During Lent, One Word Tells Us What Not to Give Up

When our observance of Lent prompts us to drop bad habits or start good ones, those behavioral effects ideally go beyond rote and become “habits of the heart.”

Giving up candies for a while helps us to appreciate treats all the more—and to remember that last year’s plan to eat more kale was noble, but short-lived. This tweaks the lesson of Forrest Gump; we discover that a box of chocolates is like life, a sampler of opportunities to find value in gjfts when they’re received, enjoyed, or offered up.

A single word that captures this uphill climb of mindfulness is “sacrifice.” Lent takes on extra meaning when the season’s little, planned concessions prepare our hearts, even our appetites, for bigger surrenders.

This writer, a flawed pilgrim who slips and slides through Lent’s penitential practices, hopes to cultivate a taste for sacrifice by making it a kind of mantra—a repetitive thought modest enough to settle the soul but bold enough to suggest there’s potential energy in everything we do.f

Forty days in the desert. The Passion and death of Christ. The redemption of Easter. The motifs of this season find parallels in our travels through the post-modern wilderness of 2025.

Our secular society craves coherent stories to find purpose in everyday busyness, but we’re not keen to embrace this complexity. We too often miss the opportunity to see life’s spiritual plot thickening.

The Shakers observed that sacrifice is a through-line in the story arc Lent portrays. The Lord offers us gifts to be simple, humble, in right relationship, allowing us “to come down where we ought to be.” This is our default position of attentiveness to God and neighbor.

However, as the sect’s timeless hymn suggests, Shakers hoped their reined-in egos would allow much more rigorous follow-throughs of self-denial and repentance. They prescribed major sacrificial actions in order to “come round right” for particular standards of worship and solidarity. Their approach proved temporary.

Lent is our chance to share and calibrate sacrifice in more sustainable forms by viewing it through four lenses. What does the word itself say to us? What does it call upon individuals to do? Can it teach communities and societies to better discern what they’re progressing toward? And can it reveal a structured, Godly worldview that’s truly “right” for the human spirit?

Sacrifice, for What It’s Worth

Etymologists provide several root meanings for our word du jour. One analysis says sacrifice is an offering—something “done zealously, to serve God.” Our “sense-perceptible gift to the Deity” is “an outward manifestation of our veneration for Him and with the object of attaining communion with Him.”

Another derivation, my favorite, says sacrifice is also a verb. It means “to make sacred,” from the root sacra for sacred and facere for “make or do.” In other words, although we might think of our Lenten denial practices as passive or trivial, the insights behind them are more dynamic and constructive, fit for earthly practicality but also useful for transformation.

Sacrifice for Individuals

Public intellectual Jordan Peterson, in his new book We Who Wrestle with God, invites humans to see sacrifice essentially as “work.” This secular psychologist and spiritual seeker explains it as an investment:

“If I am doing what needs to be done, instead of what I want to do for the sake of present gratification, I am working…. Work is the subjugation of whim, or more precisely, it’s the integration with other needs and desires into something of a higher and more complete order.”

Peterson goes on to say “work is … the delay of gratification and a sacrifice made in the service of others. It is an investment made to best ensure the beneficence of the future whose price must be paid in the present; an investment, as well, in the good will of others on whose behalf something valuable (time, energy, attention) has been given up now.”

The author evokes the mundane idea of a contract, but he also incorporates transcendence across time and circumstances. He cites the Bible’s emphasis on “sacrifice as characterizing the relationship between God and man.”

The key contract of life is ultimately a “communal or covenantal” obligation to meet the needs of one’s family and community, and even one’s future self. We might call this the “best self,” or “truest self,” one wants to become, the self which simply can’t emerge if constrained in a world of spontaneous, thoughtless hedonism.

Sacrifice for the Common Good

A focus on sacrifice, saying no to our selfishness, prompts us to wonder what actions will be most acceptable to the “self, fellow man, and natural world”—essentially what “will most please God.” Determining one’s proper offering, Peterson says, becomes identical with asking, “What is the purpose or meaning of life?”

This habit of assessing our individual decisions in light of our future and the world we wish to shape goes beyond the little behaviors we might tinker with as Lenten minimalists giving up chocolates.

Higher aspirations clear the way to imagine the broader story of an entire society—indeed, a civilization—based on sacrifice.

We start by realizing we’re born and raised in debt to the sacrificial, generative love of our parents.

We build up our moral awareness by understanding that it’s now our turn to accept a role carrying on our family’s values and humanity’s transcendent purpose. We consider bearing children and shaping a better world for them. We focus less on erotic or platonic love and more on agape love—a deep commitment to the good of the other.

Our sense of obligation to those who came before us, as well as those who will come after us, can expand the love of family life to include community solidarity and patriotic loyalty to a country. As we identify our talents and our role in an interconnected society, we’re challenged to think like accountable contributors.

Peterson envisions civilization grounded in great love stories, not mere facts and functions, theories and ideologies. Having absorbed stories which explain and celebrate our priorities, humanity can keep building on its wisdom and experience in order to thrive.

This recalls Pope John Paul II’s “exhortation” to the European Union when member countries composed their first constitution in 2003. As reported by the BBC, the pontiff urged the founding nations to “include a reference to the religious, and in particular the Christian, heritage of the continent.”

John Paul was not insulting or excluding other religions. He believed Europe had a legacy of love-story experiences that could make people free and empowered, accountable and creative. These would be valuable traits whenever the EU faced crucial moments of course-correction. But Europe’s constitution wound up containing only general language about respecting cultural guideposts.

If a secular society rejects the continuation of self-giving as the source of meaning behind its activities, people find that their options are limited, not expanded, Peterson points out.

A civilization abandoning its structures of purpose will sing John Lennon’s “Imagine,” which conjures peace in a vacuum. Motivation will derive from utilitarian judgments and personal desires for power, pride, and apparent virtue. Seeking a utopia, people might turn the tables, demanding for themselves the sacrifices of others!

As in present-day America, secular leaders adopting their stories from concepts of progress and judgmentalism may determine that some groups and behaviors are unworthy of attention or respect. Amid polarization, truth becomes relative and weaponized. The common ground of learning and wisdom withers without stewardship.

Sacrifice, for God’s Sake

Good students and stewards of sacrifice come to recognize that only an ethos of God-given dignity and rights will keep us on track to come down “where we ought to be.”

If we’re truly freed from self-centeredness, we’re able not only to honor our fellow humans as connected collaborators, but also to form a right relationship with a higher power who bestows higher purpose. Our offerings for each other yield the most fruit when we share what Peterson calls a spirit of “upward sacrifice,” focused on the ultimate effort for the ultimate good.

Our Judeo-Christian culture recognizes a deity of total self-giving, who speaks the language of family and covenant: “You will be my people, and I will be your God.”

The post-modern world pushes back mightily against this loving invitation, perhaps because we don’t want to bow down, to turn away from our pride and priorities. Or we don’t believe this God is trustworthy. Our declaration of inclusiveness, well-intentioned or strategic, precludes being trustworthy to only one paradigm of God. Thus, it precludes all paradigms.

We must admit that basing the promise of human flourishing on the prospect of giving things up is counterintuitive.

Fans of the World Economic Forum (WEF) and segments of the international administrative state met with pushback in America’s 2024 elections. Some campaigners stealthily embodied “Great Reset” thinking already widespread in Europe.

This vision of a globalized, technocratic age downplays national sovereignty and borders. To motivate followers, advocates rely largely on existential dangers, limited choices, and being on the right side of history. They stress one-size-fits-all values and enemies. WEF founder Klaus Schwab promised, “You’ll own nothing, and you will be happy.”

Voters harboring hopes for personal independence and societal abundance believed a globalized version of sacrificial “simplicity” actually risked inequality and a programming of the masses through persuasion and information control.

Bishop Robert Barron, a prominent evangelist who leads the “Word on Fire” online ministry, points out there’s another pathway to sacrificial simplicity that is more voluntary and inspiring. It’s rooted in Judeo-Christian faith, not as a bias but as a blessing. Alas, this approach also faces much pushback nowadays.

“We’re the weirdest religion around,” Barron has quipped. The Church has chosen a countercultural symbol—a crucifix on which the corpus of Christ hangs—to reveal its understanding of how reality functions.

This structure is a covenant sealed with the blood of Jesus. He calls people as humble penitents who can enter communion through His ultimate sacrifice, which broke the grip of sin so we need not veer off the trajectory toward our truest selves.

We build solidarity with this all-loving deity by picking up our own crosses. Catholics, for example, believe they pursue a mystical unity while preserving an identity that retains individual diversity. They re-present, and participate in, Jesus’ one-time sacrifice to God the Father at every Mass.

Christians offer their unique sacrifices of praise, thanksgiving, and contrition. They sing that “amazing grace” flows from this. They see their Sunday services as celebrations.

Globalism proponents should note that, yes, followers of Jesus trust they “will be happy,” but this joy, sampled on earth, is on the spiritual plane. Aristotle also saw happiness as an elevated goal. The Philosophy Termswebsite says “the real prize is becoming the hero of your own adventure,” although it’s neither ego trip nor solo flight.

This doesn’t require us to “own nothing.” Instead, we choose to “give up” our earthly experience in a deeper sense. When we face life’s inevitable sufferings and surrenders, and when we seek God’s forgiveness or confront malevolent resistance to deeds we deem virtuous, we invite God to turn our pains toward a higher purpose.

The aim of this happiness reset is to join in serving Him and spreading His glory through love for others.

“Whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it,” Jesus teaches in Matthew 16:25. Those who voluntarily go “all-in” with this sacrificial and hierarchical worldview aren’t motivated by forces of persuasion, guilt, and information control. Rather, they hope to liberate God’s creatures from these fears.

Such freedom yields the simplicity of which the Shakers sang. The mind frame of sacrifice puts us “in our place” in various ways. Psalm 51 says: “My sacrifice, O God, is a contrite spirit; a contrite, humbled heart, O God, you will not scorn.” Matthew 9:13, harking back to Hosea 6:6, says God “desires mercy, not [traditional, bloody] sacrifice.”

Sacrifice, for Now and the Future

Lenten choices represented by rituals and tweaked habits thus foster default conditions of simplicity from which we can grow to pursue the meaning of life in personal, social, and spiritual terms.

It’s no surprise that Jordan Peterson, who established an international organization to help preserve Western culture and wisdom, now considers sacrifice a gigantic topic.

In keynote remarks to his Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) at its 2025 conference in mid-February, Peterson declared that “reciprocal, voluntary self-sacrifice towards the highest possible end,” organized under divine principles, is nothing less than “the foundation of civilization,” at least in the West.

This idea of foundation, where something is being built, loops back to the etymological insight that sacrifice is a verb meaning “to make sacred.” The word cannot mean destruction, deconstruction, hatred, or nihilism.

Making the world better, during Lent and all year round, affirms Peterson’s thesis that we find ourselves today at a pivotal “civilizational moment.” We can, and must, take conscious actions and present clear explanations in defense of Western civilization.

Post-modern culture’s insular preferences for power games, self-gain, and avoidance of pain are not the stuff of a sustainable society, Peterson says.

Too many of us fail to see the error of those priorities, he adds. Our dumbed-down culture is “at a point where the obvious needs to be explained.” We need to honor the wisdom our forebears literally built into structures of the past. The altar of sacrifice is located at the center of a church, and the place of worship is located at the center of a town.

At today’s crisis point, disparate but open-minded forces can come together to build back our awareness of a fruitful, prudent, balanced moral infrastructure, Peterson argues.

Political conservatives and any groups with backgrounds in beneficent traditions can join hands with classic liberals, who have courageously advanced principles of human dignity. They’ll agree on the common cause of re-animating Western civilization at its best. Plenty of folks now suspect that humanity cannot thrive without it.

