Monday, 11 February 2013

A Good Catholic

You would have liked my dad. Everyone did.

He remains, to this day, the most admirable human being I’ve ever had the privilege of knowing.  And he was my dad. I know how unbelievably lucky that makes me.

I always knew my dad was generous, but the sheer breadth of his generosity didn’t become apparent until after he died. The man had enough “free” charity calendars to wallpaper the Sistine Chapel (and class up the joint a bit). He had obviously gotten on some mailing list as a soft touch. He received a charity appeal, he sent a check. He was never wealthy, so it may have only been a few bucks, but it seems he was incapable of saying no to a good cause. Oh, and if there was a picture of a cute kid?  Game over. My dad had an incurable soft spot for children, especially children in trouble.

It’s not surprising really, given his own childhood. The details are fuzzy, as he never spoke much about growing up, but the broad brush strokes are enough to get the picture. Born to a big and poor Irish Catholic family in the coal-mining regions of upstate Pennsylvania. First cancer takes his mom. Then a fire takes his home – and his father. One gruesome memory he did share was that of a fireman holding him back from running to my grandfather’s smouldering body, trying to protect my dad from that horror. All of this before he was ten or eleven. And then bounced around, left at times with people who didn’t really want him and let him know it. Eventually when he was a teenager a beloved older sister got married and was able to take him in. Things got better from there.

My dad had plenty of reason to be bitter. To be angry. To be depressed. But, he wasn’t. He was genial, friendly, kind and the kind of guy that called everyone “buddy”. He was a devoted husband. And, most importantly to me, an adoring father. He had his imperfections, of course. He was incredibly impatient. He also used to eat raw onions (like apples!) and then try to give me a cuddle. Bluergh.

He was fond of folksy sayings (which, endearingly, were either not quite right or just plain weird). One of his favorites was “You gotta play the hand you’re dealt.” The traumas of his childhood did help shape the man he became, but they didn’t constrain him. He didn't even have a pair of deuces to start out, but still managed to come up trumps.

These days psychologists spend a lot of time looking at resilience – how some people seem to bounce back from traumatic childhoods, while others struggle, and often fail, to survive. How do people like my dad manage to pull themselves up by their proverbial bootstraps and build a good and decent life?

You can debate psychological theories all day, but to truly understand how my dad survived his extra share of bad luck, you have to understand he was a devout Catholic.

His faith, albeit amongst other factors, was one of the forces that fed that reservoir of resilience that kept him sane. It was an anchor that kept him rooted during the turbulent storms of his childhood, or to unforgivably mix a metaphor, the life raft that kept him afloat. It was a constant in a unstable life.

Through his experiences or his faith (most likely both) my father acquired a well-developed social conscience. He hated poverty, respected women, abhorred racism and held the working man in high regard. But he was born in the 1930s and he was of his time; he certainly couldn’t be called progressive by today’s standards. He also believed strongly (but quietly), for example, that men and women should get married before having babies. However, unlike those who wrap up their selfishness and narrow-mindedness in the excuse of religiosity, he would never sentence that child – or his parents – to a life of poverty and deprivation on account of any perceived sinfulness .

My dad was not altogether comfortable with homosexuality, though he never would have tossed a gay child out onto the streets. Sadly he didn't live to see the 21st century and the massive strides towards equality it has brought. It would probably take a few heated debates around the kitchen table (one of our favorite shared activities), but I think I could bring him around slowly to the idea of equal marriage. Dad was not one to stand in the way of other people’s happiness; he knew too well that it was a precious commodity. He knew too, from his own adult life, the joy that marriage and family can bring.

No matter what his private opinions, my father was always far too moral and kind to be hateful or judgemental towards any group. Another of my father’s favourite phrases was “Never judge a man ‘till you walk a mile in his moccasins.” If that meant reconciling his own conscience with some disagreements with official Catholic dogma, than so be it. Many Catholics do this – it does not make them less devoted to their God.

When I try to explain the role of dad's faith to my liberal friends, they often reply with “but surely your dad would have been a good person with or without his faith.”  Yeah, probably. But to imagine my father without his faith is a pointless exercise and does a disservice to his memory. My father's faith was always quiet and always kind, but it was always there. It was a fundamental part of who he was, as much as his gender, his race, his sexuality – all of those things that make us who we are.

He never preached to outsiders about his faith – another man’s conscience is his own business. He certainly didn’t buy into any of the more mumbo-jumbo aspects of Catholicism – no holy water on the dresser or scapulars under the work clothes. And, arguably, much of his faith might have been rooted in cultural identity; it was a way to stay connected to a family and a history that had been torn from him.

But his actions spoke volumes. He did not miss mass on a Sunday, even on vacation. He made generous weekly donations to the Church. Most notably, he took seriously the scripture that “whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.”

