Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1480: How to Find Peace & Meaning Amid Chaos With Bishop Robert Barron
Episode Date: February 1, 2021In this episode, Sal speaks with Bishop Robert Barron. Why do people seem to be feeling so bad, so divided, when objectively speaking we seem to be doing great economically? (3:35) Why he believes ...claiming no religion in our youth is a recipe for deep suffering. (7:55) Can we find objective morality without religion? (8:47) The differences between Karl Marx and moral philosophies. (12:03) Does this current “woke” movement have its roots in Marxism? (13:35) What are the differences between the turmoil that is happening now, and in the 1960s and 70s? (15:25) Why are religious institutions being attacked at the moment? (19:30) Why are we opposed to religious freedom? (21:37) How we are made to worship. (23:41) The importance of asking ‘why’ to find your ultimate value. (26:17) The connection of secularism and people wanting fewer children. (32:12) Why the corruption of the best is the worst. (35:19) How social media facilitates the mob mentality. (37:48) What is the antidote to the negative side of the mob mentality? (40:58) Why we must do what we can to stand up to the bullies. (43:37) Are lockdowns moral? (46:00) Why the revival of religion is what it will take to reverse the violence in our society. (48:54) How religion tends to flourish when people are brought to certain limits. (51:16) Why we should all perform the simple acts of love. (54:45) Featured Guest Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Word on Fire Bishop Robert Barron – YouTube Related Links/Products Mentioned January Promotion: MAPS Fitness Starter Bundle 50% off! Secularism - Wikipedia In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace STATISTICS ON YOUTH LEAVING THE CHURCH AND WHY Karl Marx - Communist Manifesto, Theories & Beliefs - HISTORY Classical Liberalism: Dr.Martin Luther King Jr. St. Junípero Serra FAQ page - Word on Fire Book of Genesis - Wikipedia Your Life Does Not Belong to You - Word on Fire René Girard - Wikipedia Gov. Ralph Northam gets mixed reactions for asking faith leaders to ‘set an example’
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You are listening to the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Now, today's episode is a fun one.
I got to interview Bishop Robert Barron.
He's a Catholic bishop. He's been on the show a couple
times before and he always does such a great job. We always get our minds blown by some of the stuff
that he talks about. But in today's episode, I got real specific with him. I wanted to know why we
seem so divided over the past 10 years. Things have gotten more partisan, extreme. I mean, for all intents and purposes, of course,
up until the pandemic, it seemed like the numbers look great.
People were making more money.
The average person had more wealth.
Race relations, although people perceive them to be worse,
statistically, they looked a lot better.
We seem to be in better position, yet everybody seems
to be upset and perhaps the answer cannot be found in
Wealth or in government action, but rather somewhere else. So I talked to Robert Barron Bishop Barron
About this and I thought you know, maybe he has the answer
Maybe it's a something to do with our
Spiritual side. Maybe it's character flaws in humanity right now.
Maybe this is something that was predicted.
And also, how can we fix this?
He's an incredibly, incredibly intelligent man.
An amazing communicator.
He uses media, new media in ways that,
I don't think anybody else from the Catholic Church
has ever done before.
He's got a phenomenal podcast called The Word on Fire Show
and his YouTube channel is how I found him.
In fact, Bishop Robert Barron, you can find him on YouTube.
And he answers pretty much any question
that people ask him, everything.
He's always reaching out to new people
to talk to them about whatever they wanna talk about.
I think you're gonna love this guy,
whether you are religious, Christian, or not.
In fact, some of the people that liked his
previous episodes the most were atheists.
So I know you're gonna enjoy this episode.
Not before it starts.
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Bishabar and thank you so much for taking the time
for me to be able to talk to you about
certain things that are happening right now.
For me personally, it's a bit confusing to see
just kind of the way things are going.
And the reason why it's confusing to me is because
by all objective measures, at least material measures,
things have been phenomenal
or at least we've been doing phenomenal objectively.
Again, materially speaking, before the pandemic,
we had wealth was doing great, real wages were growing,
unemployment was very low.
This was just a trend that had been happening for decades.
Crime was at all time lows as well.
Yet polls were showing that Americans were more divided
than ever.
Depression seemed to be on the rise, anxiety on the rise.
Lots of mental health metrics seemed to be getting worse,
especially among the youth.
And I know a lot of people talk about the answers being found
maybe in more wealth, you know, more material stuff.
And it just doesn't seem to match up with what's happening.
Of course, we have this pandemic and things seem to be worse than ever.
So that's why I wanted to talk to you.
You're somebody I turned to for answers when I don't, I can't find answers in other places.
So I'd like to ask you, what is going on?
Why are things, why do people seem to be feeling so bad?
Why do we feel so divided when objectively speaking again,
we seem to be doing great in lots of areas?
Yeah, good.
So thanks for having me on, first of all.
You know, you raise a lot of interesting issues there. Yes. Yeah, good. So thanks for having me on, first of all.
You raise a lot of interesting issues there.
Here's a first reaction.
I'll speak now out of the spiritual tradition.
Even if all things are going well,
and the things that we can measure,
like employment, like income, that sort of thing,
there's more to life than that.
And so it doesn't surprise me really at all.
If depression could be on the rise even as
these material benefits are on the rise.
Because people need more than that.
And what's also on the rise, you and I have talked about this a lot, is secularism.
What's on the rise is a bracketing of religion.
And I can guarantee you that will lead people down a road to depression.
