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Lay Witness
The Forgotten [Lost] Generation
Reaching Out to Catholic Singles
by Mary Beth Bonacci
Single adults are a forgotten demographic.
I suppose there’s a reason for
that. After all, we’re really not supposed to exist. A couple
of generations ago, we didn’t. Children grew up, went to college,
and then got married. Some entered the seminary or the convent,
but they were hardly considered "single." Very few
others remained unmarried past their 25th birthdays.
Parishes, therefore, were set
up accordingly. We had Catholic grade schools and Catholic
high schools. When we lost the parish high schools, we started
parish youth groups. And then we had marriage prep, followed
by the PTA. Nothing in between.
So, as people start marrying later
in life, single adults hung around the margins of their parishes.
They registered as "families," attended Mass, and
tried to find a place to fit in. Many dropped out all together,
having grown up in an era which questions everything, and
having failed to find answers to their Catholic questions
in CCD programs which too often focused on making rainbows
and collages.
Too Far Gone
Some parishes, to their credit,
really did try. They saw these marginalized single adults,
and tried to help. But their early attempts at single adult
ministry amounted to little more than sticking all of the
unmarried parishioners in a room together in the hopes that
they’d all pair off and eventually join the PTA. These programs
did very little to help these single people in their faith
struggles. And they obviously did nothing for the legions
of single Catholics who had already dropped out.
And so I, as a single adult Catholic,
go through my day running into other single people—people
who "used to be" Catholic. People who "are"
Catholic only attend Mass when they get around to it. Others
consider themselves Catholic, but obviously don’t believe
all of those "childish," "backward," "repressed"
teachings coming from Rome. Their eighth grade CCD "education"
just isn’t cutting it in the real world.
And, as a Church, I get the impression
that we’ve given up on these people. Many of them are very
sophisticated, very intelligent. We don’t know what we could
possibly say to bring them back. We assume that they’re "too
far gone" for us to reach anymore. So we basically give
up on them and concentrate on the youth, hoping to avert the
same mistake in the next generation.
Don’t get me wrong—I have no problem
with paying a lot of attention to Catholic youth. I do that
myself. It’s just that I think it’s a little premature to
give up on Catholic, or formerly Catholic, single adults.
They’re a lot more open than we may think.
Never Too Late
Single adults are, for the most
part, very spiritually hungry. They often have what the rest
of the world craves—lots of disposable income. And yet they,
more than anybody else, realize that there must be more to
life. They crave meaning, they crave connection, they crave
love.
What do we as Catholics offer?
We offer meaning. We offer connection. And, most importantly,
we offer the source of all real love, Jesus Christ Himself.
But we’re not offering it to them. So they’re looking elsewhere.
In new age spirituality. In human relationships. In sexual
activity.
I want to talk about that sexual
activity for a while. I’m considered an "expert"
(if there is such a thing) on chastity. I’ve worked for many
years promoting the virtue. And I keep hearing the same thing
over and over: "We’ve got to get to them earlier. By
high school, it’s too late." And yes, if we’re talking
about first-time loss of virginity, that sadly may be true.
But since when do we believe that once somebody has sinned,
it’s "too late"? It’s a good thing Christ didn’t
think that way, or Mary Magdalen’s story would have ended
much differently.
I must admit that, when I first
began speaking on chastity, I bought into this mentality myself.
I was confident in my ability to influence teenagers. But
when it came to my peers I was, to be perfectly honest, a
little intimidated. After all, they were much more "worldly"
than I was. How could I possibly influence them?
But then it started to happen.
The youth ministers standing in the back of the room would
come to me after the talk. "I thought this was going
to be just for the teenagers, but what you said really touched
me personally." Their lives started changing. They started
becoming active in my work. And so it became clear to me that
there is no statute of limitations on God’s plan.
Therefore I began working with
single adults—the part of my work that I now enjoy most. I
love sharing with them the beauty of God’s plan for human
sexuality. I love giving them the secret to real love—the
love they’ve been craving and seeking in vain for so many
years. I love seeing the lights go on in their minds as they
begin to comprehend the reasons for their frustrated search.
I love showing them the light at the end of the tunnel.
Still Looking for Love
As I work with single adults,
I hear one question over and over: "Why haven’t I ever
heard this before? Why didn’t I hear this sooner, before I
made all of these mistakes?" Yes, they’ve been sexually
active. Some have been very sexually active. We may
think that makes it more difficult to reach them. But in a
sense, that history makes them easier to reach. When
I explain the emotional and spiritual consequences of extra-marital
sex to youth, they have to take it on faith that I’m telling
them the truth. Sexually active adults know what I’m
talking about. They know from painful personal experience.
They’ve lived those consequences. Their main problem
has been that nobody ever identified the source of their pain.
But once that identification comes, many are open to the message
of chastity.
Human sexuality is a beautiful
gift from God. It has a meaning—total, permanent self-gift.
When we speak the language of sexuality honestly, it’s an
amazingly powerful act of love. When we try to take it outside
of that meaning, it causes physical, emotional, and spiritual
damage. The message of chastity is that living respect for
ourselves and our sexuality is the best and surest way to
find real, honest love in our lives. That message applies
to everyone, in every state of life.
It also appeals to everyone,
in every state of life, especially when it’s presented as
the beautiful, positive truth that it is. And we, as Catholics,
need to stop being intimidated by what we perceive as a worldliness
or a sophistication that would dismiss our message. We need
to reach out to our brothers and sisters—particularly our
single brothers and sisters, with the truth about love,
about Christ, and about human sexuality.
They’re a lot more open than we may think.
Mary Beth Bonacci is a speaker, syndicated columnist,
and author of several books and videos on chastity. Her materials
may be obtained by calling Real Love Productions as 1-888-NO
PIZZA (888-667-4992) or via her website at www.reallove.net.
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