Rod Dreher blogs about Russell Shaw's January 27th CWR piece, "Culture and Evangelization":
The force of the mainstream cultural current is so strong that it
often seems the only communities that successfully resist it are those
who take a rock-hard communal stance against it. What Shaw is warning
against is a bunker mentality. I think he’s right to do so. One reason
that it took so long to deal with the problem of clerical sexual abuse
is because generations of Catholics had been taught tribalist habits
from the immigrant church experience. I imagine that this is one thing
that Shaw has in mind. One of the dangers of a tight-knit community is
that it becomes more difficult to point to wrongdoing within that
community, because many of its members see that as threatening the
cohesion of the whole. This is not just true of Catholics; it’s true of
all human communities.
Anyway, how do we strike a balance between being in the world but not
of it? Some conservative-minded folks I’ve known adopt the strategy of
denying that there’s a problem with the mainstream culture. It has
seemed to me that they do this because the challenges are too great to
think about … so they choose not to think about them. That is, they
understand, and will say, that we do live in a degraded culture, one
that is aggressively hostile to conservative values but they seem to
have effectively surrendered their children to this culture. On the
other hand, you have the bunker brigades, of which Shaw writes, people
who are afraid of everything, and who may instill their children with
this same rigid fear. Last year, I was accompanying friends on a visit
that took us to the home of a conservative Catholic homeschooling
family. It struck me that there was only one piece of art in the house
that wasn’t devotional, and no books on any shelf (that I could see)
that weren’t either devotional or written with a heavily Catholic focus.
The impression I got was that this is an airless, rigid place. I could
certainly have been wrong, but the impression was of a bunker. I’m sure
that had I talked to the parents, we would have agreed on most things
regarding the threat the mainstream culture poses to our religious and
moral values. But we have significantly different responses to it, our
families.
Read Dreher's entire post on The American Conservative website.