Thursday, December 10, 2009

Jeunesse Dorée

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Boys all smartly turned out in their Eton collars


My Lord Gladstone, justifying his name, has contributed thoughts on The Youth, which I am just now reading.

Oh dear. How gloomy my generation is, by his account.

There are so MANY things wrong with today's youth, that I barely know where to begin.

Even to my socially liberal eyes, that dance floor appeared as a modern day Sodom or Gommorah to me.

Sex, Drugs and Alcohol are the Holy Trinity for these teenagers, Apathy is their Messiah, Kanye West and Lady Gaga are their Prophets. They have no reverence for anything, not their parents, nor their elders, nor their teachers, nor their country. They are interested only in themselves, and their hedonistic pleasures.

Well, yes, quite.

But however justified Mr. Gladstone's complaints, let us try and go a bit further.

Is it that my generation "has no reverence" and is interested "only in ourselves?"

Or is it that we have formless hopeful and compassionate impulses, which have failed yet to find an expression?

Church attendance is declining. As a confirmed, Mass-attending High Anglican, the twenty-something Dr. Swift blames not a decline in spirituality among his peers (crackpot religion has never been more popular). Rather, he fairly and squarely blames anaemic clergy, and spineless spiritual leaders.

God is attractive. Even His Church has moments of good press.

It's baby boomer clergy of the generation above me that make me feel like sleeping in on Sundays. As the wonderfully acid Alice Thomas Ellis put it, "the liberal clergy, confronted with the Cities of the Plain (Sodom and Gommorrah), perambulate about wringing their hands and intoning "We are all guilty..." The sermon at Evensong last week was ostensibly about Advent--Incarnate God, the Wrath To Come, the Great Deliverer.

What did we get?

Multiculturalism, and a few nice thoughts on Depression.

Could do better, one feels.

Likewise, there is a deep desire to serve others in my generation--they don't join the Scouts, or the Christian World Service, instead they shop at Trade Aid, they're deeply worried about African poverty--in fact, volunteerism is rising among the young--we're deeply worried about our fracturing society, just not sure what to do about it.

It's our parents who ran off to Woodstock.

Yes, of course we have too many people blown about by our feelings, and forgetful of our duty. But, for a generation raised on bromides about following our hearts, we aren't doing too badly. It's the Baby Boomers who knew what the Right Thing was and thought getting stoned was more fun.

Yes, there is too much promiscuity--but on the other hand, a deep desire for love, for sacrifice, for hope. Having been raised on Free Love, my generation now looks for the ties that bind.

Marriage is still an aspiration.

Period Dramas like Pride and Prejudice have never been more popular.

Even trashy novels like Twilight speak to the misdirected hope that there might be someone to love you forever.

ANZAC and Rememberance Day Services here have never been more popular, or more youthful.

There is a lot to criticise about The Youth Of Today, to be sure--and Mr. Gladstone is right about most of it. But given the culture we had to start with, the aspirations we have are good ones and noble ones, however incomplete.

Pope Benedict encouraged the young people of Genoa in these terms--his prescription is for youth and goodness to be joined together, for strength and energy to lie down with service:

To be young means to have discovered the things that do not pass away with the passing of the years. If a young person discovers the great and true values, then he will never grow old, even if the body follows its own laws.Stay young in your heart and you will radiate youth, which is to say, goodness. Yes, because goodness escapes the grip of time. That is why we can say that only he who is good and generous is truly young.

I wish you all to remain young, but not as fashion goes. Fashions fizzle out in a heartbeat, they burn out in frenetic pointless succession. But youth - the youth born of goodness - will remain. Indeed, it will be perfect and resplendent in Heaven, with God.It is beautiful to be young. Today, everyone wants to be young, to remain young, and many masquerade as young people, even if their youth has gone - visibly gone. But why is it beautiful to be young? Why this dream of perennial youth?

I think there are two decisive elements. One is that youth still has all of the future ahead. Everything is the future - the time of hope. And the future is full of promise, although today, it is also full of threats, especially the threat of great emptiness.

That is why many want to stop time, out of fear for a future of emptiness. They would want to consume all at once everything that is ‘beautiful’ in life - and so they burn out the candle at both ends even if their life has just begun.It is important to choose the true promises, those that will open up the future, even if it means renouncing certain things. Whoever chooses God will have, even in old age, a future without an end, and will fear no threats ahead.So choose well - do not destroy your future.

And the first choice should be God, who revealed himself in Jesus Christ. In the light of this choice which offers us a reliable companion on our journey, one can find the criteria for the other choices that one must make.To be young, as I said, means being good and generous. But once again: the true goodness is Jesus, the Jesus you know or that your heart is searching for. He alone is the friend who will never betray. He was faithful up to giving his life on the Cross.

Surrender to his love!

By the way, the open-air Mass for Young People at which he said this was full.

Golden Youth indeed.

9 comments:

  1. Quite right, my Lord Swift, quite right indeed. There are a lot of things to be hopeful about when it comes to these generations. With the publishing of Canada's new immigrant citizen guide, it seems that monarchism and pride in our history is 'in' here in the Elder Dominion.

    However, I still see such a great amount of sin and vice that is often hard for me to see those young ladies and gentlemen who still conduct themselves in an upstanding way. You know what they say about one bad apple. After seeing so many bad apples, that's all I tend to see.

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  2. If I know my history, Gladstone was never a Lord. The "Grand Old Man" was, according to Disraeli, "God's Only Mistake".

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  3. I must be remembering things--did he not get a peerage and then disclaim it?

    No, he fought Lothian.

    Maybe you're right.

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  4. Gladstone refused a peerage, though Victoria did offer it several times. It should be remembered that his last government was 1892-4, when he was well into this eighties. Unlike Dizzy, he wanted to stay in the Commons as long as possible. Much like Churchill.

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  5. That's it. My vague memory agrees with you.

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  6. The more things change, the more they stay the same! Our elders and betters have always made predictions about the immenent failure of society due to the laziness / ineptitude / selfishness of the young.

    Consider the following quote:

    "I see no hope for the future of our people if they are dependent on
    frivolous youth of today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond words... When I was young, we were taught to be discreet and
    respectful of elders, but the present youth are exceedingly disrespectful and impatient of restraint"

    No this wasn't a rant in the Times by some consevative commontator, by was written by Hesiod (a classical Greek poet) about 800 BC.

    Mac

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  7. Exactly, and there have always been youth who bucked the trend.

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  8. Good response to the post below regards where the worst elements all stemmed from. I would only add that it is also today's youth of all backgrounds making tremendous sacrifices in Afghanistan. And that it is the media today which sets the stage for all the worst elements of youth culture to be worshipped. Any sense of entitlement is born of consumerism.

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  9. And Afgnanistan and all wars make the youth more disillusioned and apathetic. Why bother? Curious, after WW1 The Bright Young Things were the epitome of what is being discussed here. The fact was that millions died for nothing, in a senseless Barbaric war in Europe. They threw all convention aside and their attitude was while I'm alive I'm at least going to have a good time! Since life is meaningless, let's cut the pretense.

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