Memories are made of These

Father Robert Barron on using social media for Evangilization

May 24, 2012
The new evangelization and seminaries
By Father Robert Barron *
Just last week it was announced that I have been named the new Rector/President of Mundelein Seminary, my alma mater and one of the largest seminaries in the United States.  I believe that one reason Cardinal Francis George chose me for this position is that I’ve been working the past several years in the evangelization of the culture.  The last two popes have emphasized that seminaries should take the New Evangelization as their raison d’etre and organizing principle; therefore, I think that Cardinal George wants me to bring what I’ve learned in my work at Word on Fire to my new task.


 What would I want to communicate to seminarians concerning this great theme?  First, new evangelists have to be people of fervor, enthusiasm, and conviction.  When he mentioned the New Evangelization for the first time, in a speech in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince in 1983,  John Paul II said that one of the principle marks of the method would be “new ardor.”  Long ago, in his still remarkably helpful treatise on rhetoric, Aristotle commented that audiences really listen only to “an excited speaker,” by which he meant someone utterly convicted of the importance of what he is communicating.  What makes advertisers, sportscasters, politicians or evangelists effective is a patent enthusiasm for their topic.


 I was trained as an academic, and I’ve done quite a bit of formal academic writing.  I recognize that in the purely intellectual arena, cool detachment and a certain willingness to suspend judgment and entertain all points of view are virtues.  But these are not virtues in the arena of truly persuasive speech.  If we are wracked with doubts and unconvinced of our subject matter, people just won’t listen.  Something that I sense on every page of the New Testament—in the Gospels, the Epistles of Paul, James and Peter, the Revelation of John—is a palpable excitement.  These men wanted to take the world by the lapels and tell them about the resurrection of Jesus.  New evangelists have to have a similar fervor and energy.


 Secondly, I would tell my charges at Mundelein Seminary to be deeply rooted in the Bible and the great theological tradition.  There are some evangelists—both Catholic and Protestant—who are filled with energy and conviction but who just don’t have that much to say.  I saw one of the most popular televangelists in the world today being interviewed on the Larry King show some years ago.  When a caller asked about the problem of evil—one of the most serious and central issues in theology, hugely important for the Biblical authors and massively analyzed by the great figures, such as Augustine, Thomas Aquinis and John Henry Newman—the evangelist limply responded that he just wasn’t much of a theologian.  I thought that his license should have been revoked.  Can you imagine a surgeon responding to a pointed question from a suffering patient with, “ You know, I’m just not real good at anatomy”?!  And what’s the difference between a doctor and a priest?   Well, one is dealing with matters of life and death, while the other is concerned with the health of the body.


 New evangelists owe it to their people to be thoroughly versed in the Bible, both Old Testament and New, in the Councils of the church, in the writings of the pivotal theologians and spiritual masters, and in the poets, artists and architects who have expressed the Catholic spirit in words, paints, stone and glass.


 But the effective evangelist has to know more than the theological tradition; he has to know the culture he is attempting to address.  If I might quote the great Aristotle again:  “Whatever is received is received according to the mode of the recipient.”
 This implies that every communicator has to know the prejudices, expectations, mood  and attitude of the one to whom he wishes to communicate.  One who speaks the fullness of Christian truth; but does so in the void;  might be correct, but he won’t be an evangelist.  This is why the new evangelist has to know the contemporary culture, both high and low.  He should be conversant with the philosophers and opinion-makers who shape attitudes in the salons of San Francisco and the drawing rooms of the Upper East Side and he should know which movies, songs, television shows, and books average people are attending to.


 More to it, he should look out at the culture through biblical eyes, which is to say, he should be especially attentive to the patterns and events in the world that correspond to patterns and events in the scriptural revelation. That way, he will discover what the church fathers called the logoi spermatikoi, the seeds of the Word, that are thick on the ground in any culture oriented to the good, the true and the beautiful. And looking through those same biblical eyes, he will also become cognizant of all of those elements in a culture that are fallen and that need to be called to conversion. Karl Barth, the greatest Protestant theologian of the last century, proposed an image for prospective preachers that is just as valid for prospective evangelists: they should carry the Bible in one hand and the newspaper in the other.


