One piece that caught my eye is the reproduction of an article by Virgil Michel, OSB, written during the Depression, entitled City or Farm? In it he describes the importance of an awareness of nature and man’s place within it. He was an advocate of back-to-the-land movements in the context of the typical cityscape of 1939. He describes how people were so unaware of where their milk came from that a cow was paraded through the streets of one metropolis in order to show them.
In thoughtful commentary which accompanies it, the Adoremus Editors point out that this is a subject important “not only for its own relevance
to the life of grace generally,
but as a topic supremely relevant to the
celebration of and participation in the
Church’s sacred liturgy”. The glory of nature directs man to God, reflects the pattern of our worship, and inspires us to want to do so.
Some may feel that the cities of 2015 are not much better - I guess it depends on which city and which part the city we want to focus on. I can think of cities at both ends of the spectrum. Nevertheless the points that Virgil Michel makes will almost certainly resonate with many today, if the reactions to my recent article about gardening and Christian environmentalism are anything to go by! I think that the editors hit the nail on the head when they comment on this and say “...it must be acknowledged
at the same time that the city is
also a key locus for the Christian faith.
It is toward the heavenly city of Jerusalem
that we journey. (Rev. 21:2)”
For my part, I think that the answer to the question, “City or Farm?” is neither one nor the other, but both. The ideal is a society in which each has his part to play and this incorporates city and farm...and garden! This is the glory of man in harmony with the rest of creation, in which both the culture and the cultus (field) point to the cult (the liturgy), and each is derived from the forms contained within the liturgy.
The link to the Adoremus website is here; while the link through to the online presentation of the Bulletin itself is here.
The cover image of the bulletin shows a wall panel from the Newman Center at Lincoln, Nebraska. I love this depiction of the dove of the Holy Spirit, with the Romanesque style design behind it, an image which speaks to the discussion on the Sacrament of Confirmation.
and here’s the full panel in situ:
The cover image of the bulletin shows a wall panel from the Newman Center at Lincoln, Nebraska. I love this depiction of the dove of the Holy Spirit, with the Romanesque style design behind it, an image which speaks to the discussion on the Sacrament of Confirmation.
and here’s the full panel in situ: