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The gospel of Sulivan.


Catholics discouraged by the sexual-abuse scandal and by declining vocations to the priesthood should take a look at the work of Jean Sulivan, the French novelist and essayist who died in 1980.

In his spiritual journal, Morning Light (1976), Sulivan conceded: "Like the storm clouds of the Exodus, the church's face is more luminous today than when it seemed to rule. It has found glory in its humilation."

Sulivan was a diocesan priest of peasant background who did not publish his first book until he was forty-five. "I write," he said, "in order to lie a little less." After the success of his third novel, The Sea Remains, which won the Prix Catholique in 1964, Cardinal Clement Roques Roques is the name or part of the name of several communes in France:
  • Roques, in the Haute-Garonne department
  • Roques, in the Gers department
 of Rennes approved Sulivan's request to be relieved of priestly priest·ly  
adj. priest·li·er, priest·li·est
1. Of or relating to a priest or the priesthood.

2. Characteristic of or suitable for a priest.
 duties in order to devote his time to writing. Regularly critical of institutional religion, Sulivan described the style of the gospel as "just the opposite of a message that tries to control our lives with slogans and principles."

Sulivan moved to a run-down neighborhood in Paris and wrote tirelessly, completing book after book before dying in an automobile accident Ask a Lawyer

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Country: United States of America
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Say you're at a red light in a left hand turning lane and the light turns green so you let up slightly on the break antedating moving forward and the vehicle
 at the age of sixty-seven. Earlier he was called back to Rennes by his mother's hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun)
1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment.

2. the term of confinement in a hospital.
, the central subject of his powerful memoir, Anticipate Every Goodbye. Her agonized ag·o·nize  
v. ag·o·nized, ag·o·niz·ing, ag·o·niz·es

v.intr.
1. To suffer extreme pain or great anguish.

2. To make a great effort; struggle.

v.tr.
 death, rejecting the "priestly consolation" of her son, forced him to reexamine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine  
tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines
1. To examine again or anew; review.

2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination.
 his own faith more minutely, searching for "the God beyond God."

Sulivan's next novel, Eternity My Beloved, his only book in print in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , was chosen by the Dictionary of Contemporary Catholic Literature to represent his work. It tells the story of Strozzi, a maverick priest during the German occupation in World War II, who became de facto [Latin, In fact.] In fact, in deed, actually.

This phrase is used to characterize an officer, a government, a past action, or a state of affairs that must be accepted for all practical purposes, but is illegal or illegitimate.
 chaplain to the streetwalkers Streetwalkers were an English rock band of the mid-1970s led by two former members of Family, vocalist Roger Chapman and guitarist John "Charlie" Whitney. Other members included Bob Tench, a former collaborator of Jeff Beck, and Nicko McBrain, who later played drums with Iron  of Paris's notorious Pigalle district.

Sulivan apparently got to know the real Strozzi. His book's narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete.  is a skeptical journalist who keeps questioning the priest's distinterestedness. Accustomed to explaining human motivation in terms of desire, he finds it hard to accept Strozzi's virtue. But when Paquerette suddenly blurts out that she is a prostitute, Strozzi registers no shock. Together they have a drink and go to see Les enfants du paradis. In the theater, the priest rests his hand on the woman's shoulder for a moment: "The first man with whom she had ever walked and talked who did not brush against her, did not try to deceive her, and did not lecture her--which is really just another way to touch and deceive you and treat you like an object." Sulivan understands Strozzi's nonjudgmental non·judg·men·tal  
adj.
Refraining from judgment, especially one based on personal ethical standards.

Adj. 1. nonjudgmental
 openness in terms of the divine self-emptying revealed in the Incarnation.

Later, the narrator pursues Strozzi, resenting his serenity. "Tonzi, are you a man? What about 'the near occasions of sin'? How do you account for your virtue?"

"I see that you still remember the old vocabulary," Strozzi teases. He laughs, not the kind of laugh someone uses when trying to be evasive, but "the hearty laugh of a completely free man." Then, suddenly, Strozzi seems to shift ground. "Perhaps I do need women. I think that a man, in order to be a man, has to meet a woman who will bind him to the world."

The narrator begins to exult, but Strozzi's next words are not what he expects: "Why does it have to be knowing in the flesh? You'd like it if I'd say ... Well yes, I have felt some--what do you call them, desires, impulses?--like everyone else. Only, there has always been something stronger than desire, a question: How could I, Strozzi, be of service to all the others? Don't laugh--one woman isn't enough for me. That's it--I want to be available, free. For me, you see, the sexual relationship has a metaphysical value. It's a pledge, a commitment. It's not a moral idea, not a law, but a basic fact."

The depth with which the author presents Strozzi echoes the way Sulivan constantly complained of the reduction of Christianity to ideology. In his spiritual journal, Morning Light, he made clear that the gospel is the opposite of a message that tries to control our lives with rules and precepts. To those caught up in the illusions of a post-Christian world he offers this paradoxical counsel: "If you're lost in the labyrinth of conflicting truths, overwhelmed by the law, restrained by fear--stop this game, free yourself from faith itself. Live the joyous life of today. Nothing is worse than boredom and sadness. Faith will not abandon you so easily; it's as persistent as crabgrass crabgrass, name for any of several grass species of the genera Digitaria, Eleusine, and Panicum, especially the species D. sanguinalis. Crabgrass is a common lawn weed, especially in the S and E United States. ."

Joseph Cunneen, founder and longtime editor of the ecumenical quarterly CrossCurrents, was co-translator of Sulivan's The Sea Remains and Morning Light.
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Title Annotation:Jean Sulivan
Author:Cunneen, Joseph
Publication:Commonweal
Geographic Code:4EUFR
Date:Jul 14, 2006
Words:775
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