No matter how prosperous we are materially, if we're not prospering spiritually, we're
going to walk down the road toward depression.
So that doesn't really surprise me.
We ought to be attentive to a greater matrix than just the economic and the political.
Second observation is, let's face it,
this past year, the race issue again presented itself
as a real danger in our society.
What I mean there is from the beginning,
there's been this problem of racial injustice.
I mean, without going so far to say
it's the original sin of America,
I mean from the beginning with slavery,
and then coming up even after slavery is ended,
in decades and decades of oppression,
the civil rights movement, which was a huge step forward,
but then that too followed by a sort of stubbornly enduring,
racial oppression.
So I don't deny that for a minute.
And the George Floyd incident and others
brought that to the fore. I mean, it brought it again to people's consciousness. And there was legitimate anger about that. Now, it's never right to express your anger in violence.
But I understand where some of the frustrations societally is coming from.
Now, way we talk more about this as we go, but I mean, I'm not at
all excited about sort of woke ideology that has come to dominate this discussion, but
that there's a problem, I don't deny for a minute, and that there are these tensions
that are really, there are moral problems. So, again, to go back to your opening observation,
even if we're flourishing at the material level, which we are in many ways.
Still, if there are moral and spiritual deficits in a society, that's going to lead to all
sorts of psychological and spiritual problems.
You said secularism is grown and is exploded.
What do those numbers look like?
What are we talking about?
We're talking about, in our country right now, about 26% would claim no religion.
And it gave you a sense of proportion there
when I was a kid, so like in the early 70s,
it was about 3% of our country would have claimed no religion.
Among younger people, say 30 and younger,
it rises to 40%.
So it bodes very ill for the future that 40% of our young people would now claim no
religion at all.
And see, I think that's a recipe for deep suffering because when you bracket that part of life,
that dimension of life, something very deep in us is not going to be satisfied.
So those are a couple of the statistics around secularism.
Okay, so you also mentioned morality. Can we find objective morality without religion?
Well, yeah, I mean, so a non-religious person could still intuit that there are objective moral
values. I mean, so I think an atheist of goodwill should be able to see
that rape or murder, that oppression of people
because of their race, et cetera, et cetera,
are all intrinsically wrong things to do.
They're all objectively wrong.
Now, I would argue what a non-believer can't do
is finally justify that.
Because the question naturally arises,
where do these objective moral values
come from? They're a bit like the objective intelligibility that the sciences depend upon.
Every science goes out to meet some form of objective intelligibility in the world. So
naturally a question arises, where does that come from? Why should the world be marked
in every nook and cranny by intelligibility?
So in a similar way, why are there these moral values and disvalues? Where do they come from?
And I would argue the only way, finally, to ground that intuition is by talking about God,
namely a moral law giver. But to your question, sure, a non-believer can recognize objective moral values.
From my perspective, I think sometimes, just as I've gotten older, I've read more about history,
and I realized how much I took for granted, widespread belief in what we may call objective morality.
make all objective morality. It didn't seem so natural when you go back just a hundred years, in fact, believing that people should be treated equally is a relatively new concept. If you look
at how we've lived for thousands and thousands and thousands of years, using that as an example, it seems like the natural state of man is not the morals
that we may now believe to be objective. Am I shooting in the dark here?
I'd make a distinction between objective moral values and our subjective capacity to
appropriate them and recognize them. I think there can be real evolution and real development in our capacity to see them. Let's say the fundamental equality of
all people which is grounded is Jefferson himself saw in God right. All men are
created equal because we're not equal. You know, in almost any other area we're not
equal in intelligence or courage or beauty or skill or we're not equal physically, we're not equal at all.
But I'd say what Jefferson correctly intuitive is, we're all created equal, we're all equally
children of God. So that's an objective truth. That has always been true, but it took,
let's say in our case, the Western mind a while to fully appropriate that. And then I would say
fully to pull out the implications of it for the way we organize ourselves politically. So I would say Jefferson and company weren't
so much inventing a new set of ideals. They were more clearly appreciating and then appropriating
objective moral values.
I say, how is this different than the philosophies of, say,
Karl Marx, where, you know, we're talking now about people
being created equal, whereas Marx's philosophies more about us
being equal and trying to achieve being equal in all, I guess,
ways. How is that? Are those two different?
Well, Marx is coming out of an entirely different philosophical framework. Marx's philosophy of
the human person is that we really make ourselves who we are. So there is no objective human nature
for Marx. One of his famous lines is, a human nature is the sum total of social relations.
So it's the way society organizes itself economically
determines sort of who we are.
So there's the human being in a slave economy,
a human being in a feudalistic economy,
human being in early capitalist economy,
and then Marx envisioned human being in perfect communism.
And they would all be different instantiations
of human nature because there's something objective about it
That does have implications for the way Marx understands the moral life
Which is why a lot of Marxists following him will say things like hey, whatever you need to do to bring about the
Revolution to bring about communism
Okay, because there really is no objective moral of value
There's a human nature being created as we go Okay, because there really is no objective moral value,
there's a human nature being created as we go.
So Marx is coming out of an entirely different
philosophical framework, and I would say,
finally a dangerous one.
You mentioned this kind of woke movement,
and some of the characteristics of it from my perspective
seem to view things or people as either being oppressed or oppressors.
So you're in one category or the other category.
Does this kind of current woke movement, which is quite different from my perspective,
again, from classical liberalism or what liberals might have been in the 1960s.