The season of Lent is an ideal time for looking back and looking forward, for challenging ourselves and bringing hope to others, for connecting theology and philosophy to concrete actions, for assuring the world that God does important things through us.

That’s why the word “sacrifice” makes a good mantra to exercise during Lent—and beyond. It honors all the little gifts that countless people offer to God and His creatures throughout each day.

We get to emulate the moral vigor our local heroes model in pursuits as diverse as health professionals, emergency responders, laborers labeled as “essential workers,” and the Forrest Gumps of the world.

The mantra also celebrates the ability to take our habits higher. Shaping them after God’s own heart, we spot opportunities to bless a community, country, or civilization with a sustainability we can share.

Taming our self-regard, we can strive to make our future so meaningful that it’s sacred. Lenten reflections on Christ’s Passion are a welcome reminder that it is high time to offer ourselves zealously, or better, passionately.

Image from Microsoft Bing’s AI Co-Pilot, based on the command: Create a church in the center of an old European town.

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New Media Can’t Afford to Think Talk is Cheap

Newsmakers and their media enablers may or may not have valid ideas to express to the American audience, but the more obvious problem is their occasional failure to express those ideas civilly.

One of our crucial democratic norms—authentic, informed public discourse confronting issues sensibly and peacefully—often gets sidetracked by gratuitous vulgarity.

Most of us occasionally blurt a toxic or taboo remark. But open-to-the-public profanity seems to have increased among journalists, politicians, and news consumers at a time when cooler heads should prevail over our cultural coarseness.

People will offer many excuses for their loose lips—perhaps their emotional state or their state of mind, or the seriousness or triviality of what they’re discussing. They may sprinkle their words like spices or spew them like projectiles.

The trend is magnified by the algorithmic argumentation pouring through the social-media firehose and by the engagement or enragement driving “new-media” podcasts and short-form videos. Everyone’s competing for space in our “attention economy.”

New media make complex demands on us—emotional intelligence alongside intellectual heft, empathy alongside sure-footed argumentation, and clear expression of our hearts and minds alongside responsive listening to others. This can nudge society toward better discourse. When it doesn’t, when communication is cheapened, the fault is not in our screens, but in ourselves.

Recently, prominent opponents of President Trump coordinated online video attacks against his inflation-reduction promise, calling it “sh*t that ain’t true,” and his immigrant deportation policy, calling it “total bullsh*t.” One news commentator said of the phraseology, “I find it very unpersuasive and undignified.”

On the Feb. 16 edition of the Fox News “MediaBuzz” program, host Howard Kurtz played a clip from a CNN broadcast in which a top-tier anchor, interviewing former New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, spontaneously uttered a vulgar insult.

“Don’t be a d***,” the CNN anchor said as part of the discussion. He later apologized to Sununu, who brushed it off kind-heartedly.

But Kurtz brought up the incident in a follow-up segment.

“I’m noticing there is a new trend in cable news, at least on some channels, where cursing is cool, dropping F-bombs is cool,” Kurtz said.

He recalled that a congresswoman had recently tossed the bomb at Trump. The president likes his words cleaner but meaner.

Kurtz said of vulgarity in media, “Maybe I’m ridiculously old-fashioned, but I think it shows a lack of class.” His colleague, while forgiving the slip-up on CNN, agreed that embracing the profane “as a way to get eyeballs” contributes to “defining decency down.”

More than a year ago, The Wall Street Journal cited a study illustrating the problem. A content-filtering firm that monitors TV shows had surveyed vocabulary found in news and entertainment programs between 1985 and November 2023.

There were overall declines in foul language during the Covid pandemic and the Hollywood writers’ strike, the company found, but eruptions of the F-word rose from 511 to 22,177 over the period. The S-word jumped from 484 four decades ago to the latest total of 10,864.

Such disparagements and expletives seem especially common today in content aimed at younger generations and others who aren’t reliable news-addicts.

Researchers say youths do tend to “swear” more. Their lingo is hardly a symptom of lower intelligence or lack of virtue. It partly reflects an “anything goes” environment which promotes impulsive reactions or self-centered tactics to “stand out” or “fit in.”

Oddly, content creators often bleep out offensive words not because a diligent editor caught a speaker’s wayward violation, but because profanities and bleeps, purposely interwoven in planned scripts, sound witty or risqué. They make protagonists look like “part of the gang.”

Communicators in all lines of work need to rethink this approach. Words matter as precision instruments—sometimes when we least expect or want it. While not becoming prudish or aggressively woke, our default when interacting online, or on the street, should be a forbearance that preserves conversation as a civic cornerstone.

Remember that, for average folks, the audience we want to reach is already close to us—in families, friends, communities, and microcosms of the public square at the local and state levels.

Smaller-scale communities have a growing stake in disputes about issues of immigration, education, abortion, and criminal justice, which many came to consider “national news.” When people meet face-to-face with their neighbors to resolve concrete problems, we need higher standards of self-regulation and propriety.

If we are fortunate to participate in conversations that gain traction, making fuller use of America’s free marketplace of ideas, we should be ready to state our case. But also beware of ideologically motivated agitators who want to lay landmines in that market.

When we’re not being divided according to characteristics like race and sex, or by our opinions, we face partitioning by class and wealth. These polarize us, but at least we’re using words.

We now must resist a trend toward dumbed-down battles over rhetoric itself. Some ventures into raw reality are attacked less in terms of “define what’s true!” and more in terms of “you offend me, talk to the hand.” The old Groucho Marx song says it all—”whatever it is, I’m against it.

As seen in the partisan “silent treatment” given to President Trump’s address to Congress on March 4, modern word-fare can take the form of simply refusing to converse or acknowledge remarks, even when some insights deserve general agreement.

We also saw a symbolic excommunication from communication in 2020 when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tore up her text of Trump’s State of the Union speech. Games of disconnection are played across the political spectrum; Trump refused to debate his fellow candidates for the Republican nomination in 2024.

The democratization now glimpsed in the new media pushes back against disconnection by celebrating conversation. It forsakes scripted or performative approaches to rhetoric. Podcasting nurtures dialogues of all sorts, of any length, shallow or in-depth, so long as the talk is spontaneous and authentic.

Recall that many observers last year criticized presidential candidate Kamala Harris for “not going on Joe Rogan” to leverage his format of three-hour, candid, casual chats where any topic is legitimate.

California Governor Gavin Newsom has launched his “This Is Gavin Newsom” podcast, promising honest encounters with political opponents.

Optimists believe the new-media trend can re-energize the art of dialogue, add more diverse voices to the public square, and boost democratic instincts nationally and locally. We can explore “inconvenient truths” on a level playing field.

There’s even hope that formats like discussion-based podcasts can inject more transparency into truth-seeking, with no teleprompters (or artificial intelligence) to manufacture talking points. Public intellectual Jordan Peterson, a psychologist, has opined, “You can’t lie effectively [and] spontaneously in a conversation.”

Are we ready for this renaissance of debate?

Ironically, we have come to rely on our digital screens, whereby we conduct much of our business in isolation, shunning lengthy conversations. This lifestyle has made many folks prefer pressing the buttons on their devices; they avoid awkward talk that might press people’s buttons, or their own.

If we don’t reboot our skills for everyday discourse, we really do risk causing offense with words interpreted as impatient, disdainful, or unworthy of response.

There’s at least one step we can take to ensure win-win experiences when we gather to explore and improve reality together: Minimize the use of vulgarity to distract and cheapen everyone’s thoughts.

Media critic Kurtz may be right about being old-fashioned, but we should heed his implication that an excess of taboo remarks—a careless “lack of class”—will define decency down and further disable the public square.

Therefore, it behooves us to reflect more deeply on what we’re saying and how we can say it better. A vocabulary exists for achieving greater clarity on how to perform in our rhetorical dramas, although there’s a lot of subjectivity and overlap in the definitions.

We’ve been using terms like “vulgarity” and “taboo remarks.” Let’s expand this lexicon to better examine our consciences, or at least examine others’:

  • Vulgarity. This refers to “the common people” and recalls the Latin Vulgate, a “commonly used” Bible in the early Church. According to a Mental Floss essay, vulgarity is a general word for crude language. It sometimes describes “the act of substituting a coarse word in a context where a more refined expression would be expected.”
  • Profanity. This is the use of words which have inherent clout based on intensely negative experiences. In more religious eras, a contrast was drawn between the “sacred” and the “profane.” A Discover magazine article reports that Americans noticed “profanity” had spread among troops returning from the hell of the first and second world wars. They fell into the habit of emotional words whose ugliness echoed those horrors.
  • Slurs. These are harmful insults based on sex, race, and religion, says Discover. Research shows that, particularly when slurs are used around children, they psychologically affect those being defamed, or anyone who absorbs the malice. The words can sink to the level of verbal abuse.
  • Cursing. The Catholic Encyclopedia defines this as “calling down evil upon God or creatures,” as in wishing someone’s damnation.  “Cussing” expands to include profanities which are “hurtful, blasphemous, vulgar, wicked, and uncouth.”  The Bible says, “Let no evil talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for edifying … that it may impart grace.” (Ephesians 4:29)
  • Swearing. This applies to using God’s name in vain, as in violating a sworn oath. The action viscerally connects God to evil. According to an essay in The Conversation, neuroscience suggests swearing resides in a part of the brain different from other speech regions; it may be linked to the “flight or fright” reflex. Swearing may coincide with a rapid heartbeat and sweating, either providing a form of catharsis or expanding the presence of evil. Swear words in general can serve to command attention—but beware because they also “can sometimes get in the way of thinking.”
  • Obscenity. This is the use of explicit, immoral, or titillating expressions not tied to the spiritual realm. But there is a connection to American law, especially applied to whole texts or messages. According to a Mental Floss essay, material is obscene—and not protected by the First Amendment—if it fits three descriptions: The average person would find that it appeals to prurient interest; it depicts sexual content or excretory functions in a patently offensive way; and the work as a whole lacks serious artistic, political, or scientific value.

The substantial vocabulary loosely describing vulgarity constitutes neither a glossary nor a checklist to keep our conversations “clean.”

But we should note that parts of the vocabulary are rooted in religious and spiritual concerns. They show the weight traditionally given to communication, especially about God’s role in meaningful things—in private, personal things. Communication sometimes borders on mystery, so tread lightly.

We’re well-advised to develop an appreciation for the transcendent importance of words so we can form the instincts we need for effective, respectful outreach.

The role of instinct recalls the 1964  U.S. Supreme Court decision in which Justice Potter Stewart famously described his threshold test for pornography. Stewart declined to provide a “shorthand description,” but he wrote, “I know it when I see it.”

This suffices to make the point that newsmakers and news-shapers (that’s most of us, thanks to our phones) should carefully ponder what it means to speak civilly and use language well.

If we hope that, in our age of new media, conditions will evolve to make the public square more dynamic and inclusive, we must help to fulfill the promise of authentic and unsullied conversations. We’re all responsible for good stewardship of society’s words and wisdom.

Our culture’s current confusion about truth is both a cause and effect of today’s coarse talk. Polls showing widespread concern about the future of democracy impose many tasks on us, but one of them—instinctively choosing language that dignifies communities as they speak and listen—is within our grasp.

These responsibilities literally comprise more than we can say. When might we expect our improved presentations of spontaneity and self-control to bear fruit? We’ll know it when we see it.

Image from ClipSafari.com, a collection of Creative Commons designs.

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Words That Keep the Christmas Spirit Alive All Year

by Bill Schmitt

Published Feb. 10, 2025, in the blog of the Magis Center, Garden Grove, CA.