 Finally, new evangelists should be thoroughly conversant with the new media, with YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, with podcasting, and with the myriad other means of communication available through the Internet  These new media give the Catholic evangelist the opportunity to get his message out 24/7, all over the world, and at relatively little cost.  We have to face the fact that the vast majority of eyes today are not glued to books or to newspapers, but to the computer screen.  Many years ago, a very successful writer said to me, “The first rule of the writer is to read.”  Good advice, and to follow it today, we have to get the message into the world where the most “readers” are found. 
I hope I can communicate to my seminarians that this is an especially exciting time for the evangelist, in many ways as exciting as the middle years of the first century;  when the message about Jesus was brand new, or as the beginning of the sixteenth century; when the printing press first emerged.  Now is a kairos, a privileged moment, to declare the Lordship of Jesus Christ.

Father Robert Barron is the founder of the global ministry, Word on Fire, and the Francis Cardinal George Professor of Faith and Culture at University of St. Mary of the Lake in Mundelein. He is the creator and host of a new 10 episode documentary series called "Catholicism" and also hosts programs on Relevant Radio, EWTN and at www.WordOnFire.org.

TGIF : May 25, 2012

TGIF : Since the weekend is here again, most of us will be visiting our respective house of worship, and will be going down on our knees & raising-up our hands to the Almighty, whilst the Powers-That-Be continue to plunder the nation’s coffers. Let’s not forget Ambiga in our prayers as she, the chairperson of Bersih who united the Rakyat through Bersih 3.0, is still under siege and continues to be harassed by hooligans from the ruling party. Let’s also NOT FORGET that ALL BN policies & purchases are made, not for economic reasons or national security, but for personal profit through bribes, kickbacks & under-table ang-pows as it has become part of the BN culture.
WE have a choice .. to Recover ALL the nation’s money that was lost to cronies like Tajudin Ramli.
WE have a choice .. to Recover the RM12.5 BILLION RINGGIT that was stolen by ALL the criminals of PKFZ Project.
As we can’t do it on our own let’s ask our Lord for guidance in reigning-in ALL the CORRUPT BN politicians to face the consequences of their greed.
Have a wonderful & God filled weekend .... Cheers!!
My journey through American Idol ended when Joshua & Hollie Cavanagh were dumped in the semis. Listen to Hollie Cavanagh’s wonderful rendition of Journey’s “Faithfully”.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mJjByrTvKw
Hollie Cavanagh performs "Faithfully" by Journey at the Top 4 performance show. Check out full performances with judges' commentary only at http://www.americ/...
· · · 25 May at 00:01 ·


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Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees whose music shaped our lives has moved on.
May his soul Rest In Peace.

Nichol David of Malaysia wins the British Open squash championship

Nichol David of Malaysia wins the British Open squash championship for the 4th time
· · · 20 May at 21:49 ·

Chelsea .. winners of 2011/2012 Champions League

Chelsea .. winners of 2011/2012 Champions League
· · · 20 May at 05:40 ·

American Idol : Hollie Cavanagh

American Idol : The Judges Didn’t Like It. America Didn’t like it. But I liked Hollie Cavanagh’s rendition of Boni Raitt’s - “I Can_t Make You Love Me”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=li6Aui2zNMA&feature=related
Hollie Cavanagh performs "I Can't Make You Love Me" by Bonnie Raitt at the Top 4 performance show. Check out full performances with judges' commentary only a...
TGIF : WE the rakyat have been abused, trampled upon and robbed of BILLIONS over the past 50 years. But since the weekend is here again, most of us will be visiting our respective house of worship, and will be going down on our knees & raising-up our hands to the Almighty whilst the Powers-That-Be continue to plunder the nation’s coffers. Let’s reflect on the quality of our generosity this week … whether we did protest when our fellow Malaysian, Ambiga was being demonized by umNO members who set up burger stalls in front of her house or when army veterans were condemning Ambiga with their backs facing her home & umNO was calling for her citizenship to be revoked. Many of us did protest at the demonization of Ambiga by the BAND OF ROBBERS or remembered her in our prayers. Many of us did.
· · · 17 May at 23:26 ·

IGP : Burger protest outside Ambiga’s home legal,

 
Dear Ambiga, when I pray I think of you and I thank my God for a person like you. God Bless
www.causes.com
Dear Ambiga, Traders have set up a burger stall in front of your house and the police say that is not an offence. The “burger protest” may go on. Then, Berita Harian comes out to say that you should “get the message how much the public hated Bersih 3.0.” The actions above are disgraceful and ju...
· · 16 May at 06:43 ·
 