Does this have its roots in Marxism?
Yeah, and other thinkers too, but Marx is one of them. I've identified
Marx, Nietzsche, Sartre, and Michel Foucault as some of the major players in the formation of the woke mentality. And I think you're absolutely right the way you put it there is the tendency to see human beings through this one lens, the lens of power.
So who has it? Who doesn't have it? The lens of the oppressor and the oppressed, put it in haggles terms
and Marx's deeply hegelian, the master slave dynamic. Who's the master? Who's the slave?
Now, is there something to that? I would say sure. That's one way we might look at human society, but there tends to be a reduction in the
woke movement to that.
And also the questioning of an objective human nature that draws us together.
What I much prefer, as you say, correctly in classical liberalism is that, the appeal
to our common humanity, and appeal to common moral values and a common
human nature that brings us together and on that basis we can move toward greater and
greater justice.
Now, that's the language of Martin Luther King and I'm a great advocate of kings.
What we're dealing with today is something very different.
It's a different philosophical framework and I think a much worse one.
Yeah, you bring up Martin Luther King.
I'm glad you did because, as I'm looking at everything,
it's kind of happening.
There seems to be some similarities
to the turmoil of the 1960s and 70s.
We had civil rights leaders assassinated
we had a president who was assassinated in his brother.
A war that
was very unpopular. People forced into a draft, protests that were absolutely insane, double
digit inflation in the 1970s, oil embargo. I mean, it was the peak of domestic terrorism,
I believe, an example being like the weather underground who actually bombed a federal building if I'm not mistaken.
So similar in the turmoil,
but it seems very different.
What are the differences between now,
what's happening now and in the 1960s and 70s?
Yeah, as you rehearsed all that,
Sal, I lived through all that.
I was a kid, you know, when King was killed in 1968,
I was eight years old.
But I remember vividly his assassination,
Robert Kennedy's in also 68.
I remember all the things you've been describing
throughout the 1970s.
Yeah, in terms of the turmoil and kind of social upheaval,
but I'd say here's the major difference.
The civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s
was led almost exclusively by deeply religious people,
King being the most famous.
I mean, he's a Christian minister, but the top leadership in that movement was largely
religious people, and they brought together, I think, very cleverly and very effectively,
the ideals of the Bible.
So think here of King invoking Isaiah and Jeremiah and Amos and Hosea. He invokes
the great prophetic tradition of Israel, right, that speaks out on behalf of the poor and
behalf of the oppressed. They link that together with the great American tradition, which
is grounded in what you call correctly classical liberalism. So when King stands on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in 1963,
and he invokes the Hebrew prophets, and he also invokes Jefferson and the Declaration
and Abraham Lincoln to bring the American vision. I like that. I thought that was tremendous
how he brought those two traditions together. I don't see either one of those in the woke movement today,
and that's what bugs me about it.
Now, before I say any more about that,
I'll say something very positive about it.
The deep concern for people who are oppressed,
the deep concern to write wrongs,
to address injustice, I'm all for it.
That's right out of the Bible.
The Bible gave to Western culture,
especially but to the whole world,
but it gave to Western culture this deep sense
of identification with the poor and the oppressed.
And reaching its culmination in this crucified criminal,
dying on an instrument of torture outside of Jerusalem.
So the fact that the crucified Jesus
is at the heart of our Western civilization,
that's where our concern for the victim comes from.
So to that, I say, hooray, I say terrific.
The problem is the woke people,
notice, first of all, the lack of religious leadership.
The movement today is not led by religious people,
because there's often a hostility between the woke philosophy and religion.
That, to me, is a tragedy.
I'd be so much happier if we could find that space again that Martin Luther King found
where classical liberalism meets the Bible in a societal transformation.
So that's why I prefer that 50s, 60s style to what we have now.
Yeah, it seems like the movement today is not just not working with religious leaders,
but rather might even be opposed.
Right.
I know during this period of time we've seen churches get vandalized.
I know here in California there were some statues that were torn down, Unipro-Cera. In fact,
why is this happening? Why is the church and why are religious institutions being attacked at the
moment? I'll give you one reason. I mentioned those four figures. Mark's Nietzsche's Sart Foucault.
They have many things in common,
but one thing they really have in common is
they all hated religion.
They were all anti-religious.
Religion tends to be seen in the woke perspective
as part of the power establishment,
as part of the oppressor class.
And religion is a holdover from a more superstitious time,
religion in league with powerful and oppressive forces.
King did not see it that way.
I mean, King comes up out of the wonderful kind of church
tradition of the American South.
But the woke folks are influenced
by deeply anti-religious people.
And so it manifests itself in some of this hostility toward religion.
I was involved in some of that stuff this past summer, because in my pastoral region,
so I'm in Santa Barbara County, in Ventura County, in California.
There were groups going after the Unipero Sarah statues in Ventura,
which was on civil, it was on state-owned property,
but they also were going after a statue
on our own property at the Santinna's Mission.
So in both places, I stood with the people
that were trying to defend these statues
because I thought that protest was such an irrational,
deeply unfair characterization of Huniapero Sarah, who was in fact a great friend of an advocate
for the first peoples here.
So anyway, it's part though, as you say correctly,
of this anti-religious quality, and that's what I hate.
I wish we could find the space that King found in the 60s.
I'd be happy from the religious standpoint to have a conversation
with people today who are concerned about social justice quite rightly, but are doing it
in a way that I think is less than productive.