One way to keep Christmas joy alive into 2025 is to hold tight to and continue reflecting upon bits of the yuletide vocabulary that our secular culture easily sets aside as humbug.

While some spiritual advisors urge the public only to be mindful of the present moment, we know experiences become more momentous because of memories we’ve made. Our new year is an opportunity to choose some ideas we’ll continue to treasure while others fade away.

Especially at Christmas, we are immersed in a spirit that goes beyond words but gives them rhyme and reason. Centuries of faith have inspired eloquent liturgies and lexicons to be savored. They will reappear in December, but their power to unite and guide us is worthy of recycling year-round.

Keeping the Spirit of Christmas Alive All Year with the Power of Song

Listen up when enduring words and notions slip into the arena of secular discourse, regardless of calendar dates, whether in moments of holiness or scenes from popular entertainment. Remember their splendid presence in carols and other expressions of “the reason for the season.”

Then, apply your own reason to these thoughts grounded in Bethlehem, ensuring they’re relevant wherever life takes you. Such inspirations, harkening to the Word-Made-Flesh, can elevate our wisdom in 2025 to see that “God is with us.”

We can always listen to the profound lyrics that constitute the Christmas soundtrack.

Recall the amalgam of two precious traits—humility and human dignity—miraculously shared by God and humanity:

Mild He lays His glory by

Born that man no more may die

Born to raise the sons of earth, / Born to give them second birth.

—Hark the Herald Angels Sing

Catch the intimations of spiritual warfare against evil into which Christ entered, literally fleshing out our potential for goodness:

No more let sin and sorrows grow,

Nor thorns infest the ground;

He comes to make His blessings flow

Far as the curse is found.

—Joy to the World

Honor the simple shepherds whose grassroots wisdom made them responsive to the mystery they couldn’t grasp, as well as the Magi stargazers, whose wisdom told them they didn’t know everything:

If I were a wise man, I would do my part,

Yet what I can, I give him,

I give Him my heart.

—In the Bleak Midwinter

Embrace the love song to a child sung as a prayer for eternal salvation:

Bless all the dear children in Thy tender care,

And take us to heaven to live with Thee there.

—Away in a Manger

These messages can help us “repeat the sounding joy” during this Jubilee Holy Year dedicated to hope, a virtue appropriate to following Christ as joyful, trusting children.

As novelist Gregg Hurwitz said recently in a Daily Wire Plus symposium on current views of the Gospels, “We’re seeing the world burn down, in some ways, to fundamentals”—with new doubts about man vs. machine and male vs. female. He told public intellectual Jordan Peterson and other panelists, ”When we have that level of definitional collapse, we need to go back to forms of thinking. . . that are different.”

Here are several Christmas-adjacent words that, when bandied about in the public square, will deserve appreciative voices that can unlock their deeper meanings:

Finding Epiphanies Every Day: Keeping the Spirit of Christmas Alive All Year

Those whom we catechize and evangelize will profit from awareness of “epiphanies,” or revelations of truth, whenever they occur. These are occasions when God blesses us with knowledge. This recalls Pope Francis’ 2019 message for the Vatican’s World Communications Day: “Love always communicates.”

The Oxford English Dictionary provided a cautionary note in 2016 when it declared that “post-truth” was its “word of the year.” Communication had already started losing its anchors.

In 2024, we saw how polarization, pitting “my truth” against “your truth,” had infected our national politics.

Post-truth practitioners in politics and the media have dumbed down communication by replacing love with antagonism, cynicism, and skepticism. Young people, in particular, crave trust regarding what is known and what is unknown or mysterious.

Too many elites, rejecting God and religion as the best sources of truth, pursue influence through emotional manipulation and oversimplification. Our faith suffers when people adopt the paradigm of “oppressed vs. oppressor” or “victimized vs. victim.”

We need to assure youths that Truth, found in Jesus, inevitably emerges in honest dialogues and human hearts. Reality wins, so we can have hope as we battle on reality’s side.

When we have “eureka moments” that allow us to change our minds, confess our sins, and experience wonder, it’s a blessing from the Lord. Learning lessons does not threaten our self-esteem; they are proof of God’s high regard for us. He knows that seeing ourselves and our complicated world more clearly will help us brighten our lives and the lives of others.

In 2024, researchers repeated warnings of society’s tendencies toward isolation, depression, addiction, doubling down on misinformation, and retreating into artificial realities. Many are searching for truth and meaning but don’t know where to look.

Let’s encourage deeper conversations and sharing truth in love to spark imagination, reflection, and accountability. Whether or not it’s Christmastime, we can say gratefully, “Well, that was an epiphany!”

Gifts That Keep Giving: Keeping the Spirit of Christmas Alive All Year

A fuller knowledge of our religious traditions will help young people to share hopeful interpretations of what they see in the secular world. Let’s remind everyone that the Church’s treasure of traditions and knowledge is a gift handed down by parents, families, faith leaders, and church members. It’s God’s alternative to predation by the false views and “confirmation bias” in social media.

Some of our best gift exchanges in 2025 will entail what’s free of charge but especially valuable—information, ideas, and identities that reflect authenticity and create possibilities.

Popular culture in 1965 gave us a charming example of gift-giving. In A Charlie Brown Christmas, the title character speaks for so many of today’s isolated souls when he shouts with frustration, “Isn’t there anyone who knows what Christmas is all about?”

Charlie Brown’s friend Linus responds to him by reciting the words of Scripture (video from Luke 2:8-14). He repeats the angels’ announcement that Christ the Lord is bringing hope and peace to mankind. “That’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”

Closing scenes of joy and friendship arise after Charlie’s cry for wisdom, his moment of surrender amid the chaos of a holiday play rehearsal. Linus gave his friend a simple gift of clarity that brought order and solidarity.

Many young folks may never have seen this Charlie Brown special. We should feel free to show the timeless segment from YouTube. We could ask the audience, “Have you ever had a ‘good grief’ moment of frustration like Charlie Brown? Has someone come to you to offer a higher insight, demonstrating the ‘reason for their hope’ as in 1 Peter: 3-15?”

The lesson is that people should be giving gifts all year long, and the most wonderful gifts bestow encouragement through wisdom. Gifts like these honor and boost a person’s own giftedness. They say, “Don’t give up. You can make sense of this situation. God is on your side, present right now.”

Shining a Light in Darkness: Keeping the Spirit of Christmas Alive All Year

Christmas, with its message about a “star of wonder” at the darkest time of year, shone extra brightly on Dec. 25, 2024, because the hopeful feast of Hanukkah, the “festival of lights,” also began that day.

An unlikely popular-culture “parable” speaks the language of “light” in a relevant way for 2025. It encourages us to “look up” from the glare of the screens we watch and from the lower passions we carelessly enable.

The risk that our smartphones and social media convey false enlightenment was captured ingeniously by “The Game,” an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation broadcast in 1991.

This certainly is not a story suited for pre-teens. Teachers will want to make judgments about its content; check it out on Paramount Plus. The plot is about video games and emotional manipulation, whose effects we hope have not already made growing up more toxic.

The Star Trek scriptwriters told the tale of a mysterious, unnamed game the Enterprise crew had brought aboard from an alien planet. A portable optical device, worn with a headband, melded with a person’s mind by piercing the eye with a laser-like beam.

This created an augmented reality in one’s field of vision, akin to today’s high-tech eyeglasses. The solo players used their will to manipulate images in ways that triggered visceral sensations of pleasure. As players kept “scoring,” the game’s images led to stronger feelings and blissful sighs.

Nearly all Enterprise crew members retreated into their own worlds of play and became addicted to what we now might call dopamine hits. They mindlessly cooperated with an alien plot to take over Starfleet. One disciplined, college-age officer saw what was happening and resisted.

“Whatever this thing does, it must feel pretty good,” the young officer opined. His analysis revealed that the device bonded to nerve receptors, degraded higher reasoning, and “initiated a serotonin cascade in the frontal lobe.” In simpler terms, this was prurient “brain rot,” working to weaken a person’s integrity and deaden esprit de corps.

Fortunately, the android Data, immune from the game’s effects, prepared a palm beacon. Pointing the beacon’s bright light at each crew member, the device’s connection was canceled, and the Enterprise was saved.

We can draw approximate parallels between this prescient script and the toll that social media and screen addictions take on too many digital natives today.

The parable’s lesson is clear. It is now a wise, compassionate act for educators to raise concerns about evolving high-tech substitutes for rational thought, to decry “brain rot” where dopamine and self-centeredness distort reality and turn us inward. Our continuing mission must be to point people toward each other, toward the big picture, which includes God. The “light of the world” is a real force.

Waging Peace in 2025: Keeping the Spirit of Christmas Alive All Year

One more bit of Christmas vocabulary is an important takeaway to address the plague of violence that society has crafted for itself. The angels promised that the incarnation of the Prince of Peace would bring hope to those of goodwill.

We were reminded of this in early January when America held a funeral service for former President Jimmy Carter, who died at the age of 100. This fervent evangelical Christian took seriously the Lord’s pathway of love and merciful justice not only during his tumultuous one-term presidency but later as the globe-trotting founder of the Carter Center and a long-time fighter for public health and beneficent democracy.

Most importantly, he said he wanted to be known for championing human dignity and “waging peace.” His vision incorporated many challenging efforts that the world must still undertake, and he embraced America as a place where high aspirations live on.

We can use events like the Carter funeral and the celebration of Martin Luther King Day to tell stories of peace that have their roots in the crib of Jesus.

This is a good year to encourage others through the lives of people like Carter and King, who are model peacemakers and whom the Bible describes as happy and blessed. Echo their call to take action for the sake of peace, becoming beacons of the humble child who was born for healing, sacrifice, and Resurrection.

The Word was made flesh, and so the words of Christmas are inherently meaningful. Let’s allow the message to resound throughout 2025. It has a power that must not be thrown away with a holiday’s unwrapped boxes.

The Word Made Flesh: Keeping the Spirit of Christmas Alive All Year

The work of wisdom involves telling whole stories from beginning to end, making them tangible for all time. Our culture needs to imbibe God’s important lessons repeatedly, but many don’t know all the words. We must teach young people that words matter in every situation and that life’s story is about finding and sustaining hope.

Ongoing vocabulary rehearsals will benefit today’s distracted society. When we revisit the words of Christmas and hear them echo at unexpected times, they have the potential to evoke experiences of joy.

These flow naturally from the Nativity and are just the start of the hopeful story of “God with us.” Its message is a gift that will keep on giving in every life, every day of 2025, and beyond.

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Bill Schmitt

Bill Schmitt is a journalist, educator, and marketing communications specialist who has been an adjunct professor of English and media at several schools, most recently Holy Cross College in Notre Dame, IN. He served on the communications staff of the University of Notre Dame from 2003 to 2017, managing many projects and joining in a wide range of multimedia, interdisciplinary collaborations. Since then, his freelance work has included feature-writing, editing, podcasting, and blogging, with much of his work centered on the Catholic faith. Bill holds a BA from Fordham University and an MPA from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. Find his work at billschmitt.substack.com, OnWord.net, and billschmitt-onword on Linked-In.

Published in the blog of the Magis Center, Garden Grove, CA, led by Fr. Robert Spitzer, SJ

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A Personal Look at ‘Millennial’ Saint-to-be Carlo Acutis

By William Schmitt, Special to The Evangelist

Published Feb. 6, 2025

Fr. Anthony Sorgie, Fr. Robert Hohenstein, Fr. Tom Morrette (pastor of Our Lady of Victory Parish), with relic of Blessed Carlo Acutis


A parish event in Troy is set to preview a saintly story that soon will receive worldwide attention as the Catholic Church honors a teenager’s holiness.

