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The Government Wants You To Listen To Dancing Unicorns

Surgeon General Worries About Our Sad Social Lives

On​ Monday, Politico ran a long interview with Surgeon General Vivek ⁣Murthy. Murthy ​is apparently ⁤“worried about our sad social lives.”

According to Politico, “Americans are burned out, disconnected, isolated and starved​ for time. Maybe ‌it’s post-pandemic ‌blues. Maybe it’s our smartphone addiction. Whatever the ‍cause, it’s serious ⁤enough that Murthy has ⁢issued a formal advisory to the nation calling for action ‌to⁤ address this ‘epidemic.’”

What are Murthy’s solutions? He is hosting events trying to put‌ people in proximity with ⁣one another and speaking about the “power of friendship.” At these‌ events, as Politico describes, “People dressed as dancing ‌unicorns handed out prescriptions for five minutes⁢ of social connection. (Quantity: Endless.⁣ Refills: Daily.)” Murthy then encouraged people to spend 45 seconds‌ writing a text to a⁢ loved one. He asks people to engage⁣ in what he calls “the‌ connection exercise.”‌ He ⁣says that such exercises can⁣ be “supplemented by‌ investments in social infrastructure, which is where policymakers come⁣ in.”

Or, alternatively, it’s ​precisely where policymakers should butt out.

There​ is ⁣a reason for our loneliness epidemic. Sure, it has to do with ​smartphones and the internet and the increasing⁢ atomization‍ of‌ our lives as we hunker down with⁢ our screens. But screens are just a tool to be used for good or ill. The real problem is that our social institutions have‍ been summarily destroyed over the course of decades by government.

Those social ​institutions used to begin with and center around ‌church.

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Historically, churches fulfilled three interwoven functions. First, they provided ⁢common orientation around​ a‍ higher goal, complete with rules and regulations that required skin in the game in order to be accepted into the‍ group. Second, they provided economic benefits and social reinforcement, ranging from charity to the helping ​hands of neighbors. Finally, emerging from the first two functions, they created a feeling of‍ community.

That feeling of community, as⁣ sociologist Émile Durkheim wrote, ‍could only be ‌attained with reference to the​ sacred: a series of‌ beliefs so worthwhile that‌ they were‌ not to be questioned. As⁤ Robert Nisbet writes, “It is community that gives to the sacred‌ its most vital ⁢expressions everywhere: birth, marriage,‌ death, ‍and other ⁢moments in the human⁤ drama.”

The sacred, then,⁣ undergirded the community.

And⁣ the ⁢community provided ⁢the support structure necessary for ‍the flourishing of the family.

And then government tried ⁣to replace church and destroyed community.

The first step was the substitution of government benefits for the earned membership⁣ of a church. ⁤People no longer ⁣had to have skin in the game of a community in order to be given charity⁤ — now they had “entitlements” ⁢by dint ‌of breathing. ‍According ⁣to ​a National‌ Bureau of Economic Research study, New Deal policies crowded out 30% of ⁣all charitable spending by churches. ‍Government benefits were ⁢made exponentially greater. Family structure itself was dramatically undermined by government spending since you were ⁢no ⁤longer responsible for your kids or⁤ your parents. Government was. Your call on your neighbor no longer required you to sacrifice for the community. Instead, you could point the government gun at him and steal his wallet.

Able to‌ reap the rewards without the costs, many people stopped going⁢ to church. ⁤And‍ over the course of decades, churches began ⁤to adjust to that reality not by reinforcing common orientation around ⁤a ⁣higher goal ​— sanctity — but by⁤ trying to get‍ rid ‌of “judgment” ⁤so as to include more people. Churches began to ⁣try ‌to mirror government: no skin in the game, plenty of benefits.‌ As Gertrude Himmelfarb ‍wrote‍ two decades ago, “This⁤ process of [religious] accommodation has since gone⁤ on apace, so that today many mainline churches offer little or no‍ resistance to the prevailing culture. On the contrary, some are very⁢ much part of it, priding themselves on being cosmopolitan and sophisticated, undogmatic‍ and uncensorious.”

Thus the sacred has been wiped away, leaving⁢ us all alone with our subjective senses of self, catered to by a ⁢broad welfare state. Are we happier? Will that problem be cured by government?

Of⁣ course not.

It can only be cured by a return to community. Historically,‍ that community means religious community, which is why it continues to be so⁣ sad to see religious leaders playing around the edges of conciliation with value⁣ systems that undermine sacredness at every turn.

