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Religion Booknotes.


Published shortly before Pope John Paul Pope John Paul is the name of two Popes of the Roman Catholic Church:
  • Pope John Paul I (1978), who named himself in honor of his predecessors, Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VI. Reigned for only 34 calendar days
  • Pope John Paul II (1978–2005), the only Polish Pope.
 II's death, Universal Father is one of a raft of biographies of Karol Wojtyla. The most notable of the bunch is George Weigel's Witness to Hope (HarperCollins), which had the advantage of both papal cooperation and exhaustive research. Weigel is still the person to go to for fact-checking, though less for interpretation, since there is a whiff of the hagiographical about it.

Universal Father

A Life of John Paul II John Paul II, 1920–2005, pope (1978–2005), a Pole (b. Wadowice) named Karol Józef Wojtyła; successor of John Paul I. He was the first non-Italian pope elected since the Dutch Adrian VI (1522–23) and the first Polish and Slavic pope.  

Gary O'Connor

Bloomsbury, $24.95, 448 pp.

Gary O'Connor, a veteran biographer of theater personalities, has produced a solid, readable study of the late pope. He has a pleasing prose style and the ability to condense con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 complex issues into a few pages. He spends a good deal of energy attempting to capture the pope's "inner" life, particularly his universally recognized commitment to prayer. O'Connor's tone is far more sympathetic than the muckraking muck·rake  
intr.v. muck·raked, muck·rak·ing, muck·rakes
To search for and expose misconduct in public life.



[From the man with the muckrake,
 assessment of his countryman John Cornwell (The Pontiff in Winter); O'Connor operates with the hermeneutics hermeneutics, the theory and practice of interpretation. During the Reformation hermeneutics came into being as a special discipline concerned with biblical criticism.  of trust rather than suspicion and is rightly dismissive of the more egregious judgments of the less than well-informed.

Because church history and theology are not O'Connor's natural metier, he misses a number of nuances. It is not clear to me, as O'Connor baldly states, that the pope's most important encyclical encyclical, originally, a pastoral letter sent out by a bishop, now a solemn papal letter, meant to inform the whole church on some particular matter of importance. Benedict XIV circulated the first known encyclical in 1740.  is Veritatis splendor. In my opinion, the most lasting one will be Ut unum sint Ut Unum Sint (Latin: 'may they be one') is an encyclical by Pope John Paul II of May 25 1995. Following the prayer of Jesus in the Gospel according to John (17:21-22 , which addresses the issue of Petrine ministry. Also, a few factual errata er·ra·ta  
n.
Plural of erratum.
 slip into O'Connor's text: Cardinal John Krol was from Philadelphia not Chicago; Edward Schillebeeckx never lost his license to teach as a Catholic theologian.

Borrowing an idea from W.H. Auden, O'Connor tries to fit the pope into the famous distinction between the genius and the apostle--not realizing that Auden borrowed that very distinction from Kierkegaard. For Kierkegaard, one could either be an apostle or a genius, not both. My hunch is that John Paul was more Kierkegaard's apostle than his genius.

I read Universal Father before John Paul died. Rereading it again recently, I concluded that it does not catch the enormous significance of the life of the late pope. Msgr. Lorenzo Albacete has said that since John Paul was an actor in his youth, we should think of his papacy as a drama: the curtain has fallen and now we must await the reviews. Albacete's conceit is an apt one; O'Connor's book, like all John Paul II biographies thus far, is provisional. Only the distance of time will indicate how we are to judge the legacy of this extraordinary person.

Plan B

Further Thoughts on Faith

Anne Lamott

Riverhead riv·er·head  
n.
The source of a river.
 Books, $24.95, 336 pp.

At a West Coast airport some years ago, I was desperate for something to read so I picked a book called Traveling Mercies. That serendipitous ser·en·dip·i·ty  
n. pl. ser·en·dip·i·ties
1. The faculty of making fortunate discoveries by accident.