This IGP fellow with the approval of his BN MASTERS says it Is ok for traders to sell BEEF BURGERS in front of a Hindu house. Does it mean that traders can assemble and sell Bak-Ku-Teh in front of the IGP’s house & in front of all the umNO minister’s houses. He prays 5 times a day – On Fridays he goes to mosque & goes down on his knees & raises his hands to the Almighty – Doesn’t his religion teach him & his BN-masters not to insult other religions. 50 years of MERDEKA and this is the KIND OF garbage the people of Malaysia have to live under.

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/burger-protest-outside-ambigas-home-legal-say-police/

TGIF : May 10, 2012

TGIF !! .. Since the weekend is here & most of us will be visiting our respective house of worship, let us not forget that going down on our knees or raising-up our hands to the Almighty is meaningless if we are all ONLY pre-occupied with ‘I’, ‘ME’ & ‘MYSELF’ that we fail to PROTEST or VOICE OUR CONCERNS even when BN, a coalition of thieves, are brutalizing their way into, and ransacking the nation’s coffers. This nation of ours is under siege by the powers-that-be through threats of violence, scare-mongering tactics and scapegoating mechanism. WE cannot wait in the sidelines and hope things will get better. IT WILL NOT & it will only get worse. Let us PROTEST WITH ALL OUR MIGHT at everything that is going wrong. We can either be an instrument of good or of evil, and a servant of God or of SATAN (ie. BN).
Have a wonderful & God filled weekend .... Cheers!!
· · · 10 May at 23:35 ·

TGIF : May 3, 2012

TGIF : WHERE WERE YOU ON APRIL 28, 2012 ?
Bersih has become a unifying platform putting us Malaysians from all corners of the world above creed, ethnicity, religious belief and political views which the lawless & corrupt BN couldn’t do with ALL the Stolen Money & its 1Malaysia bullshit. BUT despite the huge response from about 300,000 who were willing to stand-up and be counted @ Bersih 3.0, the shocking reality is the Apathy, Complacency & Indifference among the vast majority who preferred to DUDUK BANTAH di-rumah & listen to the false, cooked-up & doctored news over the Radio & TV. I wonder, “HOW MANY ROADS ....HOW MANY SEAS ... HOW MANY DEATHS“ ... it will take before most of us can overcome the FEAR that the Powers-That-Be are using to manipulate the people, and assemble with fellow Malaysians to protest man’s inhumanity to man and reclaim our legitimate rights which have been steadily eroded over the years.
TGIF : WHERE WERE YOU ON APRIL 28, 2012 ?

· · · 3 May at 23:52 ·

May 1, 2012 ( Bersih 3.0 )

Bersih 3.0 (29 April at 21:44 )

Jimmy Kan I hope everything was ok with you although you were in the thick of things.
· · · 29 April at 21:44 ·
    • DyLon KL Low I saw one of his reply jimmy actually jump into gombak river due to tear gas :(
    • Augustin Laurence WOW!! He was near where we were but we did not meet-up because of the massive crowd. Hope he is OK
    • Jimmy Kan Sorry fr late reply sir.. Im fine.. Wat a experience.. Nw v know wat BN is... As v oredi know... I cldnt contact any of u all to meet up.. only d nxt day i know dat they used network jammer to stop us all frm communicating... tqvm BN
      1 May at 09:48 via Mobile ·
    • Augustin Laurence No worries Jimmy Kan, as long as you are ok & ready for Bersih 4.0 ... hey hey hey .... take care & wish you all the best in your business ventures