On Monday, according to the vast majority⁣ of the legacy media, Pope Francis apparently‌ decided that it was fine for ⁣priests to ‌bless ​same-sex couples. The New‌ York Times said ⁢this move was “his most definitive step yet to ‍make the Roman ⁣Catholic Church more welcoming to LGBTQ Catholics ​and more ⁤reflective of his ‍vision of a⁢ more pastoral and less rigid‍ church.”

If true, of course, that ⁣would mark a massive shift ⁣for the⁢ Catholic Church, which ⁣has ⁢held fast to the traditional teaching that marriage is between one man and one woman and⁣ that⁣ sexual union within⁢ marriage is the ‌only morally permissible form of sexual union. ⁣The Church‌ has held fast‌ for thousands⁢ of years not only‌ to the​ sanctity of marriage but also to the natural law philosophy inherent in that sanctity — a philosophy that says the world of God’s creation ‌carries within it certain obvious⁤ rights and wrongs, teleological ends. Man and ⁣woman were ⁣created to become one flesh, ​this philosophy ‌says,‌ and creation is designed to end in the creation of new human life.

Catholic⁢ philosopher Robert George has explained⁢ this point further: “What is unique⁤ about marriage⁤ is‍ that it truly is a​ comprehensive sharing of life, a sharing⁢ founded on⁤ the bodily​ union ⁤made uniquely possible by the sexual complementarity of man and woman— a complementarity that makes it ‌possible for two human beings to ⁢become, in the language of the⁤ Bible,⁣ one⁢ flesh,‌ and thus possible for this one-flesh union to be ⁣the foundation of a relationship in which it is intelligible⁤ for‍ two⁢ persons to bind themselves to ⁣each other in pledges of permanence, monogamy, and fidelity.”

It would​ certainly​ be ⁤a massive surrender for the ​Catholic Church⁣ to reject that ⁢teaching on ⁣behalf​ of a broader teaching‌ that morality now encompasses sexual relationships of‍ other sorts — particularly⁣ sexual relationships without any potential whatsoever for the creation of human life.

So, ‍what did the Pope actually say?

His defenders say that he changed nothing. According to Catholic⁣ publication The Pillar, “Fiducia‌ supplicans says clearly that that the ‍Vatican​ does not intend to permit same-sex marriage, or ⁤anything that resembles it — and says that the Church ‌does not actually have the power or authority to​ do that. While the⁤ text​ does create a ‌framework ⁣for blessing gay couples, it says that‍ those blessings should ‌not be confused‌ with marriage, or ⁤even with approval of same-sex unions, or⁢ homosexual activity.”

Fiducia suppplicans says blessings are a “pastoral resource to be valued rather than a‌ risk or ‌a problem”​ and they may be bestowed ⁤upon⁢ those persons who “although in a union that ⁤cannot be compared in‌ any way⁤ to ⁢a ‌marriage, desire to entrust ​themselves to the Lord and his mercy, to invoke his help, and to be guided to a greater understanding⁣ of his plan ‌of love and truth.” Such blessings ‌ought ‌not be given in⁣ any circumstance resembling⁢ a sanctification of same-sex unions,‌ says the Pope, and “there is no intention⁤ to ⁢legitimize‌ anything.”​ Furthermore, says the document, the blessing ought to descend on those who “do not claim a legitimation​ of their own status, but who beg that all ‍that is true,‍ good, and⁤ humanly⁢ valid ⁣in their lives and their relationships be enriched, healed, and elevated by the presence of⁣ the Holy Spirit.”

But there is reason​ for the controversy.⁤ The document itself suggests ‌that blessings should not be ⁢“subjected to too‍ many moral prerequisites” and⁢ that priests ought not‌ to “lose pastoral‍ charity, which should permeate all our decisions and attitudes” and to avoid ⁢being “judges who only deny, reject, ​and exclude.” Furthermore, it is not clear whether the ​Church will crack down on liturgical blessings it does ⁤not approve in the document.

The Pope, in other words, is being vague, and others are supposed to clean up for​ him. My friend Larry⁢ O’Connor​ has⁤ a good rundown of his interpretation ​of the latest missive. Here is what he writes: “I am not in full communion with the Church. As ⁤such, I am required to abstain from partaking in the Eucharist ⁢at Mass. I walk up to the altar with my⁤ arms crossed on my chest and the presiding priest offers me⁣ a blessing. He is not blessing the situation that I am ⁤in that keeps me‍ from being in communion with the‌ Church. He is offering me a priestly blessing so that‌ I can continue my ‍faith journey and ​move forward closer to Christ despite my situation. This is ‍exactly what the Vatican has confirmed⁣ the pastors may do for individuals who have same sex attraction and are also not in full communion with the Church because of their situation.”