Blessed Carlo Acutis, who died in 2006 at the age of 15, will be canonized this spring as the first saint of the “millennial” generation.

On Feb. 12, Our Lady of Victory Church in Troy will host a special gathering to get to know this millennial better.

It will feature a speaker who welcomed Blessed Carlo’s mother during her visit to the United States last year. Father Anthony Sorgie will convey some of the inspiring personal stories she shared with him.

Father Sorgie, pastor of Immaculate Conception and Assumption of Our Lady Parish in Tuckahoe, N.Y., will also display a first-class relic which the visitor from Italy gifted to American Catholics.

The first-class designation refers to a fragment of the physical remains of a beatified or canonized person. Authenticated relics of saints are venerated — used to praise God through that holy person. Blessed Carlo will be proclaimed a saint on April 27.

Father Sorgie, a popular lecturer and former seminary professor, benefited from his knowledge of the Italian language and culture in learning from Antonia Salzano Acutis, who raised her son in Milan.

He died of leukemia and was beatified by the Church in 2020.

“It’s not often that you can meet and hear from the mother of a soon-to-be-canonized saint,” said Father Thomas Morrette, pastor of the Catholic Community of Our Lady of Victory in Troy and Our Lady of the Snow Mission in Grafton.

The life experience of Antonia Acutis, which will be described during the Feb. 12 event, beginning at 7 p.m., “speaks to many today,” Father Morrette said. “She was a non-practicing Catholic whose son’s interest in the faith brought her back to the faith.”

The story of Blessed Carlo also includes his fervent compassion for others, special devotion to the Holy Eucharist and an intimate relationship with Jesus, all combined in a typical teenager’s life.

He has already inspired countless people internationally, and Antonia Acutis came to the U.S. to spread the word about him. He has been called “God’s Influencer,” using a term for current-day creators of digital content reaching out to audiences via computer.

Alongside his interests in soccer and video games, Blessed Carlo became skilled in web design, even building an extensive website with his research on Eucharistic miracles around the world. The site has been translated into multiple languages.

Father Morrette said his plan to hold an event honoring the boy is largely based on the youth’s love for the Eucharist — a force for evangelization, especially to upcoming generations.

Antonia wrote a book, “My Son Carlo,” recalling that he made an effort to attend Mass every day and to participate frequently in Eucharistic Adoration.

The book quoted Carlo saying, “I let God observe me, to dig deep inside me, to form my soul, to mold it.” The boy continued, “He is truly present, not an invention. He’s there. And if everyone could realize that, how they would run to it! If everyone believed in this truth, how their lives would change for the better!”

Blessed Carlo is also known as the “first millennial saint,” based on a term sociologists apply to people born between 1981 and 1996. (The birth years 1997-2012 have been grouped as “Generation Z,” and some call those born after 2012 “Gen Alpha.”)

His canonization in St. Peter’s Square will cap off the Vatican’s “Jubilee for Teenagers,” scheduled April 25-27.

This is one of the highlights expected to bring throngs of pilgrims to Rome in 2025, celebrating the Church’s Jubilee Holy Year and its theme of hope.

Late in July, the Vatican’s “Jubilee for Youth” is scheduled to include further outreach across the generations — the canonization of Pier Giorgio Frassati, who died in 1925 at the age of 24.

The preview event at Our Lady of Victory Church, at 7 p.m. on Feb. 12, is open to the public.

Published by The Evangelist, newspaper and online content from the Diocese of Albany, NY

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Media, Trump & Budgeting: Whose Line-Item Is It Anyway?

President Trump first impacted the media during cathode ray tube days—before TV technology, and his career plans, changed. But the celebrity who loved to say, “you’re fired!” now can choose to use flatter screens and a grander stage to push for changes in American communications.

It’s a new season for that sector (and many others), with the White House sparking ideas for efficiency and efficacy through budgetary bottom lines.

One reality-show plot line emerged recently; performer Sheryl Crowe announced that she had sold her Tesla and donated money to National Public Radio (NPR) as a protest against DOGE chief Elon Musk.

Prompted by one line-item in the federal budget, the president seems likely to withdraw funding from the field of public broadcasting. On the other hand, an optimist could envision him encouraging public-service innovations which span mass media, government, business, and education.

Can a little budgetary tweak yield big, beneficial results? The ensuing debate may prove to be a microcosm of such policy surprises.

Setting the Stage: Communication Everywhere and Nowhere

We should keep the vast communications field in mind as Washington pundits take us on a roller coaster ride through issues of respecting rights, educating people, and forming a more perfect union. The power of human interactions is at the heart of many goals which steered the November elections.

Vice President J.D. Vance told European officials in Munich on Feb. 14 the Trump administration wants to discuss bolstering international freedoms of speech and religion for the sake of robust democracy.

Meanwhile, our executive branch team of knights-errant reports to someone who The New York Times has said conducts “seat of the pants” negotiations. Trump’s Cabinet and stalwart supporters embrace outside-the-box thinking, an urgent pursuit of American greatness, and CEO-style deadlines and deals to solve problems.

Because of the forces clashing over the budget, citizens will be wise to analyze one microcosm at a time, garnering tips to inject smart stakeholders and strategies, as well as deep-seated values, into any transformations we see coming.

Shall we stand by our hallowed positions and allies, or pursue “big, beautiful” successes that will bring the country together, as candidate Trump promised?

The Don Quixote mind frame is both a super-power and weakness for our president. We should respond by freeing our minds for a panorama of opportunities while insisting on the importance of undeniable details.

Budget-line details are excellent tools to coalesce deals and assess outcomes—a truth we’ve forgotten as spending exploded and Congress simply passed huge omnibus bills, barely dissected or discussed

The 2024 Democratic campaign sometimes seemed like it had given up on trimming budgets or redesigning processes. Perhaps they expected World Economic Forum globalists to step in, applying Klaus Schwab’s Covid 19: The Great Reset to remake policies and public tastes.

Today’s Republican preference for a populist change-agent who will “land the plane” and stabilize American uniqueness prompts us to undertake a thought experiment. We will zero-in on one possible turning point in communications policy.

How will our democracy hold tight to overriding principles such as fairness, accountability, human dignity, and the common good while leaders demand new “efficiencies”? These ultimately require effective collaborations, not merely throwing passengers out the emergency exits.

Let the experiment begin, more or less apolitically.

It is only a matter of time before Trump administration auditors officially aim their disruptor devices at the budget for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).

Given the CPB’s relatively minuscule annual slice of federal spending—about half a billion dollars—we can expect a quick White House proposal for Congress to eliminate the entire amount. Elon Musk has already complained that NPR, a notable part of public media, is biased against conservatives and should get its funding elsewhere.

Even though rapid budget-slashing has great appeal, we should pause to consider the many value judgments which complicate this and other line-items. Regarding the CPB, there are two motivations for moving more carefully.

First Motivation: The Need to Look Back

In our management of change, we should always apply the wisdom of “Chesterton’s Fence.” British author G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936) famously posited this general rule: Don’t hastily tear down something—like a fence—if you don’t understand why it was erected in the first place.

Understanding the CPB’s backstory will alert conservative cost-cutters to the longtime feud they are rekindling.

The CPB is a private, nonprofit corporation that Congress authorized in 1967 to be “the steward of the federal government’s investment in public broadcasting.”

Congress created the CPB at a time when it needed to ensure that all citizens, especially in rural areas, would have “universal access” to a public good—namely, broadcasters carrying high-quality, non-commercial information and education. This was obvious back when alternative technology and content were much more limited.

The CPB, according to its website, is now “the largest single source of funding for public radio, television, and related online and mobile services.”

At least 70 percent of CPB funding is distributed directly to more than 1,500 locally owned radio and television stations. These stations then pay for and transmit content produced mostly by the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and NPR, both beloved by their fans.

Revenue to create shows also comes from underwriting by corporations and foundations, as well as CPB grants. As PBS repeats often during its program day, additional support comes from “viewers like you.”

Conservatives have argued against taxpayer support for the CPB since the Nixon administration, according to the Mandate for Leadership policy prescriptions published by the Heritage Foundation. Here, we are digging into arguments posed by the controversial but cogent “Project 2025.”

The document’s proposal recalls, “All Republican presidents have recognized that public funding of domestic broadcasts is a mistake.” Yet, the law was written to privilege “non-commercial educational” stations (NCEs) with distinct property on the left side of the FM dial, as well as comfortable insulation from tight government oversight.

Moreover, the Heritage Foundation book argues, as does Musk, that America’s public broadcasting networks have become “a liberal forum for public affairs and journalism.”

Pew Research found in 2014 that 60 percent of PBS’s audience described themselves as mostly or consistently liberal, while 15 percent identified as mostly or consistently conservative, according to the Heritage contributor, Mike Gonzalez. He said the liberal dominance was even more lopsided among NPR listeners.

His critique went on to note that much of the material aired—accompanied by mentions of gratitude to corporations, endowments, and other underwriters—fails to meet the original non-commercial/educational standards.

The document also could have pointed out that all sorts of stations now fill the AM and FM dials, that even rural areas have access to a much wider variety of content, and that radio and TV programs are now distributed online, not to mention cable and streaming services for video.

Indeed, younger generations choose to receive their news and information digitally—sadly, relying too much on social media and their confirmation bias.

Meanwhile, “defunding the CPB would by no means cause NPR or PBS … to file for bankruptcy” because the array of membership and funding models used in public broadcasting will allow the stations and program producers to survive, Gonzalez predicted.

He expects various sponsors will pick up the costs of presenting popular educational and entertainment shows on other platforms. For example, the streaming service Max is one of the places, along with PBS Kids, where viewers have tapped into decades-old archives of “Sesame Street” episodes.

Second Motivation: The Need to Look Ahead

Proponents of budget-slashing must plan to encounter again all the noble, reasonable arguments for the CPB dating back nearly 60 years.

America needs high-quality preK-12 education, programs designed and distributed for the common good, and a diverse, inclusive marketplace of ideas to energize American democracy.

What’s more, we should be wary of sudden policy reversals placing at risk many high-value assets: those hundreds of radio and television stations; the infrastructure of human collaboration and institutional partnerships built up around the stations; and the treasure trove of content and creative talent now in the orbits of networks like PBS and NPR.

However, there is a second reason for budget-slashers to marshal detailed judgments—and lively imaginations—in advance of the showdown.

Public broadcasting has updated itself by diversifying into other media, but 2025 may be the time to consider re-inventing, even expanding, how this institution comports with the world of 21st century communications.

It’s possible that a critical mass of budget protagonists will agree there is room for prudent updates in the law. In this case, innovative minds from various fields will need time to modify industry standards and practices and to fine-tune supply and demand. They must satisfy both the “Antiques Roadshow” enthusiasts and the advocates for needy and underrepresented groups in the population.

A stubborn pilot landing America’s budgetary jumbo jet might set a tight deadline for decisions. The achievement of saving millions would take priority over contemplating a completely new flight plan.

This is where President Trump’s inclination to float big trial-ballons, for the sake of America’s greatness (and his own), might work its magic. If fresh thinkers can step forward to help change the conversation, we may discover more people, with fatter wallets, who want to “get in” on a new public-service adventure. They do have talents and aspirations to contribute.

Communicators could envision a universe, indeed a metaverse, of platforms, technologies, and applications promising to improve education and society. Of course, stalwarts grounded in reality and reason should erect appropriate Chesterton fences preserving parts of this chaotic cosmos.

Meanwhile, we won’t encourage those with old-school experience in nitty-gritty work like teaching to totally stifle those inclined toward “big, hairy, audacious goals.” Business book authors have deemed BHAGs an energy boost for companies.

