterback Philip Rivers. He lives fairly modestly with his wife and kids, of which there are nine on the outside as of last Wednesday. He did spend a chunk of his ample earnings on a custom SUV and driver so he can watch film on his commute... thus making the most of his drive time and fulfilling his obligations both to his work and his family.

The ultimate holiness of a family is not reducible to whether they put time with each other first, or whether they practice NFP. However, from the distance that I and many others “know” the Rivers family, they seem to be joyful and stable, while honoring their commitments. That witness can go a long way, and Philip Rivers seems to be “always ready to give a reason for his hope,” as the first letter of Peter advises.2

The peace of Christ, which surpasses all understanding, can be very starkly juxtaposed with the current parental and child levels of anxiety about achievement. One of the reasons people often give for not having more children is that they feel they won’t be able to dedicate the appropriate amount of time to their academic/social success. Meanwhile, parents of four or more children generally have lower stress levels than those of two or three.3 Parents of children with Down Syndrome also have less stress than most parents.4 What sounds most like the peace of Christ?

Some people will see what those with that peace are achieving, but honestly some of us might turn out to be a “waste” in the sight of the world. I’m certainly wasting the full earning potential of my college pedigree. Whether or not my parents are disappointed by that fact is based on why they thought I should go to college, and in particular Notre Dame.

St. Edmund Campion is a great example of this “waste.” He was a celebrity-level academic, and was primed for an illustrious career in Elizabeth I’s Protestant England. Instead, he stumbled across some cold hard truth while reading the Church Fathers, became Catholic, fled the country, was ordained a priest, returned to minister to England’s Catholics in secret, and was martyred for doing that. His promise and talent were never actualized… or were they?

If you want your kids to go to certain school because it will form them in truth and in mercy, go for it. I think my life and maybe my priorities would be a lot different if I hadn’t attended Notre Dame, but I can’t be sure about that. Obviously, though, you wouldn’t cheat to get them into that school. If your child wasn’t admitted, you would pray - perhaps together! - and take God’s redirection.

If your highest goal for yourself or your child is sanctity, and not money/the best college/the most experiences, you don't have to be so stressed over those things (or pay money to get your pretend-coxswain into USC). While sainthood is hard work, anyone can do it. That’s the hidden mystery Mary knew - even (and especially) the lowliest handmaiden could magnify the greatness of the Lord. The rest of our worldly success is gravy and gift.


1 Here's the link. The emphasis above is mine.



2 Here's a secular primer on the Rivers family, and an extended interview where he talks about his faith in real life.



3 See this story from today.com.



4 This article, too.

Thursday, March 21, 2019

#TreatYoShelf: 03/21/19

by Dan Masterton

This past Sunday to Tuesday, I directed a three-day Kairos for my students, the 15th one I've been a part of. It's a well-crafted distillation of the Spiritual Exercises, pedagogically adapted for teenagers to engage in an intensive multi-day/overnight retreat. The exposure teens gain to the power of trust, vulnerability, and companionship gives them potent experience of God's love moving in their community. It's a must for any teen, whether through their Catholic high school, their parish or local community, or perhaps even in college.

That said, my leisure reading was a bit constrained this week.

"San Quentin’s chaplain: California’s death penalty moratorium has given us hope" by George Williams via America Magazine

Recently, California's governor issued an executive order placing a moratorium on the death penalty. This effectively pulled hundreds of prisoners off death row in California, which had the largest death row population of any United State. This article goes inside California's biggest prison, where these prisoners do their time. One of the many great details provided by this chaplain is the first-hand experience of prison personnel dismantling the execution apparatuses -- what a powerful action, especially when juxtaposed with the grim "work" of execution prison-workers have too often done in the past.



"Trash, permit violations and mud: why some Chicagoans hate ‘Windy City Rehab’" by Stephanie Zimmermann, Mitch Dudek and Matthew Hendrickson via the Chicago Sun-Times

My wife, Katherine, and I have taken to watching this show, not because we love house-hunter shows and can't get enough of them (we definitely can get enough) but because the idea that these flips took place at disclosed addresses we know well from our years living in the city. As we watched though, what bothered us more than the personality of the host was the fashion by which she worked -- all high-end, all high-margin, all well into the million-dollar range. Of course, she's capitalistically out for profit, but she often talks about history, story, and artifiact objects with a romance that doesn't match her profit-driven work. This article features excellent reporting that discusses the impact of expensive flips that drive up home prices, conversions that turn multi-flats into single-family homes, and more. It's fantastic journalism.

"New Year Ushers in Excitement for Cristo Rey St. Viator Las Vegas" via the Viatorian Community

This is a total homer move by me, an alum of St. Viator High School. My fave religious community has been working hard over the last few years to move from ideas and a feasibility study to the concrete, brick-and-mortar building of a new Cristo Rey Network school. I would argue, and have, that Cristo Rey secondary education is the most effective concrete thing that the Church is doing to serve and accompany socioeconomically marginalized populations. It's awesome to see my beloved priests and brothers shepherding this important work into reality and growing the network of this exceptional ministry.

Thursday, March 14, 2019

#TreatYoShelf: 03/14/19

by Dan Masterton

"Raising three kids is organized chaos. Here’s why I’m having a fourth." by Liz Tenety via the Washington Post

When Jim Gaffigan and his wife had their fourth child, he described it this way: “You know what it’s like having a fourth kid? Imagine you’re drowning, then someone hands you a baby.” (They have five kids now.) In this reflection, the author talks through the realities of having lots of children and tries to defuse some of the side-eye and skepticism that parents can evoke. Personally, I feel strongly about  having kids sooner rather than later and dislike the narratives of "readiness" that seem so common. This author tackles it with an authentic tone.

