Faithful, Engrossing - A Cultural Game-Changer
In the summer of 2009, following a story on ABC's Nightline, criticism of Christopher West came fast and furious: "He's leading people into dangerous waters . . . West isn't doing justice to John Paul II's Theology of the Body . . . He doesn't take into account the incredible strength of concupiscence, and his readers and listeners are going to be caught off-guard." To me, it appeared that West's critics would be comfortable affirming that Jesus could empower people to overcome sin - racism, drunkeness, the hunger for revenge, etc. -and actually live as blazing examples of those sins' opposing virtues . . . but He could not give them a real, sustained victory over lust. In that one area we seemed forever doomed to live on a precipice. West on the other hand seemed to completely embrace the rich spiritual theology of the Catholic Church, and especially that of St. John of the Cross. St John, the Church's mystical Doctor, taught that God can bring us into a "transforming union" with Himself, one that allows us to conquer temptations and take on the image of Christ, albeit with some slight imperfections, even in this life! Jesus' desire is to bring healing and wholeness to the whole person - and sexuality is an integral part of who we are as human beings. "I have come that they may have life and have it to the full" (Jn.10:10).
So imagine my excitement when I saw the title of Christopher West's new book, "At the Heart of the Gospel: Reclaiming the Body for the New Evangelization." Does West answer his critics? Yes, and with a tremendous amount of charity. Hats off to him for taking those criticisms to prayer, reflecting upon them, and emerging with an even stronger presentation of Theology of the Body (TOB hereafter) to show for it. Throughout this new book he anchors his explanation of TOB with quotations from John Paul II's text as well as Scripture and the Catechism. He supports his points with TOB commentary from theological heavy weights like Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) and Dr. Michael Waldstein (who in 2006, made the new, critical translation of John Paul's TOB), and offers supporting insights from bedrocks of orthodoxy such as Fulton J. Sheen. I have absolutely no doubts that what West gives readers is a completely faithful presentation of John Paul's thought, accessible to today's culture.
Christopher West does a masterful job of teaching us the true value of the body within Christian Faith. As much as the world around us - and even our own poor catechesis - would like to characterize Christianity as souls seeking release from sinful flesh, nothing could be further from the truth. The great scandal of Christianity - as opposed to the Platonism of the Greeks, or the Cartesian duality of today - is the conviction that God not only descended into human flesh but, through the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ, has raised it to literally unimaginable heights. The goal, the victory, we Christians await is not our souls' liberation from the body and the spiritual experience of heaven, but the glorification of both soul and body on the day Christ brings heaven to earth!
I did find myself taken aback at several points in the book - not from anything irreverent or immodest on West's part, but by the depth of the Holy Father's reflection. Allow me to site one example: the Holy Father's vision of marriage as the "primordial sacrament" (TOB 97:2). Prior to humanity's fa
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