In our thought experiment, we should consider whether resistance will cause paralysis by analysis. Rejection of conversation compounds skepticism. It’s already arising among seasoned practitioners who, at the level of national and international politics, mock ideas like Trump’s “Riviera of the Middle East” plan as magical thinking.

One skeptic, David Sanger, whose recent New York Times commentary applied the “seat of the pants” critique to Trump, went on to warn that big ideas spark the wrong kind of collaboration. “Where diplomats look at a problem and see a negotiating challenge, Mr. Trump looks and sees a future resort rising from the sands,” Sanger wrote.

His criticism goes to the heart of this experiment. Yes, diplomats belong in the realm of negotiation. But perhaps a president like Trump can occasionally startle nay-saying leaders and stimulate progress by conjuring an image, or a deadline, or a mean tweet.

Provided it’s suitably fenced, this is a mind-expanding game of three-dimensional chess.

If “the business of America is business,” then let entrepreneurial and eccentric flowers bloom amid the practicality. When one “big, beautiful” prospect fails, our president listens and pitches another, freeing up the players in his game to ponder and respond. Call him a salesman, and mean it as a compliment.

Where the Motivations Might Lead

In that spirit, imagine a next generation of public-interest communication. It wouldn’t replace social media like TikTok, X, and Truth Social; that’s unlikely given the investments of Trump and Musk. For the sake of this experiment, we’ll probe other boundaries.

Various collaborators might see financial and reputational gains in developing oases of content where polarization is reduced, political trust is rebuilt, timely knowledge is more accessible, cultural legacies are maintained, and people reach out into their communities.

Consider several pathways of programming, broadly defined as educational, with ambitious core goals which Americans might consider socially desirable, even statesmanlike:

  • improved relationships between the American people and their federal institutions, improving knowledge, interaction, accountability and trust;
  • the same strengthening of civic bonds at the state and city level, across the nation;
  • better and broader educational resources for teens and young adults who wish to enter fields with robust job growth and salaries, some of them “white-collar,” many “blue-collar”;
  • improved knowledge about civics in the United States, but also about other countries’ geopolitical, economic, and cultural circumstances, providing global news and awareness as distinct from disfavored “globalist” ideology;
  • heightened awareness of practices that increase physical and mental health for individuals and society, including candid discussions at the intersection of science, common sense, and the precautionary principle which environmentalism teaches.

One can develop many ideas for programs in these various categories. Perhaps they could be clustered in several menus available on a streaming service or as “channels” on a public-interest version of YouTube.

Government itself could take the lead in boosting public trust toward civic institutions. The executive branch could emulate the cable industry collaboration called C-SPAN. Instead of Congressional sessions and “Book TV,” various agencies would offer live coverage of public meetings, plus explorations of topics validly in their wheelhouses.

President Trump’s telegenic Cabinet secretaries would love to complement this coverage with their own podcasts—or with newfangled hybrids of fireside chats and Joe Rogan dialogues. This low-cost programming would fit under agencies’ existing communications budgets, which probably overspend on passé press releases.

Citizens would benefit from further immersion in reality while other communicators are offering them artificial intelligence and virtual lives. A democracy needs to know how its government works, what it does, and how it spends taxpayer money. We could start placing more faces and names on the stances and actions which are allegedly hidden in deep-state darkness. Imagine greater transparency and accountability, with less waste and cynicism.

State and local government agencies, along with the offices of governors and legislative representatives, should be encouraged to create similar coverage and civic engagement. Block grants to states for educational communication would allow cities and school districts to compete for money based on their ideas serving kids, parents, and teachers.

There are investment opportunities outside the classroom and family home. In this era of tragically weakened coverage by local newspapers and TV stations, ventures in new media platforms could help to foster a next generation of newsrooms, or at least independent journalists who would thrive on increased access and public awareness.

In 2023, the MacArthur Foundation, seeing the shrinkage of local news coverage, led a philanthropic partnership called Press Forward, which plans to invest $500 million to “support the reimagination, revitalization, and rapid development of local news.”

The foundation, which already helps to fund PBS News, might be attracted to some form of government-supported collaboration. The original $500 million price tag is said to be far too small to make nationwide impacts.

Of course, with or without extra scrutiny by journalists, officials at all levels of government would have to restrain their egos and any instincts to produce propaganda touting their excellence or demonizing others. Whatever they do, they might prompt citizens to follow up with group meetings, organized feedback, and heightened habits of news-watching.

An additional channel educating people about promising careers, timely job openings, and resources for appropriate training could be spearheaded by statewide officials, with input from federal agencies monitoring the economy and its need for particular skills.

Video content would be accompanied by websites or apps offering more information. Agencies could also host digital space for chats and Q&A. Extra services—and advertising—might flow in from local companies, civic groups, charities, churches, and labor unions.

Online partnerships could resemble, and reinvigorate, the “civil society” populated by Elks lodges, Rotary clubs, Knights of Columbus halls, and local gatherings of political parties. It would be ideal if portions of next-gen programming were cordoned off from the influence of AI, augmented reality, dopamine hits, and narrative-creating algorithms.

These ambitious visions for educational communication may seem akin to brainstorming about a “Riviera of the Middle East,” but we need to try generating cultural “great resets” that Americans are hungry for. Our values must be proactive. The King James Bible reminds us: “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” (Proverbs 29)

Sensing hope and success, defined in both secular and spiritual terms, the informed debates we start will help generate remedies for the lingering ills and oversights which have polarized America. There’s only one realistic way to fulfill Trump’s slogan—Americans making themselves great again.

This concludes the thought experiment.

But the latest experiments in federal budget management are actually ongoing—on a larger scale, under a stronger microscope, and with the public as a more engaged audience. We need to bring authentic values and historical knowledge together with systemic and strategic analysis related to budget plans for the 2026 fiscal year, which will begin October 1.

Thank you for participating in this introductory exercise. All apprentices are invited to stick around and dig deeply into your favorite line-items. We expect the reality show called our democracy will be picked up again for a new season. The plot is thickening.

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Pope’s 2025 Media Plea: Go Gentle into that Good Fight

Pope Francis says journalists face a tough assignment these days. In this polarized world, it’s never been more important for communicators to remind us of our responsibilities— and to help us carry them out.

The media serve socieites which must respect and serve their people. This starts with planting seeds of hope, according to the Pontiff’s 2025 message for World Communications Day. He spoke of a virtue which demands action and courage, not merely passive optimism.

To accomplish this, he urged “communicators of hope” to do something they’re not trained for: “disarm” today’s weaponized dialogues and “purify” public squares of aggressiveness. The task is expressed in the just-released document’s title: “Share with Gentleness the Hope that is in Your Hearts.”

“Try to promote a communication that can heal the wounds of our humanity,” the Pope instructs in the Vatican’s 59th annual message for its World Day of Social Communications, occurring on June 1.

The message was previewed on January 24, the feast day of St. Francis de Sales, who is the patron saint of journalists and (paradoxically?) is also regarded as a “saint of kindness.”

Here are some highlights from the document:

  • “I dream of a communication that does not peddle illusions or fears, but is able to give reasons for hope,” says Pope Francis. This requires journalists and their audiences to be “healed of our ‘diseases’ of self-promotion and self-absorption,” open to recognizing the dignity of every individual.
  • “I encourage you to discover and make known the many stories of goodness hidden in the folds of the news.” This will encourage consumers of information to rein in their indifference toward the poor and marginalized and to build up a “culture of care.”
  • Gentleness will help journalists and other communicators ensure that their audiences can “draw close” to the stories being told and “get in touch with the best part of themselves.”
  • Allow information to be shared in an “attentive” and “reflective” way that points out possible paths for dialogue. “This kind of communication can help to build communion, to make us feel less alone, to rediscover the importance of walking together.”

Pope Francis connects this to his previous proclamation of 2025 as a Jubilee Holy Year, whose theme summons Catholics to be “Pilgrims of Hope.” He envisions people interacting with information in ways that resemble the relaxed conversations of “fellow travelers” on a journey.

The theme also ties in with his book, Hope: The Autobiography. Its recent publication was timed with the start of the Jubilee year.

In the World Communications Day document, he says this about hope: It’s not easy because it takes boldness to challenge and forsake the “illusions and lies” which provide many with a false sense of security. Christians need hope because our knowledge of God’s presence and grace for eternal salvation sustains us through times of sacrifice and suffering.

“Hope is a hidden virtue,” giving us tenacity and patience. However, others can see when we reflect this “new way of experiencing everything.” The Epistles tell us to evangelize through this behavior: “Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope, but do it with gentleness and reverence.” (1 Peter 3:15-16) Remember, there are Jubilee Year graces for the sharing of hope, Francis points out.

“The one who has hope lives differently,” he says. “The one who hopes has been granted the gift of a new life.”

Sadly, in the standard-issue secular realm, the communications media too often erode hope. The Pope critiques this harshly.

Much of the media’s output “uses words like a razor” to sharply divide. “False or artfully distorted information,” reducing reality to slogans, sends messages which agitate, provoke, or hurt.

He warns of damage from our digital screens, where “verbal attacks on social media” create a “paradigm of competition, opposition, the will to dominate and possess, and the manipulation of public opinion.”

Francis advises careful stewardship of hope and gentleness among professional communicators and whole nations. “In the face of astonishing achievements of technology, I encourage you to care for your heart, your interior life.”

Our computer apps are “profiling us according to the logic of the market,” altering our perception of reality. We experience an “atomization of interests” that reduces one’s sense of community and the common good. Identifying others as enemies, we lose our ability to listen or try to understand.

Resisting the online appeal to emotions, “do not allow instinctive reactions to guide your communication.” We should not let digital distractions make us “forget the faces of other people.” He tells journalists, “Speak to the hearts of the women and men whom you serve.”

The goal for this heart-to-heart communication, whether in a journalist’s work-product or a pilgrim’s travels, is to emulate Jesus as “the greatest communicator of all time,” as Pope Francis points out. His encounters with people brought truth and love.

Inspired and informed by the Holy Spirit, we can “perceive the hidden goodness quietly present even when all else seems lost.” And we can learn the lesson that “hope is always a community project.”

The ultimate goal for conscientious communicators is to spread concern about our common destiny so we can “strive to write together the history of our future.”

The Pontiff’s wish for all those reading his World Communications Day message requires constant training, perhaps with the intercession of St. Francis de Sales: “May you always find those glimmers of goodness that inspire us to hope.”

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A Chesterton Poem and Other “ND” Game Prep

Pre-Game Report

On January 20, when ESPN anchors retell Notre Dame’s journey to the 2025 College Football Championship battle with Ohio State, it’s unlikely they will show film from the game that occurred Saturday, Oct. 11, 1930.

Too bad, because the telecast will neglect one character in the long saga’s subplot about finding hope through the Catholic faith.

This historical figure would have been thrilled to cheer alongside the current spiritual protagonists—Fighting Irish Coach Marcus Freeman, a new convert to the Church, and Riley Leonard, the Catholic quarterback whose avid trust and gratitude toward Jesus shine brightly in his TV interviews.

The missing character is Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936), a legendary British writer who attended and immortalized that 1930 game at Notre Dame Stadium. Chesterton is beloved for his brilliant evangelization in nonfiction, novels, and various other genres.

He wrote “The Arena,” a poem dedicated to the University of Notre Dame (“Our Lady’s University”), after the football contest stirred his soul during his visit to America.

There was a lot of history going on at that game.

Knute Rockne was near the end of 13 years of coaching, which brought Notre Dame three national championships, including one for the team Chesterton saw play.

The brand-new stadium had been solemnly dedicated in a ceremony on the prior evening, October 10.