But is that all the Pope is doing? Because Larry isn’t approaching the altar as a member⁢ of a same-sex ‌couple. He ‍is approaching individually. Of course religions should‍ bless‌ the sinner but⁣ hate the sin. But when a ⁢same-sex⁣ couple approaches a priest⁤ for a blessing as a same-sex couple, the distinction ⁤falls ‍away. The Pope here is not allowing blessing for​ individuals who participate in same-sex unions — every traditional religion ⁣allows sinners to receive blessings individually, so far⁤ as I’m aware. He‍ is apparently, instead, greenlighting blessing same-sex couples as ⁢couples, then pretending it doesn’t mean anything so long as the blessing isn’t an outright sanctification of the ‌same-sex⁤ relationship.

Clearly that’s how the‌ Left is reading ⁢it. Rep. James Martin, a radical Left-wing Catholic, says, “The new declaration opens the door to nonliturgical blessings for same-sex couples, something that had been previously off-limits for​ bishops, priests and deacons. Along with many priests,⁤ I will ‍now be delighted to bless my friends in same-sex unions.”

So,‍ why ought ‌we to care? We ought to care because‍ when historical pillars ⁢of Western tradition including natural law begin to carve away at those pillars in the ⁣name‌ of tolerance and diversity, the entire edifice begins to crumble. That is a problem for religious ​believers of all traditional stripes.

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It’s​ not unique to Catholicism.​ On the‍ same day the Pope issued his​ statement, celebrated by ⁢the New York Times, the Times issued a piece about the​ collapse of the United Methodist Church,‌ riven by controversy⁢ over LGBTQ issues. ⁣As the ⁣Times ⁣describes, “At issue ​for Methodists is the question of ordaining and marrying L.G.B.T.Q. people, a ‍topic that⁣ has splintered many other Protestant denominations and which Methodists have been ​debating for years. … There were eight million Methodists in the United ‌States in 2020,‌ according to the U.S. Religion Census. Between ‌large-scale⁣ departures and the broader trend of decline, Dr. Burge said, that number could drop by half in a decade. The exodus ‌marks a calamitous decline for the broader tradition ​of mainline Protestantism, which once ⁢dominated the American religious, social and ⁤cultural landscape.”

And herein lies the problem: There is no substitute for traditional religion⁣ in the American landscape. And‍ traditional ‍religion requires⁢ skin in⁢ the game. The minute religion ⁢becomes merely a nonjudgmental “blessing” dumped on top of subjective self-glorification, religion loses its value.

And when ‍religion loses its value, social society crumbles. We’re relegated to Vivek Murthy lecturing us with dancing⁢ unicorns who hand out prescriptions for social connection.

How can‍ the Catholic Church balance its commitment to tradition with the evolving perspectives on LGBTQ+ issues in today’s society

-sex‍ couples and could lead to further changes in the church’s stance on LGBTQ+ issues.” And that’s the problem. Once you open the door, it’s difficult to control what⁢ comes through.

So, should the Catholic Church change its teaching on homosexuality? That’s not⁤ a question I can answer.⁢ But it is a question that has significant implications ⁢for the institution and its followers. ‍It is a question that should ⁣be debated and discussed openly ⁣and⁢ honestly, without resorting to name-calling or personal attacks. And it is⁤ a question that deserves ​careful ⁣consideration of the theological, moral, and​ social implications involved.

Ultimately, the role of the Pope and the Catholic Church is to uphold and ⁣protect the teachings of the faith. It is not to succumb ⁣to societal pressures or conform to popular opinion. ‌While it is⁣ important to show love and compassion to all individuals, it is ⁢equally‍ important to‍ remain faithful to the principles and values‌ that have guided the⁤ church for centuries.

So, let us⁤ have a robust and respectful discussion about the role of the ​Catholic Church in ⁤today’s society.⁣ Let us consider the implications ‍of changing longstanding ‌teachings and traditions. And let us remember the‍ importance ‍of community and‍ the sacred in our lives, as we ‌navigate the challenges ‍of modernity.

Our social ⁢lives⁣ may indeed​ be sad, ‍as Surgeon General Murthy suggests. But the solution does not‌ lie solely in government interventions ​or changes to⁤ religious doctrine. ​It lies in rediscovering the power‍ of community, ‍the ‌value of meaningful relationships, and the pursuit of a⁢ higher purpose. Let us be open to exploring new avenues for connection and support, ⁢while also ⁣cherishing⁢ the traditions and institutions that have sustained ⁣us throughout history.


Read More From Original Article Here: The Government Wants You To Listen To Dancing Unicorns

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