Yeah, you mentioned some of the philosophers that may be behind the current, I guess,
woke movement and some of their, what they may have in common, one, you know, kind of moving laterally,
if, when I look historically at tyrants,
you know, people who ruled with an iron fist, dictatorships,
more often than not, they tend to be opposed to religion or at least religious freedom.
Why?
Because we're the dissenting voice.
If you're claiming totalizing control over the society,
and that's what, you know, whether it's Hitler,
it's Stalin, it's Mao, it's Paul Pott, it's Castro,
all those folks were trying to exercise
a totalizing control over the society.
And religion stands a thwart that
because we think that is a usurpation of power
that's completely illegitimate.
In speaking for God too,
we speak for a moral norm
that stands outside the will to power.
So if someone assumes power,
they want a totalizing control over society,
and there's no check on them, right?
Well, what stands a thwart that is religion because religion says no, no, we
You can't control the whole of society and you are as we say under God
Your authority is not something you invent and have no limit
You're under God and see religion speaks those truths,
which is why you're quite right, the tyrants of the 20th century,
to a person opposed religion and saw religion as the problem.
And that goes back to the French Revolution.
I mean, what really gives rise to modernity
is that great event at the end of the 18th century.
And what was characteristic of it, but a deep hostility to the church.
And you'll see that rising up whenever this kind of Jacobin mentality arises.
And I think the woke people, it's a Jacobin movement today that has always been anti-religious.
Yeah, you know, what's interesting is when you look at old photos of communist buildings or Nazi, you know, offices or
even today North Korea or China, you see pictures of the world leaders and people's homes. You see them, you know, statues of them. them almost as if they need to be worshiped.
And if you can't worship anyone above them,
I think that's kind of pointing to what you're saying.
When people say, when they do those polls
and they say, are you religious and they say, no,
do you worship anything and they say, no,
are they not aware that they are still worshiping something?
Are we, is our very nature and that we worship something?
Yes, and you actually articulated there a very deep truth. I would say from a biblical perspective we were made
for praise we were made to worship that read the opening verses of the book of Genesis and that's what you find is
This great liturgical procession of the creatures coming forth from God. And I say that as a Catholic, we recognize in that high poetry of
Genesis, as the creatures come forth, it's like a procession. Well, who comes at the end
of it, but the human being? Well, who comes at the end of a liturgical procession, but
the one who will lead it? Right? So there there is biblical anthropology is the human being is meant to lead
all of creation in a great chorus of praise to God. Now what sin it's bad praise, it's always the
same thing. It's bad praise. I begin worshiping someone or something other than the true God.
And what follows from that is a disintegration of the self and of the society. That, that, if you want in a nutshell, that's the book of Genesis.
That's the beginning of Genesis in a nutshell. And so you're quite right. When we stop worshiping God, we don't stop worshiping. We just worship something else.
So worship just means worship. Right. What, what do you give highest value to? Everyone's got something.
It, you can say it's my own ego, it's my family,
it's power, it's wealth, it's my,
it's the government, it's the culture, whatever.
But everyone's worshiping something.
The Bible keeps saying, forget these forms of false worship,
get ordered to correct worship, you know?
So that's a very deep intuition you've got there,
which is quite right. Everyone's religious in that sense. Everyone worships something.
The key is worshiping the right thing.
Yeah, years ago, one of the ways I found you was a video that you actually had put on YouTube
talking about this subject and you talked about power, pleasure,
think of money, wealth, pleasure, power, honor.
On a right, and I was an atheist years ago,
and if you asked me if I had worshiped anything,
I would have said no, I don't worship anything,
but then when I understood them,
I actually just actually revealed what I worshiped,
the way I understood it, and please correct me if I'm wrong, but obviously as humans,
every choice we make is based off of value. So, for example, I chose to wear this shirt
today because I thought it was better to wear this shirt than another shirt. And I chose
to do this job because it's better than another choice. And if I, what I eat for lunch and along those lines,
everything I choose is something that I value more than
the other choices.
And ultimately, at the top of that is my top value,
which is what I worship.
So in other words, my actions revealed what I worshiped.
What's the problem with that versus worshiping God?
Why worship God versus allowing myself to
just allow my actions to determine something else is valuable or most valuable to me?
Because God is the highest value. And so when you forget that and you turn something which
is less than God into God, it causes turmoil within you. You knowin says, my heart is restless
until it rests in thee, O Lord,
you made me for yourself,
and therefore my heart is restless.
It means even as you achieve these various goods,
and everything you describe, you're right,
these are values.
My talking to you right now is something I chose to do
because it's a value.
Now, ask the question, why about five times
and you'll come to the religious level? What I mean is, okay, so you chose to do because it's a value. Now, ask the question, why about five times and you'll come to the religious level?
What I mean is, okay, so you chose to be
with Sal this morning.
Well, why?
Well, because I think he has a good show
and he has a large audience
and we talk about some important things.
Okay, well, why is that important to you?
Well, because my job is to evangelize
and to try to get the church's point of view out
to as many as I can.
Okay, how come that's important to you? Well, because Jesus commanded us to evangelize and to try to get the church's point of view out to as many as I can. Okay, how come that's important to you?
Well, because Jesus commanded us to evangelize
to the ends of the earth.
Well, how come that's important to you?
Well, I think Jesus is the son of God
and what he says goes, you know,
I mean, and take anything you decide
from getting out of bed in the morning.