Bersih 3.0 - A Day After

A Day After : Welcome to GANGSTERS PARADISE where the guardians of society who are supposed to protect the people have become corrupt institution disrupting all peaceful assemblies by planting "agent provocateurs". "Agent provocateur" is French and means someone who instigates or carries-out an action that makes other parties (Bersih 3.0 here) look responsible for an act that they didn't commit. It happened in Bersih-2.0 & it happened yesterday & it is not rocket science to know who planted them. DO YOU REMEMBER just before BERSIH-2 explosives were found near SOGO. DO YOU REMEMBER during HINDRAF’s protests, the police found arms catchment in Batu Caves. And yesterday do you know who rushed to cut the RAZOR WIRE guarding Dataran Merdeka & who was instigating violence all over the place in KL. There were probably hundreds of these agent provocateurs in Bersih 3.0 outfits in action yesterday & their success was fodder for those in power to condemn Bersih 3.0 as they did Bersih 2.0 & convince all those who did not participate yesterday on why the government is condemning BERSIH. We assume that all of us know about these dirty tactics of those-in-power, but having read a lot of posts, believe me ... a lot of us don’t seem to know these things.
· · · 29 April at 21:09 ·

Bersih 3.0 : Rantings by Marina Mahathir (April 28, 2012)

What the eyes have seen from Marina Mahathir. A MUST-READ & wonderful article by a graceful lady : http://rantingsbymm.blogspot.com/2012/04/my-bersih-30-experience-behind-barbed.html  


It was the barbed wire that did it for me. Up til Friday afternoon I was still unsure about going. My hubby thought I'd already made my point last year. I was annoyed with continually being asked whether I was going or not, more so with the non-story that came out in M'kini which basically said I hadn't decided yet. I mean, does it matter?


Then I saw the photos of the police rolling out the barbed wire and I saw red. Since when did our police, or whoever is their boss, roll out barbed wire - barbed wire!! - against their own people?? Are we thugs? Terrorists? Thieves?


So I decided to go. I contacted friends and found out their plans on how to get round the roads which were sure to be blocked and the LRT which may be stopped. The same friend who so kindly offered to be my 'bodyguard' last year offered himself again. We got into my car, went to collect some other friends and drove to as close to Central Market as we could.
Part of the way down Jln Brickfields we couldn't go any further so we got down to walk. On one side of the street were thousands of people in yellow walking in the direction of the Central Market. On the other side of the street were hundreds of police in their dark blue uniforms. But they didn't look hostile and just watched us go by.


We got to the Central Market which was swarming with people. Earlier I'd read a tweet that said that people were going into the Market to have lunch and my friends and I were laughing about Malaysians and their food. "Well," we said, "Central Market restaurants will get a lot of business!". But when we got there, the Market was totally closed. So all those restaurants lost business today!


Caught up with friends in the car park while we sat to wait. It was HOT!! On the little CM stage, Ambiga was seated there with many of our colleagues from women's groups. I went up to say hello, took some photos and then went down to wait again. At 1.20 or so, Ambi took the mike to announce that we were going to move off soon, heading towards Dataran Merdeka. But, she added, we were not to breach the barriers, we would only go as far as we could and then we would simply sit down for a while and then disperse.


The atmosphere was much more fiesta-like than last year. There were people in yellow t-shirts or in other colours, in shorts or in tudungs, lots of young ones and some also of a certain age. Like last year, it was a very diverse crowd. I bumped into some old friends, some young people I knew including a nephew and the children of some friends, and met some new ones, people who were coming to a rally for the first time ever. These were not radical highly-politicised types, just your average men and women, the type you'd meet at the supermarket perhaps. I asked one newbie woman why she came and she said it was because she realised that if she wanted change, then she had to do something.


After Ambiga spoke and a quick briefing by the marshalls, we moved off. Because of the crowd we made our way slowly, stopping every now and then to take photos of the awesome crowd and ourselves. At Central Market I estimated there were at least 6000 people that I could see (though I have to say I'm bad at estimates) but many many more joined us as we walked along.
  
When we got to Lebuh Pasar Besar, there was a big crowd on it facing the direction of Dataran Merdeka while others continued on to Jalan Tun Perak. We decided we would stay on Lebuh Pasar Besar (where the Bar Council is) and made our way towards the bridge across the Klang River (just before Agro Bank). That was where we had to stop because the police had put up a barrier of barbed wire (actually my husband said it's razor wire, not barbed wire) and those red plastic road barriers, all stamped 'DUKE'. On the other side of the barrier stood a whole row of police. Most look quite senior and they simply stood there and looked at us.

I got to the front of the barrier where someone had put up a sign that said 'Welcome to Tel Aviv'. It felt very accurate. The police recognised me and nodded. I asked them, "What is this?" pointing at the razor wire, which has blades on them which can seriously cut you if you get hurled on to them (see close-up pic above). The senior cop there shrugged and gave a wan smile. "This makes me sad," I said to him. Again he shrugged.