2. The fact or occurrence of such discoveries.

3. An instance of making such a discovery.
 choice has made me a huge fan of Anne Lamott's. I have since read all of her nonfiction (she also writes novels). Plan B, culled from her writings for Salon.com, is a delight.

Lamott is a deeply Christian writer who manages never to sound pious. She found faith after a series of addictions and failed relationships. A single mother of an adolescent son (whose rearing is hilariously and touchingly described in this book), she found a Christian church that provided her a spiritual home. Her credo is considerably shorter than the one composed at Nicea: "I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 much about God; only that he or she is love and not American or male. I do love Jesus and I'm nuts about his mother .... You are not supposed to love Mary so much, if you're not Catholic, but I do."

These essays address Lamott's struggles to raise her son as he navigates his teen years ("In biblical times they used to stone a few thirteen year olds with some regularity ... the mothers were usually in the first row of stone throwers"); the death of a beloved dog; the disposal of her mother's ashes; teaching writing at San Quentin; making connections to the father of her son; the travails of turning fifty ("I often feel like someone from the Book of Lamentations"); and her determination to connect her faith to social activism. We meet her friends: the Jesuit priest who, like her, struggled with alcoholism and whose faith is an inspiration; the people at her church; and the people she admires, such as Bette Midler, who described heaven as the place where people no longer talk about their weight.

Lamott is a Bay Area native who wears dreadlocks dread·locks  
pl.n.
1. A natural hairstyle in which the hair is twisted into long matted or ropelike locks.

2. A similar hairstyle consisting of long thin braids radiating from the scalp.
 (one of her Sunday school kids called her "octopus head"), and has all of the political tics associated with Marin County. She is passionately antiwar an·ti·war  
adj.
Opposed to war or to a particular war: antiwar protests; an antiwar candidate. 
, loathes George W. Bush, and practices "prone yoga"--"you just lay around as much as possible. You could read, listen to music, you could space out or sleep. But you had to be lying down. Maintaining the prone." She is also, importantly, a devoted Christian--the only one her editor at Salon can stand, she reports. High praise.

It is a curious but true fact that some of the best spiritual writers of our day are women who are Catholic (Patricia Hampl, Nancy Mairs), Catholic fellow-travelers (Kathleen Norris), or, like Presbyterian Lamott, lovers of the Virgin Mary who seek spiritual guidance from a Birken-stock-wearing Jesuit. They all write brilliantly, they are intellectually fearless, and they are persons of deep faith. Here is an impossible thought: Why not commission the lot of them to write a catechism for young people? Add the poet Mary Oliver to the mix. Such a book would be idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 but, I suspect, young people would actually read it.

The Works of Mercy The Works of Mercy or Acts of Mercy are actions and practices which the Catholic Church considers expectations to be fulfilled by believers. These works, it is believed, express mercy, and are thus expected to be performed by believers insofar as they are able in accordance  

James Keenan, SJ

Rowman & Littlefield, $14.95, 118 pp.

James Keenan has already written books on the commandments and the virtues for this series, which is edited by Karen Sue Smith of Church magazine. His third volume, compiled from essays that first appeared in that magazine, focuses on the corporal and spiritual works of mercy. Mercy, Keenan argues, is what makes Christian morality different from other ethical systems. His definition of mercy is original and powerful: a willingness to enter into the chaos of others.

Catholics have an old tradition of listing seven corporal and seven spiritual works of mercy. The number is not meant to be taken literally; rather, it is symbolic. As Keenan points out, Augustine was one of the first to write that spiritual care was as important as temporal care. To the corporal works of mercy he added consoling the afflicted af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
, showing the way to the lost, and assisting those who hesitate.