It takes the most trivial choice you make.
Ask the why question five or six times,
you'll get to ultimate value.
Now, if you say, well, guess my ultimate value is I want to be, you know, happy pleasure.
That's the ultimate value for me, or it's because I want people to admire me, you know,
honors my ultimate value.
Well, it's really important exercise to uncover that.
But I would say, well, if you're stuck at the level of pleasure or honor or power or something,
you're not in the right spiritual space. You know, your heart is going to be restless because it's
not meant for something as trivial as that. It's what differentiates us from the other animals. You
know, a dog has his dinner and has enough water and has a place to sit down. The dog is blissfully
happy.
Dogs are much happier than we are.
It's obvious, isn't it?
You look at a typical dog.
They're much happier than we are because they attain what they're meant to attain, much
more readily.
The trouble is we're built for so much more than, oh yeah, I found enough food and drink
and I got a place to rest and I got enough people around me to entertain me.
I'm not all that's fine, but I'm not destined for that.
I'm destined for so much more than that.
And so my heart is restless until it finds
what it's looking for.
In my space of fitness, you find people who,
just through their actions, worship their bodies, right?
Their worship, fitness. And that ends up turning into a bad relationship with food or food
or eating disorders, you know, over training, terrible insecurities because it just, there's
no end to it.
Yeah.
And I imagine it's that way with other things.
You know, when you see a celebrity who's got money and power and pleasure
and they commit suicide or they're depressed
and you wonder how they seem to have everything,
it's almost as if they're trying to quench their thirst
with sea water.
Right, and see, as you quite correctly say,
you will inevitably become addicted
when you get stuck at one of those low levels
because for just that reason.
So let's say you attain the physique you always wanted.
It's like this is like perfect.
I just won the whatever the top prize I was going for.
Within the next day, I'm going to say, okay, but now I got to make it better.
And I've got to try harder and I've got to keep going after it.
Or you're looking for pleasure and you find pleasure, but the pleasure always wears off,
and so now I need to get more of it.
And because the heart is actually ordered to God,
not to these lower things,
I'll get stuck in an addictive pattern.
Because I'll say, well, it's not enough.
I'm not happy.
I don't have what I want.
I just need more and more and more of this lower good.
And the answer is no. You don't need more of that.
Rather, take that lower good,
whether it's your own physique, it's pleasure, it's power,
and now give that to God.
So you say, I'm doing this on my Oram Day glory,
I'm as Ignatius said, right,
to the greater glory of God.
Now, now your bodybuilding, your pleasure,
your power, your political position, whatever it is,
will take on real meaning.
Now it will be something that is very life giving, not something addictive.
But that's where I think at the heart of the spiritual life in many ways, with these
themes.
And you see it, if you're a pastoral person, all the time, it's the basic pattern of us sinners
that we get addictive in our, you know, strategies.
Yeah, it's funny as you're talking,
you know, I've three children,
I just had a baby about three months ago,
and my second youngest is 11,
so 11 years later I had another baby.
And, you know, if I were valuing those worldly things
that you talk about, pleasure, money, honor,
I probably wouldn't have had any kids
because kids are expensive.
They're very stressful, that's for sure.
It's not, I'm not having as much you know You know personal pleasure fun stuff. It's you know a lot of the stuff is dedicated children
Is this is the connection of secularism to people wanting less children for example? Is that a connection?
Yeah, absolutely watch when cultures are very ordered to God they tend to be more fruitful
Why isn't in the Bible that the covenants that God makes
with us are almost always sealed with the command,
go forth, be fruitful and multiply?
Because life follows from that.
It's the fruitfulness of the whole of your ordinary life
becomes greater the more you give it to God.
That's the paradox.
If I surrender that to a higher good, they all become better.
They become more themselves.
That's, I think maybe you and I talked about this, but the image of the burning bush
from the book of Exodus.
That's what's being conveyed there spiritually, is the bush is on fire, but not consumed. So the closer God gets to us,
the more beautiful we become and the more radiant and we give warmth and light to others,
but we're not consumed. It's not like God burns us up. He makes us more beautiful
the closer we get to him. So your bodybuilding or fitness or whatever it is you do
will become better, higher, a vehicle of grace, the more you give it to God.
So from your perspective, a lot of what's happening was predictable, predictable because of the
decline of religion or spirituality or value or worshiping God?
I wouldn't underplay that for a minute.
I think it is true that the more secularized a society becomes the more dysfunctional.
I agree with that.
But I also wouldn't want to lose the fact that a very real concern about racial justice
emerged this past summer.
I don't deny that for a minute, and that people were legitimately expressing a deep concern
about it.
Now, the violence that came from it and all that, obviously, is not a good thing.
But I wouldn't want to overlook that as though it's all just a question of secularism.
It was people with a real passion for justice.
And as I said, that's Amos and Isaiah and Hosea and Jeremiah
and Ezekiel and Jesus and the whole teaching tradition of the church advocates concern
for the poor and the oppressed. So I'm not against that at all. I think that was a healthy
expression. Okay. You know, one of my pastimes is I love learning about economics and politics. And when I look back through history, I noticed that the most powerful ways to manipulate
people is through real kind of feel good or justified feeling.
So you mentioned, you know, the root of wanting people to not be oppressed,
of people noticing injustice and wanting it to be changed and different.
