Where are the Men? Part 2

May 18, 2010 by  
Filed under Blog

In the last post, I mentioned how while attending a Saturday evening Vigil Mass at a local parish, I noticed that only 4 of 31 servant-leadership roles were filled by men.  Of those 4 positions of service, 1  was a young boy altar server, 2 were Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion and 1 was in the happy happy clap clap band.  The problem is not the women, the problem is the men.  Here’s why…

binocularsWhen men are absent from servant-leadership (in anything, not just at Mass) the ‘thing’ does not function properly.  When a father is absent from his family, when a husband is absent from his wife, when a priest is absent from his parish, when a coach is absent from his team, when a boss is absent from his employees, when a commander is absent from his troops… the family, marriage, parish, team, company and unit do not function correctly.  At Mass, specifically, we must correct the dysfunctions because they are widespread and have a large scope of influence.  The way to correct the dysfunction is to encourage and challenge men to act in the way in which God created them to be.  To grasp this picture, let’s look at the creation account in the Book of Genesis.

God created Adam.  From Adam’s side, He created Eve.  Adam was commanded by God to “shamar” the garden.  Shamar is Hebrew for cultivate, protect, care for, etc.  It was Adam’s job to cultivate the land, protect the garden, his wife and all of creation, but from the onset, Adam dropped the ball.  When the serpent convinced Eve to eat of the fruit, where was Adam?  Gone in another place in the garden?  No.  Was he over at some buddy’s house drinking a cold one, watching the big game?  No.  He was right beside her!  [After all, she turned and handed him the fruit that she had just eaten from.]  He was neglecting to protect the garden and his wife and failed to do what God created him to do.  The Fall = Adam’s fault!  When this sort of behavior (when men fail to cultivate, protect and care for) continues to prevail, the Church suffers greatly.

The choices Adam made are, in some way, the same decisions that many Catholic men today are making.  Instead of cultivating the Church, protecting the Church and caring for the Church, men sit back and allow women to ‘do’.  If you look at parishes and/or dioceses that are incredibly strong, that have great priests, that have large properly-functioning families and they have large numbers of seminarians, you’ll see that it is almost undoubtedly because men are involved as leaders!

The problem with men sitting back and allowing women (who are willing and ready to step in) to fill the gap is that the general population of men either don’t attend Mass or simply lose interest, although their backside is filling a spot in the pew.  This sort of behavior teaches children that men don’t need faith and that faith is a ‘woman’s thing’.  Many men believe that faith, religion, prayer, devotion, etc. is feminine and actually, anti-masculine.  They couldn’t be further from the truth.  As I have stated many times before, being manly means that a man is virtuous.  Faith, Hope and Love, the Theological Virtues, are the real signs of manliness.  In an upcoming post, I will continue with the thought of what happens when men and women don’t fulfill their roles and how it affects the Church as a whole, titled “The Church: By Women, For Women.”

TrueMan up!

Comments

5 Responses to “Where are the Men? Part 2”
  1. Melanie says:

    Dave, my eyeballs nearly fell out of my head when I read: “The Fall = Adam’s fault!” This is honestly the first time I’ve heard anyone shift the blame away from Eve. She always gets the rotten end of the fruit. But on a serious note, thank you for this post. I agree that we need more men involved at the parish level. It’s wonderful that women are quick to volunteer and put their faith in action, but it’s so important, especially for young children, to see men putting their’s in action too. Bravo!

  2. Linda Foreman says:

    Amen, Amen, Amen, Amen!!!!!!

  3. Tim says:

    In reflecting on this, I see your point. In my mind, this part of the story is to convey how sin entered into the world. But there are many things left unsaid.
    Manhood, I believe, must be learned from other men. Did Adam pay attention in class? Growing up, did he ever have to use or practice this skill of defending anything? Did he have an army drill Sargent explain what Shamar meant? Did Adam pass basic training? Did Adam have the brick building skills to wall in the garden? Sorry, did he have a kiln to make brinks? Sorry again, did he even know how to make a brick since This Old House was not on TV yet? Was the project rushed ( the wall was 2 feet tall at the time of the attack due to labor shortage issues?) I don’t mean to blame God here. I think it points out that Men, including myself, can only learn skills by watching other successful men do them and then have some sort of mentor to show them how to do it. It also shows, men without the company of other holy and successful men to which he is accountable, can be manipulated to vary from path God calls us to.

    Blessed by Jesus Christ, true God and true Man.

  4. admin says:

    Tim,
    Your point is very well taken, as I agree that MALES MUST LEARN FROM MEN! This is an essential aspect to passing on TrueManhood. However, I have to believe that God set Adam up for success, and intended everything to succeed. After all, God (Abba, which means “Daddy”) wants what is best for His children, and doesn’t give us anything we can’t handle. I submit that Adam was capable of shamaring successfully, however wasn’t aware enough to know that the serpent was endangering his family, home and security within the garden. This leads me to a thought… we MUST stop making excuses for males! Males can no longer be pitied b/c they don’t have good role models, good foundations, good motivations. Each guy, everywhere, must stop making excuses and man up. Zip up your man suit and make a difference in this world! Excuses get us nowhere, except where we are.

    TrueMan up!
    Dave

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