Keenan devotes a chapter to each of the works of mercy and, in the case of the corporal works, shows how each has developed. He notes, to cite an example, that there is an ancient lineage that links the work of Catholic Relief Services Catholic Relief Services (CRS) is the official international relief and development agency of the U.S. Catholic community. Founded in 1943 by the U.S. bishops, the agency provides assistance to 80 million people in 99 countries and territories in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the  to much older groups that did similar work. These chapters serve a number of needs: they provide a sense of the tradition; they show how charitable work is rooted in the gospel; and, finally, they challenge us to consider what needs to be done in our contemporary world. It was one thing to provide water for a village by sponsoring the town fountain; it is quite another to figure out how to provide clean drinking water drinking water

supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g.
 to halt the thousands of deaths that occur every day from lack of this fundamental commodity.

In the last section of his book, Keenan has some quite wonderful pages on mercy and the Eucharist. Like some other moral theologians writing today, he is at pains to link action and contemplation, worship and morality. As he rightly notes, during Communion, we do not enter into God's world; God enters into ours. This well-written and passionately argued book hits exactly the target for which it is intended: anyone interested in the pastoral life of the church. Keenan, to borrow a chapter title from his book, calls each of us to be a "minister of mercy" and gives compelling reasons why we should respond to that call.

Cross-Shattered Christ

Meditations on the Seven Last Words

Stanley Hauerwas

Brazos, $14.99, 108 pp.

Catholics of a certain age will remember the Tre Ore devotions of Good Friday, which featured seven sermons on the traditional seven last words of Jesus. I remember sitting in my un-air-conditioned church in Florida with my parents, listening to some leather-lunged missionary priest deliver the sermons, wondering if the service would ever end.

Devotion to the Seven Last Words is a relatively recent development in Christian piety. Both Haydn and Beethoven set the words to music in the early nineteenth century; by the time of the Second Vatican Council Noun 1. Second Vatican Council - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms
Vatican II

Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church
, a number of books had been published on the topic. After the council, however, interest in this devotion diminished with the institution of the Good Friday service. Curiously enough, devotion to the Seven Last Words has recently become popular again. Richard John Neuhaus Richard John Neuhaus (born May 21, 1936) is a prominent Catholic priest and writer born in Canada and living in the United States, where he is a naturalized citizen. He is the founder and editor of the monthly journal First Things  published a reflection on the words in 2000, and Timothy Radcliffe, former master of the Dominicans, did so in 2005. A series of meditations (by Andrew Greeley and Martin Marty, among others) designed to be read along with Haydn's music has also been published. These books are all, in their own way, proof that the biblical texts have a "surplus of meaning."

As with most of the New Testament, there are echoes of the revelation given to the chosen people in almost all of the seven final statements. When Jesus says "I thirst" it is clear that the cry of Jesus must be, simultaneously, seen against Psalm 22 ("my mouth is dried up like a potsherd pot·sherd   also pot·shard
n.
A fragment of broken pottery, especially one found in an archaeological excavation.


potsherd
Noun

a broken piece of pottery [pot + schoord
 ...") and John's emphasis on Christ as the Living Water. I say "simultaneously" because the gospel passage concerning Jesus' thirst is not just a metaphor: it describes the real thirst of a dying person. To forget that is to risk slipping into Docetism.

During Lent this year I read Stanley Hauerwas's Cross-Shattered Christ, which is based on a series of sermons he gave. It is a slight book; none of the meditations run more than a dozen pages, but they are packed with good theology. Hauerwas notes, for example, that when Jesus says "it is finished" (powerfully in the Vulgate Vulgate (vŭl`gāt) [Lat. Vulgata editio=common edition], most ancient extant version of the whole Christian Bible. Its name derives from a 13th-century reference to it as the "editio vulgata. : consummatum est), there is an echo of the Genesis creation account when, on the seventh day, God "finished" the divine work. I read Hauerwas's book slowly and, in the process, discovered a number of new ways of thinking about the Passion narratives. This book would make good reading during the Lenten season, or a nice companion text for a retreat. An added advantage is handsome woodcuts by Rick Beerhorst, which aid the reader in experiencing what St. Ignatius calls in the Exercises, "composition of place."