We're talking now, the spiritual realm,
is that a feeling that is often manipulated
by not by God, but by Satan, by evil forces?
And are we, what does that look like
when evil forces are at battle with good, within us.
Yeah, and that's good.
It's a good question, searching, question,
because I think you're right.
The Romans had that saying,
corrupts you, Optimee, Pesima,
the corruption of the best is the worst.
And so what's really beautiful and good,
passion for justice,
the concern for the oppressed,
reaching out to those on the margins
who have been overlooked.
It's beautiful, that's a great thing. But when it goes bad, it can go very bad. And it can turn
into violence, it can turn into this deep rupture between classes and races, etc. It turns into violence.
And it turns into scapegoating.
And here I rely on the work of a great philosopher, René Girard, who said that when tensions arise
in any society could be your family to a nation-state, by a very deep instinct, we reach out for scapegoats.
So we reach out for someone to blame,
and then we can all come together
in a kind of, or ersatz piece, that we all come to say, yeah, that person's to blame,
or that group is to blame.
And we find a kind of equilibrium in that,
you know, a sort of satisfaction,
but it's deeply dysfunctional,
because it leads
only to greater division and violence. So the scapegoating instinct is so deep in us, and I
think that was on full display throughout this past year, you know, the casting about for
scapegoats, the searching for the victim and so on. So that's a dysfunctional feature of this.
We also saw a lot of kind of this this mob mentality.
I know from a psychological standpoint,
if you look at the studies, humans behave very differently
when they're caught up in the frenzy of the mob.
We tend to do things that we would never do
if we were alone, act in ways that are not characteristic
of how we would act on our own.
Do you think social media has kind of spread mob mentality
or made it a bit cancerous?
Because now you're meeting with other groups
and you're sharing
these things and we're getting scared together and it's normally we'd have to get together, but now
we can use the internet. Yeah, my answer is emphatically yes to that. And I say it,
Sal, as someone who uses social media, so my ministry depends a lot on social media, so I don't
want to demonize it. I mean, I think a lot of good can be accomplished through it.
But boy, that's the shadow side. You're right. Is it facilitates precisely the formation of mobs?
And mob is the right word for what Gerard is describing. So together we find a common victim,
the scapegoat, and we form ourselves precisely as a mob. So not rational, not loving,
but rather this irrational and violent
conglomeration of people,
but we all sense the thrill of it, don't we?
And that can be,
you're in a school cafeteria,
and a bunch of your buddies are bad-mouthing somebody, right?
And you hear that, and you say,
oh, I want to get into that conversation.
Let me be part of that.
And then you feel this kind of commonality,
but it's not a healthy commonality.
It's a mob mentality.
Well, take the high school cafeteria
and now just extrapolate from that
to a nation state, to a society.
And you're right, facilitated by social media
that allows these mobs to form very quickly.
And look at, don't we even refer to it as a Twitter mob?
And I think one of the ugliest developments
in the last, what, 10 years would be that,
that a mob can form like that,
watch how people are scapegoated like just overnight.
And let's face it, lives can be destroyed.
Now there's the whole cancel culture side of this thing.
But cancel culture is part of the scapegoating mechanism, right?
It's that guy, it's that article,
it's that lady wrote that, she said,
and now the mob forms, we get excited within that mob,
but then irrationally and with deep, And now the mob forms, we get excited within that mob,
but then irrationally and with deep hatred,
we destroy people.
So that dynamic is God awful
and it's been facilitated, you're right,
I think, by social media.
It's very powerful.
I even can sometimes catch myself getting caught up
in a frenzy
just through, again, through social media
or from around everybody, you know, people that
think in similar ways, till the way I may think
and then I find myself thinking in more extreme ways.
What's the antidote to, you know, that kind of mob,
that psychological effect because, you know,
you use social media, I use social media,
it's, I think it's a part of life,
and there's great things with it.
I wouldn't be able to do what I do without it.
You've been able to evangelize in ways,
you know, people haven't been able to do in the past.
How do we check that?
What's the antidote to the negative side of mob mentality?
Well, first to be aware of it, and to aware of its dynamics.
And I love the fact that you admitted, and I admit it too, that we all get caught up in
it.
We're all sinners here.
And we're all in danger of falling into the gerardian of trap, of getting excited by
this mob, this group that's formed.
I can be part of that.
And I, yeah, they're the one to blame.
So it's very enticing. First thing to be aware of it. Secondly, don't cooperate with it. You know a story
that Gerard, especially love from the New Testament, was the woman caught an adultery in the
gospel of John. Remember that story? When, you know, the Pharisees bring this woman to
Jesus. We've caught her in the very active adultery, so they found their scapegoat. And around them, this angry mob is forming, right? They're taking stones in
their hand because they, with the mosaic law, you know, we can stone this lady to death.
What does Jesus do? And they come to him, hey, tell us, what do you think about this? They
want him to sanction it. And instead, he just bends down and he writes on the ground.
And famously, we don't know what he wrote.
It's the only time he's ever described his writing something
in the New Testament, but we don't know what it is.
But I think what's important there is he doesn't cooperate
with it.
He just, he's doodles on the ground.
I'm not gonna cooperate with it.
And then he has the devastating one liner, right?
Let the one among you without sin be the first to cast a stone at her. So that's a beautiful
way to disempower the Gerardian mob. Don't recognize it for what it is. Don't cooperate with it.
And then turn its energy against itself. Let the one among you who's without sin be the first to cast a stone at her.
