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Sample Pages from [em]Reclaiming America's Children: Raising and Educating Morally Healthy Kids[/em] by Michelle Willis

CHAPTER 2

PERMISSIVE PARENTING: ENHANCING IMPULSIVENESS, MINIMIZING CONSCIENCE

In study after study the child-rearing factors associated with aggression and delinquency are described in similar language. Several well-known studies have presented a picture from which two basic dimensions of parenting styles emerge: warm vs. cold and permissive vs. restrictive.

WARM PARENTAL STYLE: A warm parent is approving and supportive of the child, frequently employs praise as a reinforcement for good behavior and explains the reasons for rules.

COLD PARENTAL STYLE: A cold parent acts in the opposite manner, frequently displaying irritability, passiveness or indifference, and relying more on negative than on positive reinforcements.

RESTRICTIVE PARENTAL STYLE: The mother or father states clear rules, monitors behavior to insure that it conforms to those rules and reinforces compliance by the consistent and contingent use of reinforcement.

PERMISSIVE PARENTAL STYLE: Permissive parents fail to do these things though they imagine they do them because they are always yelling at the child, but inconsistent and ineffectual nattering is not a form of control that alters behavior in accordance with parental intentions.

In New Directions For Child Development (A Socioanalytic Theory of Moral Development), authors Hogan, Johnson and Elmer projected the general outcome of four parenting style combinations: warm-restrictive, warm-permissive, cold-restrictive, and cold-permissive.

WARM-RESTRICTlVE: These parents are highly supportive, loving, and often praise their children, but they are consistent about monitoring behavior and compliance with rules. They set and maintain clear, fair, and consistent boundaries. "Their children will value adult approval, readily internalize rules and be rule abiding."

WARM-PERMISSlVE: These parents are approving, loving and supportive, but inconsistent about monitoring behavior and compliance to rules. They often nag at or verbally reprimand the child, but seldom back up their words with consistent action. It is not uncommon for parents of this style to let the "little stuff' slide, and oftentimes they permit behaviors to continue which need correcting. "Their children will be self-confident and socially outgoing, but will frequently ignore or bend the rules; in everyday language they will be affable, but spoiled."

COLD-RESTRICTIVE: These parents display irritability and are often harsh to the child. They are insistent on the rules and sometimes inflict harsh punishment. This style is not uncommon in alcoholic or drug-abusing parents. "Their children will be anxious and sullen, but compliant: their anger may be turned inward on themselves."

COLD-PERMISSIVE: These parents are irritable, very often indifferent and inconsistent disciplinarians. They will sometimes react harshly over small infractions, while at other times they will pay little attention to the child or show little genuine concern. This style is also not uncommon in alcoholic or drug-abusing parents. Children from cold-permissive families are very much on their own in the world. These children "will be hostile and rule-defying, with a high probability of delinquency."

Recall what was said earlier regarding the shift in parenting advice, namely, that over the last several decades parents were advised to raise more self-expressive children. The advice shifted toward the style described above as warm-permissive. There is evidence that permissive parenting both enhances impulsiveness and minimizes the function of the conscience.

During the same period of time in which warm-permissive parenting was popularized, beginning with the late 1950s, there emerged also an expanding drug culture, a generation, many who are parents today. A significant number of these parents have retained their alcohol and drug habits. While the psychological "experts" called for warm-permissive parenting, the reality of the drug culture created a permissive style that was cold in nature. The former gave us children who are socially outgoing but who frequently ignore or bend the rules, while the latter produced children who tend to be sullen, hostile, or rule defying.

A famous study by D. J. West and D. P. Farrington published in 1973 entitled "Who Becomes Delinquent?" followed the careers of 411 boys chosen at random from a working class section of London. The study followed the boys from age eight to age seventeen. Although there were some questionable assumptions brought forth by the study, what many felt was indisputable in the London study was the impact of adverse child rearing practices.

" A particularly noticeable characteristic of the parents of many of the delinquents in the study was carelessness or laxness in matters of supervision. They were less concerned than other parents to watch over or to know about their children's doings, whereabouts and companions, and they failed to enforce or to formulate fixed rules about such things as punctuality, manners, bedtime, television viewing or tidying Up."

Although the constitutional make-up of children differs regarding their tendency and willingness to internalize rules and regulations, parental supervision and consistent monitoring of a child's behavior does affect, to some degree, whether or not and to what extent that child develops his own inner controls, or what is called an "operational conscience."

