
Denver, Colo., Oct 5, 2017 / 03:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- When Timothy Piazza pledged a fraternity at Pennsylvania State University in February 2017, he had hoped to find a brotherhood.
To join the fraternity, he endured severe hazing rituals, one of which ended with Piazza collapsing down a set of basement stairs, where he was left alone without medical attention. Ultimately, the injury led to his death.
His girlfriend of three years, Kaitlyn Tempalsky, told reporters that Piazza joined the fraternity looking for friendships. She told the New York Times that “he wasn’t in it for the partying … He really wanted that brotherhood.”
Male friendships are becoming a rarity in American culture, Catholic leaders say, which could lead some men, like Piazza, to look for friends in dangerous situations.
Historically, occasions for brotherhood were systemically built into many cultures, Catholic psychologist Dr. Jim Langley told CNA.
Listing the examples of chopping down trees or heading into battle together, Dr. Langley said, “It’s our base coding, in our human nature as men” to complete projects or engage in activities together – though in contemporary culture, men are becoming more isolated.
“Men who are isolated are prone to all sorts of mental health problems – anxiety and depression. Specifically among men that we see in our work, men who are isolated are much more prone to addiction to pornography.”
Langley explained that the source of pornography addiction may stem from a desire for intimacy, even for male friends.
“Men in general struggle with [intimacy], it’s a pretty common thing. But it’s not just romantic intimacy, and it’s not just intimacy related to woman, we also have a longing for brotherhood.”
Because humans are physical, intellectual, and relational beings, he said, our sense of identity is not discovered by being alone, it is rather found in the context of other people.
“Specifically, figuring out how we can contribute in relationship and how relationships contribute to us.”
Matthew Schaefer, director of student development at Franciscan University of Steubenville, agreed.
“I am the best man I can be when I have strong male friendships. We hear in Scripture that ‘iron sharpens iron,’ and so it is with men,” Schaefer said.
“When men engage in true friendships – and by this I mean more than spending time together playing sports or video games – they can encourage one another toward holiness.”
Schaefer pointed to the household system at Franciscan University, through which more than half of the university’s students participate in small, single-sex faith communities.
“These same-sex communities help members grow in mind, body, and spirit and hold each other accountable to ongoing conversion.”
“In men’s households, they are encouraged to be on more of a schedule by committing to weekly gatherings, generally focused on prayer. They are present to console in times of need and celebrate in times of joy. They are brothers for the Christian walk.”
This type of accompaniment is not easily accomplished, said Daniel Porting, a FOCUS missionary at Southern Methodist University, who reflected on his own college experience in the Phi Gama Delta fraternity.
Porting told CNA that most fraternities have mentoring programs, but that those programs are not always taken seriously.
“So that’s a very good structure, I’m not saying they do it well, but there is a structure in every fraternity where they want to inspire that good authentic and organic friendship, where it starts on a one-on-one level, where one person can accompany another,” he said.
But secular culture is struggling to foster this type of friendship, Dr. Langley said, “because an authentic friendship with men, in some ways, needs to be reinvented.”
“As men, we connect through doing things side-by-side, but if you look at the routes that men have to connect with each other, it’s very superficial.”
Dr. Langley said that some social norms and stereotypes make it difficult for men to pursue deep friendships with one another.
“Until recently in our culture, being affectionate with another man was really frowned upon and looked at as being effeminate, or a person would worry about [appearing] homosexual.”
Research conducted by Dr. Niobe Way, a psychology professor at New York University, published in 2013 by the American Sociological Association, showed that male friendships, which include emotional vulnerability, are typical during boyhood. But as boys get older, and deep male friendships become associated with homosexuality, she said men lose this avenue of emotional vulnerability.
“It is only in late adolescence – a time when, according to national data, suicides and violence among boys soar – that boys disconnect from other boys,” said Way in a 2013 article in Contexts magazine.
“The boys in my studies begin, in late adolescence, to use the phrase ‘no homo’ when discussing their male friendships, expressing the fear that if they seek out close friendships, they will be perceived as ‘gay’ or ‘girly.’”
Mark Harfiel, vice president of Paradisus Dei, a family-based Catholic ministry, said that when culture doesn’t support true masculinity, men lose sense of what it means to be authentically human.
“When you turn from Christ and begin to make all truth relative with no absolutes, you begin to lose a sense of what it even means to be human. All relationships have become sexualized and masculinity itself has even come into question.”
Secular culture often promotes a damaged view of masculinity, Daniel Porting said. He suggested that there are three main characteristics of heightened masculinity in the culture: an emphasis on power, pleasure and wealth.
“And I think that those all lead to unfulfillment and a lack of joy.”
Porting noted that many college-aged men with whom he works have suffered from a lack of authentic masculine role models, which creates wounds in men and impedes the desire to be loved.
The FOCUS missionary said these wounds are difficult for men to address, and added that when he meets men on campus he will steer away from questions like, “how is your life growing up?” or “how is your family?”
These questions “trigger something that is very wounding because someone didn’t step up and be a good role model,” he said.
Every parish needs to have an opportunity for men to find fraternal bonds and spiritually rich accountability, Harfiel added. That Man is You, a program affiliated with Paridisus Dei, is one possibility, he said, noting the group has created an estimated 1,000 male fraternal groups and reached over 100,000 men in the past 12 years.
However, this avenue might not be available for everyone, and Langley acknowledged that some men struggle with an even bigger problem – namely, fear.
“If there are not opportunities, one could create opportunities, connections with other people, but we’re afraid to be the first person to do that. We’re afraid to meet new people. We are afraid to be real with other people. So the virtue which would overcome all these virtues really is truly courage.”