We stood there for a while. Some people started to sing Negara Ku so we all joined in. The senior cop who shrugged at me stood at attention, really the only one who did so. Some people started chanting 'Bukak, bukak!' meaning open the barriers. But overall there were high spirits but nothing provocative.


Then suddenly all the cops moved back, away from us. We were puzzled but in a short while we realised why. Several police trucks moved in and headed in our direction. For a moment I wondered if they were simply going to mow us down. Then they retreated again. Next a whole row of police with helmets, batons and shields formed in front of the trucks facing us. Again we wondered if they were going to charge us, which seems silly because they too would have come up against the razor wire.

Someone then told us to sit down. So we did on our side of the barrier while on the other side, about 10 metres away, the police were lined up with their shields and batons. It looked like it was going to be a battle of wills, who would last longer in the heat . We were prepared to sit for the next two hours til 4pm, the appointed dispersal time.


After about 15 minutes sweating behind the razor wire, someone told us to move back and disperse. "We must use our brains. Don't provoke. It's time to move back."  So we moved away from the barriers and milled around the streets, just looking at people. Bumped into more friends and chatted to random people who said hello. It was a nice atmosphere, akin to going to a fun run or something like that.


We then read a Star tweet that said that Ambiga said Bersih 3.0 was already successful and we can all now disperse. So my friends and I made our way back to Brickfields, got into my car and drove home.


It was only after that that we started to get smses and tweets regarding teargas at Dataran Merdeka. It was a shock because up til then there was nothing to indicate that the police might do that, even when they brought the ones with the helmets and shields out. We passed many cops on our way home and they hardly looked at us.


My phone was running out of battery and I had to wait til I got home before hearing from my daughter that she had been teargassed. She was part of a team videostreaming the events today and was near Dataran Merdeka, stuck among thousands of people, when some people, against Bersih's instructions, breached the barriers and ran onto the Dataran.  The police then started running away from them and soon they saw why: the teargas canisters being fired at them. Her first time being teargassed, she said it was awful but people around her were all helping one another. What was more frightening was the fear of being crushed but luckily people were so mindful of this that if anyone fell, they were immediately given space and a hand up. She's fine though and I never really worried about her because she had a friend with her who was tasked with making sure she was alright.


(Her videos, along with those by others, are now on the Bersih428 Youtube channel).


Since reaching home, I've been trying to keep up with the many many reports on today's events, both the good and the bad. Yes, there were some people who misbehaved, let's be honest. We don't know who they are but in such a large crowd there are bound to be people like that, despite instructions from the Bersih steering committee and marshalls not to provoke anyone. There are also very likely agent provocateurs who are out to make trouble and discredit Bersih.


 But it doesn't detract from the fact that an unbelievable number of people turned out today, far more than last year, and compared to the incidents of bad behaviour, there was a far larger number of people who marched and rallied peacefully. I hardly saw anyone with a frown or a scowl but lots of happy smiles. Just like last year, I never once felt unsafe. Instead I felt part of a large Malaysian community, all together for one cause. Or two, since the anti-Lynas people also turned out in huge numbers.


Here's a report from the UK's Independent newspaper which is pretty accurate although there were far far more than 25000 people there. It was hard to see everybody but it had to be about 50000-80000. There are thousands and thousands of photos and videos being uploaded right now. So go take a look and decide for yourself. I also hope people will put up their personal stories too.


I'm sorry that there were people who got injured, both protestors and police. None of that was really necessary. A few weeks ago, at the International Women's Day rally in PJ, 5000 people turned up and there was absolutely no violence because the police left everyone alone to do their thing. The same could have happened today, if only the powers-that-be could have been wiser.


One more thing, about those politicians who were there. At Central Market there were some there but they were not allowed to speak. Along the march, if anyone started any chants that sounded political, others wouldn't take it up and they pretty soon petered out. Like last year, the most popular chants were those that simply said 'Bersih' and 'Hidup Rakyat'. Most were simple ordinary people, who just want to express how they feel and who really have no time for politicians.


Besides, which politician or political party, from any side, can mobilise anything as incredible as Global Bersih?
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