Since inner controls are absorbed by the child from the outer controls applied by a child's parents and by other authority figures, a child whose parents fail to set clear, fair, and consistent boundaries will show marked weakness in monitoring his own behavior. He is likely, not only to be more impulsive, but also to have less "bite of conscience" for his inappropriate actions.

It is innate for a child to believe that if the parent does not disapprove of certain behavior then that form of behavior is acceptable. Like the parents in the London study, permissive parents will probably provide less direct supervision and will either fail to formulate fixed rules or tend to overlook non-compliance to such things as manners, punctuality, bedtime, picking up after oneself, tone of voice, accountability for school performance, etc. They may yell at or nag the child and thus think they are good disciplinarians, but they seldom enforce compliance in a consistent manner. Since there is no actual consequence involved with repeated verbal reprimands, a child soon learns that his parent's scoldings mean very little, carry little weight and seldom, if ever, are followed by an actual consequence. He quickly learns to ignore them.

It works the same way in a classroom. Warm-restrictive teachers will encourage students through a genuine caring manner, but they will consistently monitor compliance regarding proper conduct. Warm-permissive teachers, on the other hand, will use repeated verbal warnings or reprimands and seldom take action until having overstepped their level of tolerance. Often permissive teachers yell at or nag students, thinking they are good disciplinarians, but just as in the home, inconsistent, ineffectual nattering in the classroom is not a form of control that alters behavior in a positive way.

Travis Hirschi, known best for his "social control theory," has concluded that parents can affect the behavior of their offspring in two ways: first, by instilling a desire for their approval, and second, by making that approval contingent on proper behavior. "Some parents, however much they want their children to value their approval, lack the inclination or the ability to make their rewards contingent on the child's displaying the behavior necessary to win that approval."

In a roundabout way, parents and teachers have been led to believe that it is wrong to inspire children to behave or perform in certain ways to win their approval. They have been told over and over that their love for a child should be "unconditional." Both humanistic psychology and "new age" thinking emphasize the importance of "unconditional love," but separating the person from his behavior is not easily accomplished. In everyday practice, the theory of "unconditional love" has often resulted in unconditional approval of behavior. Led by humanist psychologists, parents have come to believe that permissive parenting is loving parenting. They are afraid of damaging a child's self-esteem and equally fearful of hampering his natural self-expression. It has even been subtly suggested by mental health professionals that parents and teachers who strive to uphold standards for behavior have an unconscious, ulterior need for power and control.

While it is true that in an emotionally healthy family a child will not have to "win" the love of his parents, it does not necessarily mean he may not have to gain their approval by adhering to appropriate standards for behavior. As Dr. Samenow has stated:

"Being firm does not call for being any less loving, and it certainly does not call for harshness or abuse. Parents who equate leniency with love often have unceasing difficulty controlling their children. Life holds consequences for irresponsible and destructive behavior. What could be more loving than to help a child learn this early, when penalties for misbehavior are far less severe than they will be later in life."

It might be helpful for parents to remember that "moral choices are determined by moral conscience, which is shaped early in life and most profoundly by the family." That children should be free spirits is a mistaken idea. That imposing standards, obligations, or requirements deprives a child of his childhood is an idea that undermines the very fiber of a child's character. Of course we remember the horror stories of the past when children, robbed of their childhood, were forced into long hours of hard labor, but that is no longer the case. Today's children have been robbed of appropriate responsibility, their need for limits and boundaries denied them by permissive parents. "Failure to set limits may have disastrous results. These parents do not realize that a boy or a girl who receives little discipline may find it difficult to become self-disciplined."

Public classrooms are filled with unruly, undisciplined children. If, as a caring parent, you want your child to get the best education possible, you must send him to school prepared to learn, prepared to listen, to concentrate, and to behave appropriately. Teachers have to spend too much of their instructional time just trying to control student behavior. The energy it takes is tremendous, and the energy and time wasted because of misbehaving students is taking its toll on the effectiveness of education.

Today, parents tend to blame teachers when their children do not do well in school. This is, again, a result of the permissive parenting trend in which parents and authority figures look at forces outside the child as the cause for failure, rather than hold the child, himself, accountable for his poor performance. Teachers, while absorbing the blame, know how hard they work to educate children and how increasingly difficult that becomes as the students become increasingly unruly and undisciplined.