"With Alex Trebek's announcement comes unease over the words 'fight' and 'win' applied to cancer" by Heidi Stevens via the Chicago Tribune

This column is right on. I started to draft a blog about this but found myself struggling to both speak my mind honestly and be duly respectful to people with cancer and their families. This author strikes the balance I couldn't find by describing the potential harm of "fight" language when it comes to this stupid disease. I wish Alex Trebek the prayers and blessings of a grateful viewer and admire his courage in trying to tackle his diagnosis with ferocity.

"Gov. Newsom to Suspend Death Penalty by Executive Order; Political Fallout Likely" by Scott Shafer via KQED

It was a serious bummer when California failed to repeal its death penalty. As a former Californian for one unusual year, it was neat to participate in a presidential-year election and complete a ballot full of binding statewide initiatives. In the case of the death penalty, the people of California had a chance to repeal it themselves, but the majority ruled against repeal. Now, the governor has decided to utilize executive powers to declare a moratorium and halt executions on America's biggest death row. Much like Illinois, hopefully the law will catch up and formalize this so that no person will be executed in California again.

* * *

As a final note, the recent plane crash in Ethiopia was a tragedy on many levels. One way it touched me was through the death of 4 staff members from Catholic Relief Services. I got to visit Uganda on an education immersion with CRS with other teachers from Catholic high schools. While the whole national apparatus was directed by an American expat, the operations and groundwork were done almost exclusively by native-born Ugandans or immigrants from other African countries. Their expertise and knowledge was astounding, and their hospitality and warmth endeared us to them so quickly. The folks who passed in this plane crash were CRS staff from these types of local programs, and it's such a sadness to lose them as they sought to do such valuable development work. May God bless them and their legacy of development to the people of Ethiopia.

Thursday, March 7, 2019

#TreatYoShelf: 03/07/19

by Dan Masterton

I totally flubbed meal-planning this week, as I was not thinking in terms of Lenten meat abstinence when I did the week's grid on Sunday (my wife and I sketch out the week on a basic grid chart called "The Swirling Storm of Life" each Sunday night). Crockpot pulled pork had to slide from Wednesday to Thursday in favor of cheese pizza; pasta night on Friday could remain but will lack its usual meat sauce. Luckily, today is in play, and our crockpot is making us those neighbors cooking something that makes the stairwell smell good instead of ooky. I even saw one Catholic org refer to today as Meat Oasis Thursday. I'm here for that.

On to this week's links!

Statement by Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C. The Sexual Abuse Crisis in the Church: Notre Dame’s Response

Sorry to those of you with Domer fatigue from this blog's contributors, but this one warrants a look. Nothing the Church does in the wake of so many years of so much abuse and coverup will ever be enough, especially to the victims of these sins. However, that doesn't mean earnest efforts shouldn't be made to take positive steps that respond to the shortcomings of the Church. Notre Dame, certainly an imperfect Catholic institution itself, laid out a blueprint for the next steps it will try to take. The road map here is a good start.

Loop's Zero Waste Platform Is Changing The Culture Of Disposability One Pint Of Ice Cream At A Time by Sara Weinreb via Forbes

I'm grateful for my college, my current coworkers, and many close friends who have taught me some finer points of conservation -- things like what "recyclables" aren't actually recyclable in most places (damn you, #6!), what things are compostable (future life goal when done with apartment living), and habits to get away from disposable culture (reusable shopping bags to the rescue!). Now comes a new company trying to take that reusable bag life and draw on the old "milkman" concept to make us greener. Loop will launch soon, and several articles help lay out the way you can subscribe to everyday household products delivered in a reusable tote and in reusable containers. Read more in the article, and consider signing up for email alerts ahead of when they roll out.

The Eclipse of Sex by the Rise of Gender by Abigail Favale via McGrath Institute for Church Life at Notre Dame

This is a deep dive, so put on your scuba gear first. I know that as I try to learn about the complexities and nuance of sexual orientation and gender identity, I often find myself struggling as I seek to understand more. There are a lot of layers to what sexuality is, especially when it comes to our understanding of our bodies and explanations of gender. I have a lot still to learn and think about, but this article (at least what I grasped of it) helped me think further on this tough stuff.

The Abortion Debate Needs Moral Lament by Michael Wear via The Atlantic

This article is excellently deliberate, measured, and fair. Without bending to either extreme of a wedge issue, this writer takes the time to carefully explain the ways that the entire debate is broken. It's worth a full read, and I'll just use the conclusion an enticement to start from his beginning: "What the abortion debate needs is not an increase of moral outrage—we have plenty of that—but instead a sense of moral lament. It is to our collective shame that our politics seem incapable of such a development."

Awkward Moments with Jason Benetti via the Cerebal Palsy Foundation


Jason Benetti is a Chicago native who has attained his childhood dream job of being the play-by-play guy for the Chicago White Sox. He is professional, polished, and proficient while at the same time being wonderfully grounded, humble, and self-deprecating. He's an awesome get for the White Sox, who hopefully have their play-by-play man for decades to come. Benetti also has cereal palsy and is a great teacher and advocate for CP. Perhaps my favorite element of that is a web series he voices called "Awkward Moments," in which clever animations accompany his narration in explaining various aspects of what life is like for people with CP. It's educational and heart-warmingly funny.

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