So I think especially for Christians, it's very important for us to be aware of this
dynamic.
How sad, I'll speak bluntly here, that way too often in the Catholic media space, you
got people stirring up these Gerardian mobs.
You got people stirring up just this kind of scapegoating violence.
And that's especially tragic when Christians do it because we're the ones who should most
be able to see through it.
You know, listening to what you're saying, I agree 100%. 100% but I also acknowledge that that can be scary
to be the one person to stand up to the mob
or not go along with the mob.
It's, you get afraid, is my business gonna be destroyed?
Am I gonna be hurt?
What do you do in that situation?
What do you do in that situation where you're afraid
to not
go along?
Yeah, I get it.
I get it.
And people are very aggressive.
And they're trying to destroy careers and destroy lives, you know.
And so people start of getting naturally defensive.
So I get that.
I wouldn't want to, you know, be pontificating here to people that are really in danger
of losing their livelihood.
But I think to do all we can to unmask
and not cooperate with these tendencies.
And yeah, to have the courage to tell the truth publicly,
when you know it's probably going to excite
a Gerardian mob, no, I get it.
And again, I don't want to sound fast-sile to those who's lives and work are really threatened
by this.
But the best we can do is unmask it and try to disempower it.
Yeah, I think sometimes what gives me courage is realizing there's probably other people
that may want to do the same.
They just feel like they're alone, so maybe make them feel like there's other people.
Yeah, and you know, there's, again,
I want to be careful because I know I'm dealing
with people's real lives here,
but you know, it's been said that a lot of the woke
cancel culture stuff is propagated by essentially bullies,
and that bullies are our cowards,
and we know that from the grade school playground.
And so standing up to them can be the best thing
and often disempowers them.
And so Jesus in that story is basically standing up to a mob.
He's challenging them.
He's getting in their face.
And now, he paid the supreme price.
One way to read the cross is precisely Jesus himself becoming the scapegoated victim.
So I get that.
I get the seriousness of it.
But to do all we can to stand up to the boys.
I want to change directions a little bit and talk about the, just the pandemic and the
response that we've had
to pandemic and maybe what may happen in the future.
Let's start with the lockdowns or forced shutdowns
of businesses that most governments enacted.
There's been a lot, I mean on both sides,
there are people, people saying it's necessary to save lives
and there's people on the other side that say,
my life and my business is destroyed
and this is a voluntary change.
Our lockdown's moral, is there a moral backing to them?
Well, I'd say yes in general,
if you wanna speak abstractly about it, sure.
And certainly in the beginning of this whole crisis
back in March and April in May,
I think most of us saw, yeah, given the nature of this pandemic, there's something we should do to protect people's lives.
And even now, I'm here in Southern California where there's been a terrible spiking of this thing.
So yeah, I understand that. And in the opening months, the church was very cooperative with
the government and saying, yeah, we should keep our people safe. Now, is there a legitimate room for a certain pushback or people saying, well, I'll wait
a minute, we've done this, but we have to do this for the next six months.
And I think there can be a healthy conversation within the body politic, the people pushing
back against the government.
A good example is the church. We, over these months, have been in kind of steady conversation against the government. A good example is the church.
Over these months,
it has been in a steady conversation
with the government out here in California,
pressing our case to allow
greater openness in the churches.
Sometimes, I think it's like,
okay, we understand, we acquiesce.
Other times pushing back,
getting some what we want.
Other times no.
Okay, I think that's all right
within a democratic policy
that we have that kind of give and take.
So, in answer your question, I'd say, yeah, lockdowns
can be construed as something moral, but they're not absolute.
And I think people can raise legitimate objections.
There's also fears that there may be policies to force vaccinations to, you know, just
to be able to function in society.
Is there a moral backing to forcing people to vaccinate?
Well, I suppose we have to look at what's on the ground.
My instinct is against that.
I think when the government starts imposing things on people, it tends to be a bad idea
and tends to awaken resistance. I think what we are now that most people are very open to
receiving the vaccination when it becomes available. I think for the moment we're probably okay with
that. My instinct is against governmental impositions, but I suppose I can in extreme emergency the
government could legitimately
do something like that, but we're getting a little bit too out of my field that I would
want to be pontificating much further about that.
Sure, no problem.
Okay, so are you able to, what do you think is going to happen?
I mean, we're kind of talking about maybe the root cause of this division among people
being just lack of spiritual health.
Where is this going?
Where do you think this is going?
What's it going to take to reverse it?
Well, I do think ultimately it's a revival of religion,
a revival of the spiritual, is what it'll take to reverse violence in our society.
We can't solve this problem within a purely secular framework.
If we, let's say the pandemic is over, we return simply to achieving as much material
success as we can. I mean, that's fine, but it's not going to solve the societal issues.
I mean, where does racial hatred finally come from? I say, a lack of a spiritual vision
that we don't recognize objective moral values, we don't recognize our
common humanity which is grounded in our common status as creatures of God.
You know, I think recovering all of that is key to a moral revolution.
And if we just go back to business as usual, we just go back to seeking the goods of the
world.
We're not going to solve these fundamental problems.
And let me say this too, Sal, I think it's very important, you know, I speak as a Catholic
Bishop.
We're never going to solve our problems this side of the end of time.
You know what I mean?
We're a compromised dysfunctional family.
We're made up of sinners.
There's no program.