Parents must teach children to monitor their behavior, and they must not fail to hold their children accountable for misbehavior. Making excuses for a child teaches him to make excuses for himself. Placing blame on outside forces inhibits the development of an operational conscience. A child who does not develop an operational conscience when he is young will be better equipped to ignore the voice of conscience when it is convenient for him to do so later.

IN SUMMARY

While there are no guaranteed formulas for child rearing, and while each child comes into the world with his own unique set of qualities and his own disposition, certain parental factors do appear to hinder healthy morality while others enhance it. Parents and teachers alike can benefit by developing an overall style of discipline that is warm-restrictive in nature.

HELPFUL TIPS

I. Develop a warm-restrictive parenting/discipline style.

2. Remember that adult supervision and consistent monitoring of a child's behavior (different from nagging) are necessary factors in helping a child develop his own inner controls.

3. Keep in mind that repeated verbal reprimands and continual nagging do little to change behavior. Rather than utilizing repeated verbal warnings and threats, state expectations clearly, give one warning stating what the consequence will be if compliance does not follow, then calmly follow through with the consequence. Consistency of this caliber is amazingly effective, and it does not take many instances of this type of discipline to let a child know you mean what you say. (This works in the classroom, too.)

4. Consequences can be simple. They need not be harsh or abusive. It is the consistency in following through that carries the real clout.

5. "Being firm does not call for being any less loving and it certainly does not call for harshness or abuse."

6. Parents can affect the behavior of their children by instilling a desire for their approval and by making that approval contingent on proper behavior.

7. Parents and teachers should not mistake unconditional love for unconditional approval of behavior, nor must they be daunted by those who suggest that setting and upholding standards for behavior is the manifestation of some unhealthy, unconscious need for control and power.

8. Provide appropriate opportunities for a child to have some on-going responsibility.

9. Parents: Do not blame teachers when your child does not do well in school. If teachers were the problem, then all students would be doing poorly. That is certainly not the case. Teachers: Help parents to understand the importance of holding the child responsible for his poor performance.

10. Remember that making excuses for a child teachs him to conveniently excuse himself.

11. Do not inhibit the development of an operational conscience by placing blame on outside forces. Help your child to focus on himself and to make adjustments in his own behavior and attitude. Thinking that other people are the source of one's problems is a major characteristic of the antisocial person.

12. Above all, remember that a child who does not develop an operational conscience when he is young will find it easier to turn off the voice of conscience later .

13. Special Note: Parents and teachers of learning disabled students have an additional, and often, difficult task. They must find and maintain that acute balance between making allowances for a child's legitimate disability and reinforcing a child's sense of personal responsibility for his behavior and performance. As is the case with all children, learning disabled students must develop an operational conscience, and, like all children, when excuses are conveniently offered for them by others, they learn to conveniently excuse themselves.


Excerpted from Reclaiming America's Children: Raising and Educating Morally Healthy Kids by Michelle Willis Copyright 1991, Ocean East Publishing, Used with permission of the author

Sample Pages from [em]Red Hugh, Prince of Donegal[/em] by Robert T. Reilly

Foreword

"A TALE THAT IS not told dies." That’s what the old Irish storytellers like to say as they light their clay pipes from the turf fire and launch into a fanciful report on the legendary ghosts of their region or the "little folk" that do be bothering the lonesome traveler.

But sometimes their story is true—as this one is. And evenings when the embers are smoldering and the crickets scuttling among the warm ashes, the ancient Gaelic narrators hold their audiences spellbound with the tale of Red Hugh O’Donnell.

Red Hugh lived at a time when the first settlers from the Old World were eyeing the new continent, America. Shakespeare was writing his great plays and England defeated the Spanish Armada to become "Mistress of the Seas." During his lifetime, gunpowder was to become more prominent as a weapon of war and, less than twenty years after his death, the Pilgrim Fathers would land on Plymouth Rock.

His mother, Ineen Duive, was one of those remarkable warrior queens for which Ireland is famous. Her exploits serve to place her beside the fabled Maeve and Scota. But she had her gentle side, one that was in keeping with the true chivalric spirit of Ireland during those years.

On the Elizabethan maps, the gallant MacSweeney appeared as two crossed battle-axes, the symbol of his military might. His loyalty to his neighbor in Donegal is spoken of proudly by those who prize such virtues.

Every royal family had its own poet or shanachie and in Martin of Cloghan we shall find all of the features of the true bard. Contrary to current belief, the poet was not a weak and feminine man whose verses were his single attribute. He was often a fine warrior who rode into battle with his lord.