Several days earlier, Chesterton had arrived on campus to begin a six-week series of lectures. This was a rare departure from his English homeland.

At the game, he was struck not only by the skills employed in this American football, but by the sight of the nearby administration building looming over the field. There, a golden statue of the mother of Jesus stood atop the famed Golden Dome.

His poem portrayed the ND athletes as gladiators nobly dedicating their talents and hearts to Jesus Christ through His mother. She had been with the team during tougher times, but, he believed, “she whose names are Seven Sorrows and the Cause of All Our Joy” was also with them in the October 11 romp over Navy, 26-2.

He observed the jubilance of “youth untroubled, youth untutored; hateless war and harmless mirth.” They played for the valiant spirit of the school and for “Our Lady of the Victories—the Mother of the Master of the Masterers of the World.”

He said to the Queen that those Fighting Irish were “the men that live forever, who are free of all things living but a Child, and He was thine.”

The University of Notre Dame is, by tradition, a place that aims to evince the heavenly on earth and the earthly raised to heavenly grace.

We can hear that intersectionality in the “Alma Mater” (“Notre Dame, Our Mother”), which is sung together by the team and their fans after each game—if ESPN will cover that postlude this time.

There’s a quip about this: Someone asks, “Is the Alma Mater a school song or a hymn?” His interlocutor answers, “Yes.”

It has been 37 years since Notre Dame won a national championship. That was in 1988 under Coach Lou Holtz, another enduring force for Catholic evangelization.

In the spirit of resilient, transcendent joy, whether January 20 brings good or ill, we should recall Coach Freeman’s comment in a 2022 interview with National Catholic Register regarding the team and its ongoing encounters with fans and critics across the nation.

“It’s extremely difficult to be a college student-athlete right now, in terms of the social media, in terms of mental health,” he said.

“They’re normal human beings, but the problem is that on social media there’s a lot of power given to different people’s opinions, in [the player’s] eyes. And I try to encourage them all the time to not be overly concerned with that. But I think it’s a lot easier said than done.”

When asked for his message to Notre Dame fans everywhere, Freeman said:

“Support our players, the good and the bad. Blame the coaches, you know what I mean? … Those players, man, they give us everything they’ve got, so continue to support them.”

Meanwhile, QB Riley Leonard has made his message of loyalty clear on many occasions. It’s his earnest call, “Jesus Bless.”

# # #

The Arena

by GK Chesterton

(Dedicated to the University of Notre Dame, Indiana)

There uprose a golden giant
On the gilded house of Nero
Even his far-flung flaming shadow and his image swollen large
Looking down on the dry whirlpool
Of the round Arena spinning
As a chariot-wheel goes spinning; and the chariots at the charge.

And the molten monstrous visage
Saw the pageants, saw the torments,
Down the golden dust undazzled saw the gladiators go,
Heard the cry in the closed desert
Te salutant morituri,
As the slaves of doom went stumbling, shuddering, to the shades below.

“Lord of Life, of lyres and laughter,
Those about to die salute thee,
At thy godlike fancy feeding men with bread and beasts with men,
But for us the Fates point deathward
In a thousand thumbs thrust downward,
And the Dog of Hell is roaring through the lions in their den.”

I have seen, where a strange country
Opened its secret plains about me,
One great golden dome stand lonely with its golden image, one
Seen afar, in strange fulfillment,
Through the sunlit Indian summer
That Apocalyptic portent that has clothed her with the Sun.

She too looks on the Arena
Sees the gladiators grapple,
She whose names are Seven Sorrows and the Cause of All Our Joy,
Sees the pit that stank with slaughter
Scoured to make the courts of morning
For the cheers of jesting kindred and the scampering of a boy.

“Queen of Death and deadly weeping
Those about to live salute thee,
Youth untroubled; youth untutored; hateless war and harmless mirth
And the New Lord’s larger largesse
Holier bread and happier circus,
Since the Queen of Sevenfold Sorrow has brought joy upon the earth.”

Burns above the broad arena
Where the whirling centuries circle,
Burns the Sun-clothed on the summit, golden-sheeted, golden shod,
Like a sun-burst on the mountains,
Like the flames upon the forest
Of the sunbeams of the sword-blades of the Gladiators of God.

And I saw them shock the whirlwind
Of the World of dust and dazzle:
And thrice they stamped, a thunderclap; and thrice the sand-wheel swirled;
And thrice they cried like thunder
On Our Lady of the Victories,
The Mother of the Master of the Masterers of the World.

“Queen of Death and Life undying
Those about to live salute thee;
Not the crawlers with the cattle; looking deathward with the swine,
But the shout upon the mountains
Of the men that live for ever
Who are free of all things living but a Child; and He was thine.”

–G.K. Chesterton (1930)

Image from AI designer function of Microsoft Bing Co-Pilot.

Find more information from the Society of GK Chesterton at chesterton.org

Posted in Education, Prayer, Spirit of communication, Writing | Leave a comment

Did You Hear What I Heard? It’s Streaming in 2025.

One way to keep Christmas joy alive throughout the new year is to hold tight to, and continue reflecting upon, bits of the yuletide vocabulary to which our culture grants only a short shelf life.

While some spiritual advisors urge us only to be mindful of the present moment, we know experiences become more momentous because of memories we’ve made. Thoughts about the past, about almost anything, rely on words. The start of 2025 is an opportunity to choose some terms to treasure even as others fade away.

Secular commentators have already culled the heard.

Lake Superior State University issued its annual list of verbal fads for which the past year should be the expiration date—“cringe” and “sorry, not sorry,” for example.

Washington Post book reviewers said one of their favorite sentences from the literature of 2024 is, “There’s depth in not decisively agreeing.” That’s deep, I guess.

Linguist John McWhorter and journalist Bari Weiss, in a podcast conversation, speculated that more words like “delulu” will show up this year. Maybe it means “delightful,” but the Urban Dictionary’s usage guide references this new maxim: “Delusion is not the solution”—that is, “Delulu is not the solulu.”

Our language should be able to do better than that!

Especially at Christmas, we are immersed in a spirit that goes beyond words but gives them rhyme and reason. Centuries of faith have inspired eloquent liturgies and lexicon to be savored. They will reappear next December, but their power to unite and guide us is worthy of recycling year-round, amid whatever deluges of delulu we might confront.

Sing to the Lord an Old Song

Listen up when enduring words and ideas slip into the arena of secular aspirations, regardless of calendar dates, whether in moments of holiness or scenes from popular entertainment. Remember their splendid presence in carols and other expressions of “the reason for the season.”

Then, apply your own reason to these thoughts grounded in Bethlehem, ensuring they’re relevant wherever life takes you. Such inspirations, harkening to the Word made flesh, can elevate our wisdom in 2025 to see that “God is with us.”

Enjoy the profound lyrics which constitute the Christmas soundtrack.

Recall the amalgam of two precious traits—humility and dignity—miraculously shared by God and humanity: Mild He lays His glory by, / Born that man no more may die, / Born to raise the sons of earth, / Born to give them second birth. (“Hark the Herald Angels Sing”)

Catch the intimations of spiritual warfare against evil into which Christ entered, literally fleshing out our potential goodness: No more let sin and sorrows grow, / Nor thorns infest the ground; / He comes to make His blessings flow /  Far as the curse is found. (“Joy to the World”)

Honor the simple shepherds whose grassroots wisdom made them responsive to mystery, to all they didn’t know, as well as the Magi stargazers, whose wisdom told them they didn’t know everything: If I were a wise man, I would do my part, / Yet what I can, I give him,/ I give Him my heart. (“In the Bleak Midwinter”)

Embrace the love song to a child sung by seekers of a similarly pure soul: Bless all the dear children in Thy tender care, / And take us to heaven to live with Thee there. (“Away in a Manger”)

These messages can help us “repeat the sounding joy” in a world that needs it.

As novelist Gregg Hurwitz said recently in a Daily Wire Plus symposium on the Gospels, “We’re seeing the world burn down, in some ways, to fundamentals”—with questions about man vs. machine and male vs. female. He told Jordan Peterson and other panelists, ”When we have that level of definitional collapse, we need to go back to forms of thinking … that are different.”

Here are several Christmas-adjacent words that, when bandied about in the public square, will deserve appreciative voices which can impart their deeper meanings.

Epiphany

We should welcome “epiphanies,” or revelations of truth, at all times even though the unexpected requires interpretation. Epiphanies, like the Catholic feast marked liturgically on January 5 this year, are moments of communication, often blessing us with knowledge. This recalls Pope Francis’ 2019 message for the Vatican’s World Communications Day: “Love always communicates.”

The Oxford English Dictionary provided a cautionary note in 2016  when it declared that “post-truth” was its “word of the year.” Communication had already gotten dicey.

We saw in 2024 how polarization, pitting “my truth” against “your truth,” had infected our national politics. Public figures and private citizens were castigated for everything from irresponsible hyperbole and objectionable rhetoric to strategic fabulism and lies of omission.

Post-truth practitioners in politics and the media have dumbed-down our communications by replacing love with hatred, mockery, and fear. The public craves trust regarding what is known and what is unknown. A democracy’s ability to learn and discern has come under attack.

Too many elites, rejecting God and religion as the best sources of truth, pursue influence through emotional manipulation and utopian ideals. They draw upon their “cults of cognition,” to use a term from theologian Dietrich von Hildebrand (1889-1977). All-purpose paradigms of “oppressed vs. oppressor” and “victimized vs. victim” continue to drive wedges among us.

Truth inevitably emerges in public discourse and human experience. Reality wins. “Eureka moments” allow people to change their minds, to correct their courses, to experience wonder. We can do our part, using our voices and actions to champion the epiphanies that occasionally cut through the fog of spiritual warfare.

Sadly, some post-truth stalwarts will choose only to generate more confusion and turn up the gaslight of the status quo.

Not unlike Herod conducting the massacre of the “Holy Innocents” in order to kill the foretold King of the Jews (Matthew 2:13-18), those who keep their grip on the power of darkness try to deprive us of the happy surprises in a free marketplace of ideas.

In 2024, researchers repeated warnings of society’s tendencies toward isolation, depression, addiction, doubling down on misinformation, and retreating into artificial realities. Many are searching for truth but don’t know where to look. The New York Times reported in December that “there is now a growing cottage industry of psychedelic [magic-mushroom] retreats for business leaders.”

Let’s participate more avidly in conversations that spark imagination, reflection, and accountability when natural and supernatural epiphanies occur.

Gifts

The surest and most healing revelations come from relationships with Christ, supported by honest, dynamic, lasting connections to people who cluster around reality.

Over the past year, God seems to have gifted Americans—dutiful news-consumers and common-sense types—with remarkable moments of discovery exposing inconvenient truths about people, plans, institutions, and ideologies. We must retain these memories as lessons to mull over, without malice but with firm plans to repair the brokenness.

A richer knowledge of our religious traditions will help us to share our interpretations and present them as uplifting alternatives to confirmation bias.

The Christmas shepherds eagerly transmitted to others what an angel had told them, and they returned to the Holy Family to offer all they had to give—thanks and praise. The “wise men” offered three items. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh were costly but even more important for their present and future significance.

Some of our best gift exchanges in the new year will entail what’s free-of-charge but especially valuable—information, ideas, and identities which reflect our authenticity and create possibilities. This is communication as a gift, assuring each other that we are in the right place with fellow pilgrims.

Popular culture in 1965 gave us a charming example of gift-giving, with epiphany as a bonus. In A Charlie Brown Christmas, the title character speaks for so many of today’s isolated souls when he shouts with frustration, “Isn’t there anyone who knows what Christmas is all about?”