There's no political reform. There's
no great leader that's ever going to solve our problems. And that's not to be pessimistic
as to be deeply realistic. We turn to the grace of God, finally. We besiege the grace of
God. And there's no moral program or political reform that's ever going to solve our problems. It's been said like maybe a week after the Eskitan, meaning the end of time, we might
actually solve our problems.
So, there's a healthy Christian realism, I would say, about that.
And a certain modesty in regard to whatever we propose.
So, oh, I got it.
I got, here's the solution. Here's what we need to do.
I'm always wary of that.
Here's the program.
Well, there's no program that's ever gonna solve it
because the problem is a problem of sin, finally.
When things get really challenging, societally speaking,
do we tend to see people become more religious
or do we see people move away from religion?
And then the second part to that is, tend to see people become more religious or do we see people move away from religion?
And then the second part to that is,
how has this affected the Catholic church?
Yeah, and answer the first part of the question,
I say yes, tends to be the answer.
And the reason for it is religion tends to flourish
when people are brought to certain limits.
See, as long as I'm living my life,
I'm basically happy, I'm having my needs met and so on.
Okay, I'm all right.
But when I come up against limits, so I become sick, I fail.
Someone in my family dies.
My business collapses.
At those moments, when I'm more vulnerable and I feel the limits of my own finitude, I tend to look to what stands beyond
the finite.
I tend to look toward God, you know?
So it's not like, oh, there's religion as a crutch.
No, I think it's a natural instinct
that when we come up against the limits
of our ordinary experience, we tend to look toward God.
You know, what's gonna happen in the current situation? It's too early to tell, we tend to look toward God. What's gonna happen in the current situation?
It's too early to tell, we don't know.
My biggest fear tell you the truth right now
is that people aren't gonna come back to church
because we have now for almost a year,
and legitimately, we've suspended the obligation
to come to Mass on Sunday,
which is a very serious moral obligation,
but we've suspended that because we've said,
look, to keep yourself safe.
So people have gotten into the habit now,
most people, of not going to mass on Sunday.
That concerns me a lot.
And whether we can recover,
I think we gotta really work overtime
to make sure that people don't stay away.
Yeah, I'll have to say, Bishop, I think people will come back
because I know for myself part of the value
that I get going to church is being with other people.
And I haven't been able to replicate that with Zoom.
Even this interview with you now through zoom.
It's just not the same. You don't get that same connection. So I hope you're right.
I sincerely hope you're right, that people feel just that way. Because you know,
as Catholics, I'll tell you one thing. This was about a few weeks ago. It was the governor of
Virginia, I think, and he was talking about the shutdowns and he said, hey, look, you don't need to come to church.
You can worship God anywhere in your part.
Well I did a little video on it because I said, no, no, say what you want about that, but
that's a very Protestant way to understand that that worship is just an interior personal
individual thing.
Catholics feel very strongly about what you just said, that
we come together as the mystical body of Christ, and the fact that we worship together
corporately matters immensely. And it's not like, okay, is it, oh, you're fine and you go
your way and you go to the woods and worship and you go to the beach. No, no, what? Catholics
don't believe that. We believe it's very important to come together
in a sacred place where Christ is really present
in the Eucharist and that we worship together.
So I hope you're right.
I sincerely do that people sense that
and they wanna come back.
So last question, let's say somebody's watching right now,
they're not religious, maybe they're agnostic or maybe even atheist. Last question, let's say somebody's watching right now.
They're not religious, maybe they're agnostic or maybe even atheist, but what you're saying
is resonating, they're noticing that they feel,
they just don't feel whole, or like the way I felt,
like I was always needing something,
something was always missing.
What's the first step?
They're not ready to worship God,
they're not ready to take that step.
What would be the first step for them to take
to see if this actually improves their quality of life
or brings them any value?
Perform the simplest act of love.
Love means willing the good of the other, right?
So it doesn't mean a feeling.
You can't just generate feelings about things,
but you can do an act of the will. I will the good of another.
I do something on behalf of somebody else.
It could be helping a kid with their homework.
It could be making cookies for someone.
It could be a friendly smile, right, to someone who looks lonely.
Perform the simplest act of love.
And you actually have opened a very important door thereby by because at the heart of Christian faith is the claim that God is love, right?
It doesn't just have love, he is love.
That's what God's nature is.
So when we love authentically, even in the simplest way, you are in fact in the presence
of God. You are in fact filled up with
the Holy Spirit at least to a degree. So I would, this was a famous thing in the 19th
century, Jared Manley Hopkins, the great Catholic poet, was asked by an agnostic friend.
I mean, what should I do? I want to believe in God, but I just can't
muster it, you know? And Hopkins said to him, give alms. And that's what I'm saying. In other
words, perform a simple act of love. Give some of what you have to the poor. Find a homeless
person and just go up to that person and give them something or smile, greet them, say something
warm and friendly to them.
That's a first step, but a very important step because Mother Teresa of Calcutta or the
little flower, the highest saints will say, the culmination of the spiritual life is
that, is to perform the simplest act of love. If I go to Mass every day
and I read the spiritual books and I'm studying Thomas Aquinas, but I have not love, as St. Paul said,
I'm nothing. I'm nothing. So do that. Right now, today, perform an active love, and you've opened the most important
door into the spiritual life.
That's a great way to end this interview, Bishop.
Thank you very much for coming on.
I appreciate you.
Hey, Sal, it's always my pleasure.
Great talking to you.
Thank you.
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