Villains there are, too, in this old tale. The English viceroys bore the brunt of the Irish hatred but behind all of their scheming rises the figure of Elizabeth, the powerful sovereign of that age.

Elizabeth never met Hugh Roe O’Donnell face to face but, in the events that closed both of their lives, they would learn much of each other. During the famous Nine Years’ War which follows the tale you are about to read, O’Donnell and his ally, O’Neill, defeated every army sent against them and turned back the invader on every front. Their defense of their country is one of the noblest chapters in this world’s short history.

But that’s another story—one that has a grown man for its hero. Our hero is yet a boy. The crickets have ceased their chirping and the shanachie has plucked a flaming straw from the warm turf. I believe he’s about to begin his tale.

 

Chapter One

IN THE FAR west of Donegal, where the waters of Lake Eske plunge headlong into the Atlantic, a solitary castle stood guard over a quiet September. Shaped like a sledge it was, with the massive head facing the stream and the long row of stone dwellings forming a handle that stretched to the opposite wall. Low-lying heather and tiny firs dotted the courtyard and repeated the triangular pattern which marked the gabled rooftops. The fortresslike head rose four stories high and towered above the rest of the buildings. Each corner was the base for a turret and the largest of these faced the ocean. There were few windows and these were but wide enough to accommodate the archers.

Surrounding the entire structure was a bawn, a large space enclosed by a stone wall. Within this lived the servants and retainers whose thatched huts ranged around the entire perimeter of the castle. Cattle were sheltered here at night and here, too, was the exercise and game area for the peasants and their lords. The bawn was quiet now. An old man could be seen carrying some turf into his hut and a little girl drove some sheep past the fortress and across the drawbridge to pasture land. A blacksmith’s hammer sounded rhythmically from his shop and a score of busy looms wove a melody about the smithy’s cadence.

From the ramparts of the castle the restless sentries swept the steep banks of the river and, behind them, armed warriors paced warily along the crest of the broad enclosure. Bowmen stood guard over the land approaches and a few small ship’s cannons pointed their iron muzzles toward the open sea. Powder and shot stood nearby and rack after rack of pikes and axes gleamed in the warm autumn sun. If the bawn displayed a people at peace, the fortress disclosed a people ready for war.

And well might the archers be alert and the bold infantrymen, or "gallowglasses," at their posts. For this was the year of our Lord, 1587, and the bright, broad shield of the O’Donnell looked down from the parapet above the moat.

On this stone shield a plump, brown wren roosted, cocked its tail, and then blinking beneath its white brows, sailed into the courtyard and peered boldly from its rock sill at the woman who lodged within.

Ineen Duive O’Donnell, queen of the northern clan, turned for a moment toward the small bird and smiled. Then, placing the palms of her hands against one another, she pressed her slender forefingers against her lips, musingly closed her eyes, and turned slowly back to the men that sat around the table.

Anyone observing her, as she faced the brehons, the Gaelic judges, would note first the deep, jet eyes and the ebon hair that settled easily on her white neck and shoulders. It was these features that had earned for her the title of "The Dark Lady of Donegal." She was a tall, intense woman whose proud carriage and regal presence informed the observer she was born to the throne. She was of the Scottish MacDonnells but had left her homeland years ago when the king of her Irish kinsmen had married her amid the swirl of the pipes and rollicking, kilted dancers. Now Hugh, her husband, was a bedridden invalid and to her fell the task of leadership in the stormy province.

"It is true," she addressed them, with her eyes half shut, "it is true that my son may not please all that meet him nor stir in them the conviction that he should be king. But king he shall be, nonetheless, and the time may be upon us for the crown to pass from his father."

A white-bearded ancient who propped his weary body against the heavy table spoke up for the judges. "Arrah, my lady, it is not that the prince is not well liked. By the saints, the reverse is true. The people love him. But he is young and has the faults of the young."

The queen lifted her head. "Hugh is fifteen," she replied. "My father ruled his clan at that age and I, myself, rode into battle when but a year older."

"Aye," another of the lawgivers interrupted, "it is not the age alone. If you will excuse an old man, we all fear the young prince is impatient and headstrong and not much given to the serious aspect of things."

The Dark Lady smiled patiently. "He is also courageous and clever. You have said so yourselves."

The first brehon made a searching little gesture with his hands and sucked in his breath before he spoke again.

