Catholic and Enjoying It!
A day after Mark Shea picked up Parousian Emily Byers' strong pro-life apologetic, the popular Catholic cyberculture guru links to the Parousian homepage offering the following words:
"Check out the Parousians!
No, they are not from the planet Parousia.
No, they are not from the capital of France.
They are gung ho young Catholics and a sign of hope for our world."
We know people pay attention to Mark Shea, and we will try to live up to his confidence in us as a sign for hope. For the newcomers viewing our blog for the first time, we are a fledgling philosophical and literary society for Catholics geared to viewing the culture through the eyes of The Faith. In the next month, original pieces from several Parousians will be posted on the blog. We are unofficially present at LSU, trying to work out the details of becoming an academic club but maintaining our Catholic identity. We are currently attempting to launch other chapters at colleges in Louisiana, and hopefully at more universities down the road. Part of our vision is to distribute a smart magazine exploring the ideas we discuss at college campuses across the country. Feel free to contact us if you can help us (we are poor colege students with a big and worthy vision) or if we can help you (start a group, anything, just ask).
Many thanks to Mark Shea for plugging our little Parousians. Father Bryce Sibley's retired blog used to champion the efforts of the faithful at LSU. It is good to have another friend in the Catholic blogosphere.
Below is the text from our first post. If you want to get a feel for who we are, please read on:
"In January of 2006, eight LSU students began to discuss the ideas that really matter. All loyal Catholics with a desire to learn, we leaned on each other's background in disciplines across the liberal arts and sciences to seek a comprehensive worldview where the faith and the culture met head-on, hoping to know the times and what we ought to do. A sort of informal philosophical and literary circle emerged, much akin to the Inklings, except perhaps in the way of brilliance. May the reader judge with charity. Still, we persisted. The Parousians were born, and this blog will contain our ponderings and pontifications. Please forgive us for thinking out loud, but at least there are some in this wayward generation who still choose to think.
Why choose the Parousians as our moniker? The Parousia is the Greek word for arrival, and all of us are at least hoping to get there. In extended Christian circles, it refers to the second coming. While we are not expecting the apocalypse in our lifetime, we figure we best be ready for it anyway. God has His way of bringing down the proud, and it reminds us to be humble. Kings and kingdoms fall, and one day each of us will be judged. And "Lord, come quickly" should be every Christian's prayer. More specific to our circle, the Catholic sees the Parousia at the moment of consecration when the bread and wine become the Body and the Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus arrives everyday in the flesh. It is this sacramental view of life that teaches us how to see our culture.
Our heroes include the Chesterbelloc and the Inklings; St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Augustine and St. Therese; Walker Percy and Flannery O'Connor; Thomas Merton and Fulton Sheen; Dorothy Day and Russell Kirk; Cardinal Newman, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Alasdair MacIntyre, Wendell Barry, Eric Voegelin, Whit Stillman; Jim Stoner,LSU political theory and constitutional law professor, and Chris Baglow, theology professor at Holy Cross in New Orleans; the writers at Godspy; Father James Schall, Father Clifton Hill, Father Jason Labbe, and Father Bryce Sibley, as well as any other priest or religious who cares enough to write us or come hang out with us; Mother Teresa; Popes John XXIII, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI. Our heroes are more talented than us, and they have already made the world a better place. Please bear with us as we attempt to imitate them."
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1 comment:
how can you list Voegelin as one of your heroes?
it seems to me that since the Nag hammadi library was discovered, there can be no justification for his entire concept of gnosticism.
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