Charlie Brown’s friend Linus responds to him by reciting the words of Scripture (Luke 2:8-14). He repeats the angels’ announcement of Christ the Lord bringing hope and peace to mankind. “That’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”

Closing scenes of joy and friendship arise after Charlie’s cry for wisdom, his “good grief!” moment amid the chaos of a holiday play rehearsal. Linus gave his friend a simple gift of clarity that placed everything in order.

This must-see TV holds a lesson for today: Adults need constant practice in the art of sharing presents (and presence), both as generous givers and grateful receivers. Let’s use our gifts to honor the giftedness of others, not treating them as statistics or labeled groups, but offering them our respect and recommendations, questions and answers.

Light

Christmas, with its message about a “star of wonder” at the darkest time of year, shone extra brightly on Dec. 25, 2024, because Hanukkah, the “festival of lights,” also began that day.

An unlikely popular-culture “parable” speaks the language of “light” in a relevant way for 2025. It encourages us to “look up” from the glare of the screens we’re holding and from the lower passions we carelessly enable.

The risk that our smartphones and social media convey false enlightenment was captured ingeniously by “The Game,” an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation broadcast in 1991.

In that year, video games were all the rage, but smartphones were still a twinkle in their inventors’ eyes, and media like Facebook were more than a decade away.

Still, the Star Trek scriptwriters told the tale of a mysterious, unnamed game the Enterprise crew had brought aboard from an alien planet. A portable optical device, worn with a headband, connected to a person’s mind by piercing the eye with a laser-like beam.

This created augmented reality in their field of vision, akin to today’s high-tech eyeglasses. The solo players used their will to manipulate images in ways that triggered visceral sensations of pleasure. As players kept “scoring,” the game’s images led to stronger feelings and blissful sighs.

Nearly all Enterprise crew members retreated into their own worlds of play and became addicted to what we now might call dopamine hits. They mindlessly cooperated with an alien plot to take over Star Fleet. One disciplined officer saw what was happening and resisted.

“Whatever this thing does, it must feel pretty good,” the officer opined. His analysis revealed that the device bonded to nerve receptors, degraded higher reasoning, and “initiated a serotonin cascade in the frontal lobe.” In layman’s terms, this was prurient “brain rot.”

Fortunately, the android Data, immune from the game’s effects, prepared a palm beacon. Pointing the beacon’s bright light at each crew member canceled the device’s connection, and the Enterprise was saved.

We can draw approximate parallels between this prescient script and the toll which social media and screen addictions take on some digital denizens today.

The parable’s lesson is clear. It is now a wise, compassionate act to raise concerns about evolving high-tech substitutes for rational thought, to decry “brain rot” where dopamine and self-centeredness distort reality. Our continuing mission is to point people toward each other, toward the big picture—and the “light of the world.”

Peace

One more bit of Christmas vocabulary is an important takeaway to address the plague of violence which society has crafted for itself. The angels promised that the incarnation of the Prince of Peace would bring hope to those of good will.

We will be reminded of this in the days ahead when America holds a funeral service for former President Jimmy Carter, who died at the age of 100. This fervent evangelical Christian took seriously the Lord’s pathway of love and merciful justice not only during his tumultuous one-term presidency, but later as the globe-trotting founder of the Carter Center and a long-time fighter for public health and beneficent democracy.

Most importantly, he said he wanted to be known for championing human dignity and “waging peace.” His vision incorporated many challenging efforts which the world must still undertake, and he embraced America as a place where high aspirations live on.

“America did not invent human rights,” he once said. “In a very real sense, human rights invented America.” (See the Phronesis in Pieces story about President Carter.)

Those who pursue wisdom should help secular culture to gain insights about people like Carter as model peacemakers, whom the Bible describes as happy and blessed. We’re called to take action for the sake of peace, becoming beacons of the humble child found away in a manger, born for sacrifice and Resurrection.

The Word was made flesh, and so the words of Christmas are inherently meaningful. Let’s allow the message to resound throughout 2025. It has a power which must not be buried in gift-wrapped boxes. As the new year begins, we know our share of suffering and sadness awaits us, but the story has a happy ending.

The work of wisdom involves telling whole stories from beginning to end. We all need to imbibe important lessons again and again, but many don’t know all the words, or the words they do know are yesterday’s news, or fake news, or brain fog.

Ongoing vocabulary rehearsals will benefit this misled culture. Perhaps we’ll know it’s time to lift our voices when we hear somebody sighing, “We need a little Christmas, right this very minute.”

Image from AI design function of Microsoft Bing Co-Pilot

Posted in Prayer, Spirit of communication, Words | Leave a comment

Our Trains of Thought Need More than Search Engines

’Tis the season for language gurus to announce their “Words of the Year.” The 2024 selections from Merriam-Webster and Oxford are “polarization” and “brain rot,” respectively. Cultural critics may conclude these choices—alongside samples from previous years—suggest a certain pattern of thought, or anti-thought.

Both declarations offer a dismaying diagnosis of the state our society is in, especially our state of mind. They highlight our frequent failure to cozy up to reality, which is now home-delivered online.

Let’s look at these words and several others which dictionary editors and readers have observed as obstacles to our pursuit of wisdom.

Polarization

Merriam-Webster declared polarization as this year’s top pick on December 9, based on the volume of searches for its definition at the company’s website.

The US-based dictionary company defines the word as “division into two sharply distinct opposites; especially, a state in which the opinions, beliefs, or interests of a group or society no longer range along a continuum but become concentrated at opposing extremes.”

Polarization is hardly a new idea, dating back to the early 1800s, Merriam-Webster points out. It emerged from physics and a description of light waves. But this led to an application in politics and culture “that helps define the world today” among people across the ideological spectrum.

America’s election season this year suffered from a polarization of opinions cultivated by the candidates themselves and adopted by voters in emotional, as well as policy-centric, ways.

Indeed, with encouragement by the mainstream media and social media, policy differences mattered less than rhetoric of doubt and fear, even hatred. For too many people who saw no opportunities for compromise, polarization was practically the only thing they agreed upon.

Brain Rot

The Oxford English Dictionary, which announced its choice on December 2, defined brain rot as “the supposed deterioration of a person’s mental or intellectual state, especially viewed as the result of overconsumption of material (now particularly online content) considered to be trivial or unchallenging.”

This describes a sort of information inflation in which the sheer quantity, and dreary quality, of digitized words and images filling our heads make each particular bit or byte less valuable—merely clogging our cognitive pipes.

Oxford also acknowledged its term has a history. It first appeared in the 1854 book Walden, in which Henry David Thoreau “criticizes society’s tendency to devalue complex ideas, or those that can be interpreted in multiple ways.” He sees the retreat to simplistic thinking as “a general decline in mental and intellectual effort.”

Take note that the original meaning has morphed slightly, but its new iteration “increased in usage frequency by 230 percent between 2023 and 2024,” according to Oxford. The UK-based publisher cited not only its own data-mining metrics on the term’s appearances, but also research in which lexicographers surveyed and conversed with the general public.

Brain rot gained traction “on social media platforms—particularly on TikTok among Gen Z and Gen Alpha communities,” says Oxford. Usage has spread to mainstream journalism, often as a self-deprecatory description of online information, akin to critiquing one’s diet as junk food.

By the way, “Gen Alpha” has become a label for people born between 2010 and 2024, according to Michele Debczak at Mental FlossMuch of this age cohort was in grammar school during the days of pandemic shutdowns. Members of Generation Z were born between approximately 1997 and 2010.

Taken together, these two groups constitute the “digital natives” now under the age of about twenty-seven, already deeply influenced by America’s online culture and influencing it, as well.

Those talking about brain rot, even if their intention is humorous, might be expressing the modern-day equivalent of “Houston, we’ve got a problem.”

Whether one uses Thoreau’s formulation of intellectual laziness or the updated interpretation of mental unwellness caused by information gluttony, this concern warrants digging for more context among some “words of the year” from the past.

Authenticity

Merriam-Webster named “authentic” as its 2023 selection. Again, their conclusion came largely from a surge in the number of times online visitors searched for the meaning of the word.

Editors opined that, “with the rise of artificial intelligence—and its impact on deepfake videos, actors’ contracts, academic honesty, and a vast number of other topics—the line between “real” and “fake” has become increasingly blurred.

Our culture places a high value on authenticity, or the trait of being true to one’s core identity, but this secular, relativistic era of expressive individualism allows us plenty of leeway in defining and enforcing who we are. A previous edition of Phronesis in Pieces titled “That Man is Not Real!” discussed the challenge of reality in this light.

Gaslighting

In 2022, Merriam-Webster’s word of the year was “gaslighting.” The news release defined this as “a psychological manipulation of a person, usually over an extended period of time, that causes the victim to question the validity of their own thoughts, perception of reality, or memories and typically leads to confusion, loss of confidence and self-esteem, uncertainty of one’s emotional or mental stability, and a dependency on the perpetrator.”

A number of media voices had accused former president Donald Trump of being a key perpetrator of gaslighting in the political arena during 2022, the company commented.

Post-Truth

We can look further back to 2016, when Oxford made one of its most perspicacious and prophetic picks of all, “post-truth.” The publisher defined this adjective as “relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.”

No one can deny that the presidential election Americans recently survived was a post-truth experience par excellence, marked by a near-collapse of public trust in candidates, pronouncements, and institutions on the right and the left.

Merriam-Webster’s word for 2016 happened to be “surreal.”

Truthiness

That publisher presaged America’s eroding sense of reality way back in 2006 by selecting the word “truthiness”—defined as “truth coming from the gut, not books; preferring to believe what you wish to believe rather than what is known to be true.”

Nostalgia for 2003

We might say Merriam-Webster provided in 2003 a prequel to the saga of our polity’s pursuit of truth through language. Data regarding lookups of definitions that year surprised even its editors.

According to the Writers Write website, “The number one word of the year, which received by a wide margin the most unexpectedly large number of user-requests,” was “democracy.”

John Morse, publisher of Merriam-Webster, was quoted with this explanation: “To the surprise of some, the most frequently looked-up words are not the newest words, not the latest high-tech terms, not the cool new slang. Instead, the users are most interested in exploring full definitions for words cropping up in current media headlines or in other kinds of daily reading and conversation—not so much new words as newly popular words.”

This comment from two decades ago now evokes a bit of poignant irony. In 2003, the year when the precursor of Facebook (Facemash) helped trigger a social-media explosion, Merriam-Webster observed its users acting traditionally, digging for “full definitions for words” found in forms of “daily reading and conversation” they respected.

In another irony, Merriam-Webster mentioned in its 2024 announcement that democracy returned as one of its runners-up, again showing a “large increase in lookups.”

Not only did its current site-users want to “fully understand what [democracy] means,” but this year they also sought “to challenge, celebrate, and protect it”—representing people “who consider it triumphant and those who think it’s at risk.”

The culture of virtuous learning and diligent truth-seeking, prescribed by America’s founders as crucial for our democratic republic, seems to have slipped downhill to the newly designated milepost of brain rot.

We have circled back to the subject of democracy, this time with a sense of confusion—or polarization. Alas, people see a mélange of governance concepts other than democracy being championed and negative impressions about democracy being amplified.

Looking Ahead

Is the ubiquity of social media use—along with other trends in education, media, civil society, and common-good thinking—leading us to a place of impotence in our political lives? Is there something rotten in the state of mind online?

The mere fact that lexicographers are helping us “watch our words” every year actually should give us hope, provided we focus less on snapshots of their popularity and more on how those terms are being used.

Casper Grathwohl, president of OUP’s Oxford Languages, shares this optimism in an online statement about his dictionary and other initiatives. He says his company’s mission is “to unlock the power of language for learning and for life.” The goal is to provide “more versatile and accessible formats for building and sharing language knowledge worldwide.” That’s a helpful context for critiquing social media.