"We know that the English Queen Elizabeth has promised to destroy us. Hour does not replace hour but we are made aware of her threat. Do you think young Hugh can manage her? Can he organize a defense as well as govern a province?"

"I shall be with him in his early years and his father has the wisdom to guide his footsteps."

The brehons exchanged a look of disbelief.

"His father is still the king," she reminded them sharply. Then softening, she added, "And there is the prophecy to consider."

The three judges nodded wearily and the youngest, who had not spoken, said, "The people here believe it, but a prophecy is not proof against Elizabeth’s fleet or her armies."

The queen seated herself at the head of the council table and rested her strong hands on the arms of the oak chair. Behind her, on the rippling arras, were emblazoned in gold the words, "O’Donnell Abu," "O’Donnell to Victory," the battle cry of the clan.

"It was first proclaimed by judges like yourselves," she said at last, "and the legend has swept like a flame across this green land until every hut and every castle wills that it shall come to pass." Her brow furrowed as if she looked past the silent elders, past the dim hanging lamp, and beyond the dark paneled chamber that enclosed the present. "It was said," she continued, "that when Hugh succeeded Hugh, then should Ireland be free. And now, in this generation, does my son Red Hugh sit at the knee of his father, the old Hugh O’Donnell, my husband. When he shall leave that place and seat himself on that timeless throne, then shall the words of ages past be redeemed. We shall see it happen."

There was a long silence in the room, until one of the judges began to speak again.

"My Queen," he said gravely, "do you not think that Elizabeth, too, knows the prophecy? Do you imagine for one whisper of a moment that, cunning as she is, she will see this transpire without a battle?"

Ineen rose, her long garments trailing behind her, and walked again to the window where she allowed the wren to peck at her fingers.

"Och, she is cunning, right enough," she said, smiling, "and schooled in the arts of deceit and intrigue. They say she wears a red wig and has many lovers who flatter her and call her beautiful. Her galleons choke the channel and her warriors mock the challenge of Spain. And yet does she fear me—for I have a son!"

The impertinent little bird scolded the queen for her laughing pride and the old brehons took her bright reverie as a signal for dismissal. The wren wheeled about the fall sky inventing idle melodies. Their complaints expressed in noiseless gestures, the lawgivers drifted back through the cold, dim halls of the castle.


Excerpted from Red Hugh, Prince of Donegal by Robert T. Reilly Copyright 1957/1985, Used with permission from Bethlehem Books

Sample Pages from [em]Saint Athanasius[/em] by F.A. Forbes

Chapter 1

A FORESHADOWING

THE Patriarch of Alexandria, Egypt was expecting company. He stood at the window of his palace looking down the long road, that at the first sign of his guests' arrival he might go forth and welcome them. Before him, like a white pearl in the blue waters of the Mediterranean, lay the city of Alexandria - "the beautiful," as men loved to call it. Across the harbor the marble tower of the great lighthouse soared up into the clear Eastern sky, white as the white cliffs of the Island of Pharos from which it sprang. It was noonday, and the sunshine lay like a veil of gold over all.

The Patriarch's thoughts were wandering in the past. He had been celebrating the anniversary of his holy predecessor Peter, the previous Bishop, who had won the crown of martyrdom during the terrible persecution of the Christians not so many years before. Several of the clergy present had come from afar to assist at the festival, and these were to be his expected guests.

The time of suffering was past and over, and yet it seemed to Alexander as if it had all happened yesterday and might happen again tomorrow. There stood the great palace of the Caesars, where the pagan emperor had sat in judgment upon the lambs of Christ's flock; there the famous temple of Serapis, where the Christians had been dragged to offer incense to the gods; there the amphitheater where they had been torn to pieces by beasts and slain with the sword for confessing the Name of Christ. And all through those , dark days, firm and steadfast as the lighthouse on the cliffs of Pharos, had stood the Patriarch Peter, a tower of strength and comfort to his persecuted children.

A hundred Bishops and more had looked to him as their head, for the See of Alexandria in the East was second only to that of Rome in the West, and the burden of responsibility was heavy. But, thanks to the example of its chief, the Church in Egypt had borne the trial bravely, and if some had quailed before the torture and the rack and had fallen away, by far the greater number had been true. Even the unheroic souls, who had loved their lives better than their God, had not been lost beyond hope, for they had come back during the lulls in the storm, begging to be absolved from their sin. And Peter, mindful of his Master's words that he should not quench the smoking flax nor break the bruised reed, received them back, after they had done penance, into the fold of Christ with mercy and compassion.

