In preparation for a faculty in-service at Bishop McGuinness Catholic High School, I reread this summer C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce. The title pays homage to William Blake’s poem The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. In Lewis’ short story (less than 150 pages), we follow the narrator on a bus ride to a fantastical place along with many grumpy passengers. When they disembark, they are revealed to be ghosts. There are a number of descriptions that seek to pin down the precise meaning of Lewis’ allegory. I have always described it as souls from hell are given one day at the doors of paradise, but must confront someone they knew in life who is now in heaven. The dialogue is fast-paced and makes the reader reflect about their own actions, responses, and priority of loves in their own life, but weighed against the love they have for heaven.
In terms of southern, Catholic authors, Flannery O’Connor and Walker Percy are two of my favorites. Walker Percy (1916-1990) lived most of his life in Louisiana and was an Oblate of St. Benedict. He was trained as a physician but, after contracting tuberculosis, dedicated his life to philosophy and writing. This summer, I read Percy’s last novel The Thanatos Syndrome, published in 1987. It is a sequel to Love in the Ruins. It is set in the not-too-distant future in a town where residents are experiencing “off” behaviors. It follows a psychiatrist and lapsed Catholic who returns to his hometown and begins observing strange behaviors in the residents, including his wife with whom he is no longer in love. He feels compelled with the assistance of his cousin to figure out what the root cause is. One element that I enjoy in Percy’s novels is that there is always a fallen priest character that is secondary to the main plot. In The Thanatos Syndrome, the local parish priest has been replaced because he has given up the ministry and run off to live in a wildfire watch tower in a nearby National Forest. The interchanges between the psychiatrist and priest are comical, enlightening, and quite on the nose about fallen human nature. Altogether, the novel moves briskly in its plot as it introduces a number of poignant themes: the fallen hero; a world gone crazy; science’s role in the devaluing of human dignity; and the inability of society to function without a shared language and shared moral values. As a caveat, let me be clear, this is not a novel for young ones as there are some adult themes present.
Saturday 4 PM
Sunday 8 AM, 11 AM
& 2 PM (Spanish)
Tuesday 12:30 PM
Wednesday 6:15 PM
Thursday & Friday 9 AM
Unless otherwise advertised:
Vigil: 7 PM
Holy Day: 9 AM, 12:30 PM, 7PM (Spanish)
**Please see the parish calendar for the schedule on a particular Holy Day or Feast.
616 South Cherry Street
Kernersville, NC 27284
Phone: 336-996-5109
Fax: 336-996-5669
Mon, Tue, Thu 9:00 am - 3:00 pm
Wednesday. 2:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Friday 9:00 am - 2:00 pm
Saturday 2:30 pm - 5:30 pm
Sunday 9:00 am - 2:00 pm