Especially if there is no men’s ministry at the parish, Dr. Langely said, most likely other men in the parish are feeling the same way. He added that most people will be flattered by an invitation, “because it feels good to be noticed.”
This invitation, he said, doesn’t need to be big. It could simply be asking a gentleman (and maybe his wife) out for a bite to eat, or starting a small parish group of guys who go out periodically for beers.
“If you do sense a call to start something, then don’t be afraid to keep it simple. A friend of mine at my parish started a men’s group called ‘faith fermentation,’ which is just a fancy title for a bunch of guys going to get some beers together.”
“So don’t worry about starting anything big. Just start something that ‘scratches your own itch,’ and most likely it will scratch the itch for connection that other men have too.”
Prioritizing male friendships with priests, peers, old and young adults, Langley said, takes courage. He noted Christ’s own example of surrounding himself with friends.
“We are blessed with this wonderful example of Jesus Christ, and he told his apostles that he was their friend – they weren’t just his pupils, they weren’t just the flock he was ministering to.”
[…]
Carnage and the Cross
I look at the blood and devastation,
Decimation of God’s creation.
Innocence on full display,
There is no execution stay.
A body pierced by a blade,
As a life begins to fade.
I see wounds everywhere,
More than my heart can bear.
Evil on full display,
No words, nothing to say.
Not thinking of Calvary,
But killing fields for all to see.
Unborn children torn apart,
Forever stopping a beating heart.
Jesus cried two thousand years ago,
His tears continue to flow.
“When asked what he would say to Catholic president Biden, Hying responded: “I would say, Mr. President, we invite you to look at what the Church says about the dignity of life.”
What a weak statement! The CCC lists several sins that cry to heaven – murder is first on the list. Abortion is murder, the deliberate killing of the unborn. Those in the abortion business, women seeking abortion, and politicians promoting abortion (murder) are endangering their eternal salvation. Would it be too much to ask a bishop to state this, rather than just saying it is “wrong.” Lots of things are “wrong” but they don’t necessarily endanger one’s soul.
I am not singling out Bishop Hying, because what he said is typical of bishops’ statements on abortion. Not long ago I saw one state’s bishops reacting to the state’s latest pro-abortion action as “problematic.” Hard to see Saint Paul telling some of the Corinthians that what they were doing was “problematic.”
Unfortunately, the bishops’ statements on abortion are in line with their actions, or should I say their lack of actions. They refuse to enforce canon 915 by continuing to give the Eucharist to public notorious sinners. So, what are people to think?
There is a description for people who do the same thing over and over and expect a different outcome. and it is not a positive description.
I am looking for a little outrage. Is it too much to ask, for example, for the same level of outrage by the bishops over the murder of the unborn that many bishops show when our country enforces our border immigration laws?
“The CCC lists several sins that cry to heaven – murder is first on the list.”
Yes, the Catechism and the Magisterium (nn. 2033-5) identify intrinsically evil acts which are immoral under all circumstances and non-negotiable. These include: intentional killing of the innocent (n. 2273), infanticide (n. 2268), abortion (n. 2273), euthanasia (n. 2277); and sexual immorality (nn. 2352, 2353, 2356, 2357, 2370, 2380, 2381).
The Second Vatican Council makes direct reference to the binding force in all cases of universal Natural Law (n. 79), and then expands the list:
“Furthermore, whatever is opposed to life itself, such as any type of murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia, or willful self-destruction, whatever violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, torments inflicted on body or mind, attempts to coerce the will itself; whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women and children; as well as disgraced working conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed. They poison human society, but they do more harm to those who practice them than those who suffer from the injury. Moreover, they are a supreme dishonor to the Creator” (n. 27).
QUESTION: About the appeasements of so-called “gradualism,” why doesn’t Dignitas Infinita remove Fiducia Supplicans’ drop of cyanide in the punchbowl—the crypto-blessing of “irregular” couples—as “couples” rather than as persons?
Munich in 1938. Rome in 2023?
Bishop Hying is one of the good guys. He deserves support.
One may reasonably suspect that Biden has known the Catholic position on abortion for decades and has come to reject that teaching for political, perhaps financial gain. Biden made his choice to promote and sustain abortion.
Good on him for taking a stand, but where are the rest of the US Bishops on calling out Biden and all the other self-professed “Catholics” in the political world, and where have they been the past 7 years? Aside from the very few who have shown courage, US Catholic “leadership” has been guilty of silence on so many vital issues.
Your Excellency, demand Biden’s excommunication or sit down and shut up. Those are your options.
Abortion isn’t bad because the church says it’s bad, abortion is bad because the Bible says so. God says that murder is a sin against humanity and Gods Holy nature and his Word, not because the Catholic Church says so.
Not only because the sola Scriptura Bible says so…
St. Irenaeus said it this way: “From the beginning, God had implanted in the heart of man the precepts of the natural law. Then he was content to remind him of them. This was the Decalogue [the Bible].” And St. John Paul II underlines both the baked-in natural law plus your point: “The Church is no way the author or the arbiter of this [‘moral’] norm” (n. 95).
Amen!!!
Can we please stop dancing around this issue and tell the blunt truth? Abortion is murder and as such, it’s a mortal sin. The punishment for mortal sin if never confessed and forgiven is hell. This is real simple.
Amen!!!
The Bishop, as well as all the Bishops, should be inviting Biden to either repent or to leave the Catholic Church altogether. Biden knows full well what the Church has to say about abortion and he has made it clear time-and-time again that he doesn’t care. Given that, he should be invited to honor his choice to not be Catholic and to leave the church (or made to if he doesn’t accept that invitation or the invitation to repent). We need to stop being weak about our faith, and live it the way the Lord requires us to as revealed in Scripture!