There were some who had not scrupled to protest against such mercy. "Were these apostates," cried Meletius, Bishop of Lykopolis, "to be made equal to those who had borne the burden and the heat of the day?" And he had rebelled against the decision of the Patriarch and made a schism in the Church. Even the martyrdom of the holy Peter had not brought him back to his allegiance: the Meletians were rebels still, to the crying scandal of Christians and pagans alike.

They were a hard people to govern, these Alexandrians-subtle, passionate and unstable, ready to follow any preacher of novelties. Alexander half envied Peter his martyr's crown as he stood musing over the past.

What was delaying his guests? he wondered, as he looked down the long road, where there was as yet no sign of them.

On the shore, at a little distance, a group of boys were playing, their bare legs and white tunics flashing hither and thither as they ran. One of them, a tall slim lad, whose aureole of ruddy hair seemed to catch every wandering sunbeam, was evidently directing the game, for all seemed to look to him for orders. "A leader of men," smiled the Patriarch to himself, as a vigorous wave of the boy's hand brought all his companions round him.

They were building some kind of a platform now, on to which he of the ruddy locks was promptly hoisted, while the others appeared to be forming a procession.

"A church ceremony," murmured the Patriarch to himself, remembering his own boyhood days. Presently a little boy advanced solemnly and presented some kind of a vessel to the youthful bishop, who, with a magnificent gesture, beckoned to the procession to approach. Then, as the foremost boy advanced and knelt at his feet, he raised the vessel and poured some of its contents over his head.

"The baptism of the catechumens!" exclaimed the Patriarch; "but this looks a good deal too much like earnest!"

Hastily calling a servant, he bade him go down to the shore and bring up the band of boys who were playing there. Summoned thus hastily to appear before authority, they approached with some uneasiness, and there was a certain amount of scuffling among them which resulted in the appearance of the would-be bishop in the forefront of the group - and where should a bishop be if not at the head of his flock?

"What were you doing down there on the shore?" asked the Patriarch.

The boy's clear eyes looked at him with interest, but without a vestige of fear.

"We were playing," he said. "It was the baptism of the catechumens. I was the bishop, and they" - pointing to his companions - "were the catechumens."

"Are you a Christian?" asked Alexander.

"Yes," answered the boy proudly.

"And these?"

"Catechumens."

"What did you do?"

"I poured the water on them and said the words."

"What words?"

The boy repeated the formula in perfect Greek.

"Did you pour the water as you said the words?"

"Yes."

The Patriarch's face was troubled. "It is a dangerous game to play at," he said. "What would you say if I told you that you had really baptized them?"

The boy looked at him in amazement. "But I am not a bishop," he said.

The Patriarch could not help smiling. "Although the bishop usually does baptize the catechumens," he said, "it is not necessary that it should be a bishop, not even necessary that it should be a priest."

The boy-bishop looked grave, his companions frightened, the Patriarch thoughtful.

"What is your name?" he asked suddenly, laying his hand on the ruddy locks.

"Athanasius," answered the boy.

"What would you like to be?" he asked.

"A priest," was the prompt answer.

"A bishop perhaps?" asked Alexander with a smile; "you think it is an easy and a glorious life?"

The boy's eyes looked straight into the Patriarch's.

"The blessed Peter was a martyr," he answered.

"You need much learning to be a priest."

"I love learning," said the boy.

Alexander noted the broad, intelligent brow, the keen eyes and the clear-cut face before him. His heart went out to this frank and fearless lad who loved the martyrs.

"Come to me this evening, and we will talk of this," he said, for his guests were at last to be seen approaching, and his duty lay with them.

That evening the boy and the Patriarch had much to say to each other as they walked under the palm trees in the garden of the episcopal palace. Alexander learned how Athanasius had been brought up in the Christian Faith under the shadow of the great persecution, among those who counted it the highest honor to shed their blood for Christ. He had been well taught in the famous Greek schools of Alexandria and was full of enthusiasm for the great Greek philosophers and poets. Strong of will, noble of heart and keen of intellect, the boy was born to something great - of that the Patriarch felt assured. The Church had need of such men in these troublous times, when the dangers of heresy had succeeded to those of persecution.