And yes, he raised his children Catholic. And, no, I don’t resent him for it. In fact, I admire him for it. He made a promise when he married to raise his children in faith, and my dad kept his promises. Besides, his faith meant so much to him, why wouldn't he share it with the people he loved the most? It was a gift born of love.

Even when I was old enough to drive, he would get home from the 6am mass and then wake me and boot me out of the house to “get my churchin’” in time for the late mass. I often secretly went to Burger King instead – I was a rebellious kid – but his actions sent an important message. Promises. Commitment. Belief in something bigger than yourself. These things matter. This is not to say that you need faith to pass good values to your children. Some of the most ethical people I know are atheists. But faith was the vehicle through which my father taught me those values and, for that, that faith was precious.

I’m perplexed by the common assertion that no good can ever come from faith, when my own relationship with Catholicism is so nuanced and ambivalent, flushed with the good and the bad. And I deeply resent the accusation that I have been brainwashed, or worse yet, abused, by parents who chose to raise me in faith.

Yes, I am acutely aware that the patriarchy of the Catholic Church has a long and continuing history of complicity with misogyny, xenophobia, homophobia and, tragically, child abuse. It was for these reasons and more that I followed my conscience away from the faith of my father. But the Catholic Church also hasa long history of promoting social justice. St Francis. Dorothy Day. Sister Helen Prejean. And, in his smaller way, Ed McKeown. Catholicism is, after all, a faith dedicated to the worship of a man / god who taught us that “Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.” To focus only on the bad while ignoring the good, is, in my mind, to do an injustice to the world’s nearly 1.2 billion Catholics. And it is to do an injustice to people like my father, people called by their faith to charity, compassion and tolerance.

I am flummoxed by those who claim to be on the side of reason and justice, but say unreasonable and unjust things. So much of the public discourse – from public academics to facebook walls – is about how faith is nothing but a force for bad, how it “causes” violence. I find this way of thinking dangerously reductionist, ignoring as it does all the other human and geopolitical forces that lead to conflict. Sure, religion plays a role in the dangerous game of identity politics. But sectarian strife, as far as I can tell, is rarely about legitimate theological disagreements. Your average Northern Irish paramilitary probably doesn't care too much about the literal transubstantiation of Christ or the nature of the Trinity.

With all due respect to John Lennon, if faith and religion disappeared tomorrow, we suddenly wouldn’t find ourselves in a halcyon new tomorrow where we all hold hands and get along. We’d find some other cloak in which to wrap up our prejudices and hatreds. Because people are people.  We will always be fighting against greed and anger and jealously and all the ugly parts of our nature. Sometimes religion will be our ally in that fight, and sometimes it will be our foe.

Amongst the more strident public voices are sometimes the quieter voices of those whom I love and respect. In their understandable passion to push back against the small-mindedness that permeates the viewpoints of many – though I believe not most – people of faith, they say things in a way that is unnecessarily disrespectful. I try not to be overly sensitive and humourless; after all, who doesn't love Father Ted? But it can be a fine line between humorous and hurtful.

It's just that whenever I hear a snarky, dismissive comment about the “magical book of stories” or “imaginary sky friend”, it feels like fighting intolerance with more intolerance. Those comments usually reveal a lack of respect in the faith of others. That attitude says, “I have nothing to learn from you and your silly beliefs”. It shuts off the chance for dialogue and understanding, which is, incidentally, often exactly what irritates the non-theists about the more strident “Warriors for God” types. I guess I am an idealist enough to believe that as long as you approach me with an attitude of mutual respect, there’s a whole lot I can learn from you, regardless of your faith.

And I completely baffled by the oft made assumption that by raising me in faith, my father was not also raising me in reason. As if believing in God is prima facie proof of one’s ignorance and backwardness. My dad loved science and math. As a road builder, he talked to little girl me about pre-stressed concrete and the structural integrity of bridges. Granted, I grew up to be a humanities geek and don’t remember a lot of that stuff now. But he also taught me to be a critical thinker and question what I was told. And that lesson did stick.

The truth is there are many good people of faith (and of many faiths) like my dad. Though he will, of course, always be my favourite teacher. I try to follow his example every day, with not nearly as much success as I would like. But when I fail, that’s OK, because one of the gifts my lapsed Catholicism has bequeathed me is a belief the healing value of forgiveness, even, and perhaps especially, forgiveness of one’s self. It is through forgiveness that I have come back to equanimity with, if not adherence to, the Catholic Church.

Has the Church perpetuated some unspeakable wrongs in the world?  Yes. Should those wrongs be challenged? Absolutely. 
 
But has it also been a force for good? Yes. My dad was proof of that.

And do I believe that people like my dad, people whose faith is so integral to their selves, deserve better than to have that faith ridiculed, patronised, dismissed and maligned in the ostensible pursuit of “reason” and “tolerance”? 

Yeah, I do.