Recall that Oxford acknowledged brain rot is discussed by many digital denizens in a self-deprecatory or humorous way. Young people, who are in many ways the driving force for our culture, see the complex paradox of risks and potential rewards of technology they are using. Deep down, they know there’s a challenge to be faced.

Social analyst Malcolm Gladwell, in his new book Revenge of the Tipping Point, invites us to take a nuanced look at our contagious tendencies of thought. He wrote 25 years ago, in the runaway best-seller The Tipping Point, that relatively few people can generate an outsized impact on ideas that come to dominate society’s collective mind.

That earlier book came before various online danger zones had risen to prominence, exercising their ability to accentuate, confirm, or condemn certain points of view. When C-SPAN Book TV’s Peter Slen recently asked Gladwell how social media had affected his analysis of brain contagions, the author showed candid concern based on his new book.

“The phenomenon has become even more asymmetrical,” Gladwell said in the video interview, acknowledging that it takes fewer people than ever to shape what we’re thinking. Also, our gestating opinions hit transformative tipping points even faster than before.

It has been said roughly 90 percent of social media communication is dominated by 10 percent of those who actively post their often-volatile comments.

Gladwell might have been incorporating insights from philosopher Rene Girard (1923-2015), who famously argued that human behavior is based on “mimetic desire”—our proclivity to imitate others for the sake of popularity and belonging.

Girard noted that mimesis ironically tends to promote conflict; we want to be the undisputed paradigms of the ideas we adopt and promote (discussed in a previous Phronesis in Pieces in August 2023).

Looking Up

One more piece of the puzzle comes from Gladwell, who suggests in Revenge that our behavior is based not only on personal copycatting, but on “overstories,” or “meta-narratives,” which reflect a broader community’s shared stories.

This appeal to common ground and bigger truths may be the tipping point we advocates for reality should welcome as we reflect upon responsible consciousness. Even if “words of the year” hint at a plague of brain rot and polarization, we should look around—and almost literally “look up”—for higher stories that put words in a bolder, broader context.

Words are the building blocks of stories, but the stories themselves carry value through human beings’ values, experiences, and aspirations. In our post-truth culture and our “attention economy,” we too often use words because they are au courant, attention-grabbing, even weaponizable, not because they can build communion.

Christians and other people of faith place an especially high value on the Word, on the Logos, and on words in general not because they are popular data points, but because they help to unlock meaning in stories which can be shared and interpreted.

Upon his announcement of the brain rot selection, Oxford’s Grathwohl said such terms show society’s “growing preoccupation with … the way internet culture is permeating so much of who we are and what we talk about.” He continued, “It feels like a rightful next chapter in the cultural conversation about humanity and technology.”

The necessary guard rails for our wild, sometimes withering use of words must come largely from people of faith, especially as we consider the dehumanizing threats from society’s use of technology.

Words are only part of the stories we are living, the tools for progress and corrective action we are chasing. Likewise, the distractions of social media are only the most obvious digital force currently presenting themselves for analysis.

We need to be aware of how other forces like artificial intelligence, rigorous cybersecurity, and the treasures of our human knowledge, integrity, and creativity can be marshaled. This requires personal discipline, clear-minded outreach, and stories about us at our best.

If we want to spice up the stories with memorable terms, we can draw from Pope Francis’ 2024 World Communications Day message about artificial intelligence. He called for people from all walks of life to join together to monitor the dangers, to pursue regulations and policies that will make AI “person-centered.”

Another term to contribute—and to work on defining even better—is “human flourishing,” which is the stated mission of Humanity 2.0, an incubator for global initiatives headed by philosopher Father Philiip Larrey. He is one of the Vatican’s leading experts on emerging technologies, who holds abundant conversations about the irreplaceable genius of human nature.

There are many other examples of computer experts, faith-based organizations, and well-intentioned advocates leading endeavors based on Catholic social-justice principles and transcendent values. These rise above self-serving strategies and contrived language. We need to “spread the word” about these efforts to help tell the upbeat truth that will stir us from our social-media sloth.

Young people and entrepreneurs sense the difficult future emerging in digital communication. Most want to approach it constructively and collaboratively, face-to-face and heart-to-heart, going beyond a trivialized “internet culture” of information inflation.

A talent pool that is conscious of belonging to something bigger, seeking the best for the human community, will help all generations to prioritize words and deeds on an upward trajectory. Are we talking about brain rot? Let’s focus on the brain! Talking about post-truth? Let’s focus on the truth!

The most important step we can take to short-circuit disillusionment and disengagement as we write the “next chapter” in our cultural conversation is to spark faith-filled imaginations across all fields of communications and governance. We can counter frustration about anti-thought politics or technology by clarifying our pro-human principles.

Regardless of what new words will pop out in tomorrow’s online searches or endure longer to guide a greater mission, our virtuous stewardship of consciousness and conscientiousness, expressed in stories of real-world potential, should be the pattern of thought in our media.

Aided by dictionary lookups but not limited by them, we’ll spell out the best ways to define ourselves.

Image from ClipSafari.com, a collection of Creative Commons designs.

Posted in Education, Spirit of communication, Words, Writing | Leave a comment

A Franciscan’s Mindfulness Yields an Advent Prayer

This commentary by Bill Schmitt was published on December 9 at the blog of the Magis Center, directed by Father Robert Spitzer, SJ.

The liturgical season of Advent inspires many people to think more broadly about how Christ comes into our lives. We also have a handy prayer to help us experience His presence more deeply.

This booster shot of expectancy doesn’t rely on theological gravitas. Think instead of a priest who had long adapted to New York City’s moral mayhem by learning to heed God’s ways to keep discipleship simple. Imagine this minister using dry wit to welcome Jesus, saying, now we’ve got You right where You want us!

We’re told Father Mychal Judge, OFM (1933-2001), expressed this practical attitude and profound aspiration when he prayed every day:

“Lord, take me where you want me to go; let me meet who you want me to meet; tell me what you want me to say; and keep me out of your way.”

It’s likely he had said this prayer on the morning of September 11, 2001, when he began his official duties as New York Fire Department chaplain by joining the first responders after a plane crash was reported at the World Trade Center.

His immediate task was to offer prayer and assistance to the wounded and the rescuers in the North Tower’s emergency command post. Suddenly, massive debris rained down upon that space from the South Tower. Firefighters carried Judge out of the chaos, and he became the first certified fatality—victim 0001—from the day’s terror attacks.

More details of this Franciscan’s life story, available at Mychal’s MessageNational Catholic ReporterFranciscan Media, and other websites tell of the priest’s caring and charismatic traits. A Brooklyn native who was ordained in 1961, he regularly ministered to the homeless, as well as AIDS patients, at a time when fear of catching the disease stirred prejudice and reduced the ranks of caregivers.

Always eager to meet urgent needs, Father Mychal was alert to Christ as the protagonist in a grand story of God’s desire to be with the marginalized and save all His children.

That connects Mychal’s message to the alertness that Advent intends to instill in us. One might say the message helps transform the Advent journey into an adventure.

The season’s prayers, Scripture readings, and sacraments surround us during the four Sundays prior to Christmas, preparing us to appreciate the gift of redemption we’ll receive by dint of Jesus’ Incarnation.

Advent’s liturgical lens also zooms out from the Christmas crib to raise our awareness of Christ’s second coming at the end of time, another pivotal moment where the eternal and the temporal touch.

The Catholic Church sees God’s grand story everywhere. His salvific relationship with mankind is the ongoing context that helps us make sense of our smaller day-to-day joys and crosses.

Advent stretches our spirits still more broadly. It spotlights Jesus’ coming a first time, a second time, and in the here and now. A virtuous storyteller might say Good News isn’t really news unless we observe it unfolding every day, instructively, purposefully, and truthfully.

Pope Paul VI put it this way: “The history of salvation is being accomplished in the midst of the history of the world.”

We need to experience this history taking shape in our minds, hearts, and souls, as well as in our encounters with others, with grace, and with spiritual battles against the chaos of sin. Advent ties our journey to the Mass, especially to the transubstantiation of bread and wine into Christ’s divine body and blood—as sustenance in the battles.

Human beings need the will and willpower to receive, parse, and participate in all the deep reality going on beneath the superficiality and artificiality of things our secular world calls truth. Our pilgrimage toward true happiness begins with surprise and wonder, and we can coax it along toward alertness and curiosity.

Recognizing our need to exercise our wills, sometimes by surrendering them, the Catechism of the Catholic Church notes that Advent boosts our sense of purpose in the present, partly through patient waiting. The Church calls us to “re-read and re-live the great events of salvation history in the ‘today’ of her liturgy.”

Developing a resilient motivation demands “catechesis [to] help the faithful to open themselves to this spiritual understanding of the economy of salvation. . . .” Advent “enables us to live” the love about which we’re learning. (paragraph 1095)

The prayer of Father Mychal Judge bolsters this catechesis because it helps to nudge Catholics beyond reading and hearing the Good News or merely joining together with other spectators. History is made not by spectators but by enthusiastic participants in stories being written.

Father Mychal was keenly aware of all the different ways in which God desires to save, and Christ desires to be present. These situations, whether feeding the poor, caring for AIDS patients, or ministering at Ground Zero on 9/11, require that persons “live the love about which we’re learning.” Christ’s hands and feet must truly be our own.

God is doing something new every day. Salvation history is full of surprise and mystery. When we sense God’s presence, sometimes in a gentle zephyr and sometimes in a thunderclap, we need to be “first responders” acting with agility

One might say Father Mychal’s expectancy showed a zeal sung about in the musical Hamilton. Observing the mysteries of the economy of salvation, this friar wanted to be “in the room where it happens”—as an active member of the supporting cast.

Rather than seeking celebrity or trying to tinker with God’s script, he asked only to know just enough about his role in any situation—where he might go, whom he should meet, what he might say.

This required great humility and curiosity about all that a great God could and would do through him and others. He also needed to stand by with all the tools in his spiritual toolkit. This meant always strengthening his robust faith, hope, and love, as well as his belief in miracles, delight in God’s mysteries, and trust in the unlimited power of prayer.

One of Father Mychal’s best friends is quoted regarding the Manhattan firehouse where he had an office for years:

“Whenever the firefighters would rush out on a call with their sirens going, Mychal, if in his room at the time, would go over to [the] window, raise his hand in blessing, and pray for the firefighters.”

This confidence in God at work, sometimes silently and unseen, can be likened to appreciating a beautiful piece of music whose score is filled with “rest” symbols for this or that instrument. It’s also akin to the ultimate guidance sought in Father Mychal’s prayer: “Keep me out of your way.”

Catechists may want to remind all the faithful that there is a difference between an active participant, discerning between times of action or waiting, and a disengaged or performative spectator. Sometimes, pious silence merely covers up a yawn or a virtue-signal shout.

During this Advent, the Church offers many resources for building an authentic relationship with Jesus that literally and figuratively stands the test of time. We can learn from the past, present, and future, preparing our hearts to celebrate amazing moments when the temporal and eternal connect. The challenges of journeying and expectancy become opportunities for patience, humility, and profound stories.

With the assistance of a prayer like Father Mychal’s, let’s help each other expand our alertness into a keen sense of timing, place, people, and purpose. Suddenly, we can see salvation history happening everywhere, providing chances to participate.

Honoring Jesus as teacher and protagonist, let’s strive to be right where He wants us to be whenever He calls. The adventure of Advent will grow as we become “doers of the Word and not hearers only.” (James 1:22)

Image from ClipSafari.com, a collection of Creative Commons images.

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