The Temple of Jerusalem Noun 1. Temple of Jerusalem - any of three successive temples in Jerusalem that served as the primary center for Jewish worship; the first temple contained the Ark of the Covenant and was built by Solomon in the 10th century BC and destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar in 586  

Simon Goldhill

Harvard University Press The Harvard University Press is a publishing house, a division of Harvard University, that is highly respected in academic publishing. It was established on January 13, 1913. In 2005, it published 220 new titles. , $19.95., 208 pp.

The Temple of Jerusalem is one of a series of books on the world's most important architectural monuments. (Another is Richard Jenkyn's wonderful account of Westminster Abbey.) These books were originally published in England, and Harvard University Press has now made them available for readers on this side of the pond.

Simon Goldhill's book is about the temple of Solomon Noun 1. Temple of Solomon - any of three successive temples in Jerusalem that served as the primary center for Jewish worship; the first temple contained the Ark of the Covenant and was built by Solomon in the 10th century BC and destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC; , which was first destroyed centuries before the Bible was written. The Temple was rebuilt after the Babylonian exile and again during the reign of Herod the Great. It is this latter Temple that Jesus knew and that is featured in the New Testament. The memory of that Temple bulks large in Western history. To this day, pious Jews lament its destruction and pray at its Western wall. Ultrazealous Jews (abetted by fundamentalist Christians) scheme to rebuild it, while Muslims lay claim to the land where it stood. The Dome of the Rock Dome of the Rock: see Islamic art and architecture.
Dome of the Rock
 or Mosque of Omar

Oldest existing Islamic monument. It is located on Temple Mount, previously the site of the Temple of Jerusalem.
 and the Al-Aksa Mosque are both located on the Temple Mount. Orthodox Jews are forbidden to walk on the Mount for fear of treading on the Holy of Holies Holy of Holies

Innermost and most sacred area of the ancient Temple of Jerusalem, accessible only to the Israelite high priest and only once a year, on Yom Kippur. The Holy of Holies was located at the western end of the temple.
 buried beneath.

The Temple has also served as a model and inspiration for Christians. Justinian's architects claimed they outdid out·did  
v.
Past tense of outdo.
 Solomon's Temple when they erected Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. During the Crusader period, the Christians erected a cross over the Dome of the Rock, and artists such as Raphael and Bernini have sought to capture the temple's former grandeur. (Bernini's baldachino in St. Peter's was supposedly inspired in part by the temple's columns.) The mythos my·thos  
n. pl. my·thoi
1. Myth.

2. Mythology.

3. The pattern of basic values and attitudes of a people, characteristically transmitted through myths and the arts.
 of the Temple even found its way into the rituals of the Freemasons This is a list of notable Freemasons. Freemasonry is a fraternal organisation which exists in a number of forms worldwide. Throughout history some members of the fraternity have made no secret of their involvement, while others have not made their membership public. , who have written (metaphorically) about "rebuilding the Temple."

Since the nineteenth century, archaeologists have given us a clearer picture of what the second temple may have looked like. Of course, any attempt at a full-scale scientific excavation is out of the question due to the extraordinarily explosive character of Jewish-Muslim relations. After all, Ariel Sharon's simple act of going up to the Mount triggered a second intifada, the fruits of which are still marked in bloodshed and violence.

What this book does make clear is that the temple of Solomon is more important for its memory than for its once existent reality. It is central to Jewish memory and piety and is woven into the theology of Christianity. Goldhill's book is not a scholarly one, though it rests on reliable scholarship. I, for one, will bring the book to class next term to read Goldhill's description of daily temple worship in Jesus' time. The text is enhanced with some two dozen illustrations, and each chapter includes a reading guide.

Lawrence S. Cunningham is John A. O'Brien Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Commonweal Foundation
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Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Cunningham, Lawrence S.
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Oct 21, 2005
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