Alexander at once resolved to take Athanasius into his household and to bring him up as his own son, an inspiration for which he was often to thank God in the years to come. The boy soon grew to love the gentle and holy Patriarch, who could act with such strength and decision when it was needful for the good of the Church. He was constantly in touch with men of every rank and country, for Alexandria was a city where people of all nations and of all creeds met. Pagans, Jews and Christians lived side by side in their various quarters; there even existed a set of philosophers who tried to make a religion for themselves out of an amalgamation of several others.

Athanasius was still very young when he began to act as secretary to the Patriarch, accompanying him on all his journeys throughout his vast diocese; and he himself tells us how he stayed , for a time among the monks in the desert of Egypt and how his young soul was set on fire by the holiness of their lives.

Neither science nor logic nor philosophy, offered any difficulty to the brilliant young scholar, whose knowledge of Scripture and of theology was to astonish the men of his time. Alexander himself as he grew older leaned more and more on Athanasius, consulting him, young as he was, on the most important matters.

So the years rolled on, and the boy grew into manhood, "gentle and strong," as we are told by one who knew him, "high in prowess, humble in spirit, full of sympathy, angelic in mind and face." That he would make his mark on the world of his time, few who knew him doubted; but of the dauntless soldier-spirit that slumbered behind that gentle mien, of the steadfast will that no human power could shake, they knew but little. God's moment had not yet come.


Excerpted from Saint Athanasius by F.A. Forbes 1919, TAN Books and Publishers, Used with permission.

Sample Pages from [em]Saint Therese and the Roses[/em] by Helen Walker Homan

Chapter One

French Lace and Fine Jewels

Little Therese sat on the floor at her mother's feet, watching the bright needle as it flew through the cloud of fine lace her mother was making. It was a winter day in the year 1875.

The room was warm and cozy, but outside it was snowing. Therese could see the big soft flakes falling against the window where her mother's chair had been drawn to catch the fading light. Therese was not yet three years old, but she noticed everything.

She was thinking now that the snowflakes outside looked like the lovely white lace growing under her mother's quick fingers. Later she would learn that her mother was the finest maker of lace in the city of Alencon - and that Alencon, France, was the place where the finest lace in all the world was made.

Crawling closer, she pulled herself up by her mother's skirts and toddled to the window. She put her small nose against the pane, wishing with all her heart that she could catch the snowflakes as they fell. Snow did not come often to Alencon, and when it did, it delighted the children.

"Come back, little one", said her mother. "Come back, and sit here with me. The window is cold. Soon your sisters will return, and Celine will play a fine game with you.

But little Therese stayed at the window, and her mother had to rise and carry the small girl back to the cushion at her feet. Therese did not mind, for really her favorite place was on the carpet of the cozy sitting room. It was such a lovely carpet with bright red and pink roses woven on it. Now she stretched down a tiny finger and began to trace the outline of one of the big red roses.

"Rose," she said and smiled up at her mother.

"Yes, dearest," replied her mother, bending to stroke the soft golden curls that crowned the small head. "It is a rose. And when sumemr comes, you will see many like it growing in the garden. Only they will be much lovelier, for they will have been made by the good God himself."

"The good God", repeated Therese. But she said it in French, which has a softer sound. "Le bon Dieu", she said.

Her mother was thinking how prettily she smiled and how large and blue were her eyes.

Just then they heard the outer door open, and the happy voices of Therese's older sisters filled the hall. They had been out for a romp in the snow. In they came, with faces glowing and eyes dancing. Throwing off their wet coats to dry near the stove, they all began talking at once in their rapid French. Their mother thought they sounded like a flock of young birds, chirping among the apple blossoms that bloomed every springtime against the old stone wall in the garden.

Marie, the oldest, with her big, brown eyes, was as tall as her mother. Because she was almost sixteen and helped greatly with the housekeeping, all the others looked up to her. Little Therese, the baby of the family, held up her arms to Marie for a hug and a kiss.

Therese had four sisters. After Marie came Pauline, who was fourteen, but she was away now at boarding school. Next came Leonie, who was twelve; and then Celine, who was six. With Therese, this made five children, four of whom were now gathered about their mother in the warm room.

When Marie had hugged the baby, she reached in her pocket, and to Therese's delight, gave her a small piece of chocolate. Then Marie put her arm about her mother's shoulder and bent down to look at the foam of white lace in her lap.

"It's beautiful, Mother!" exclaimed Marie. "The loveliest you ever made! And who is to be lucky enough to own it?"

"The countess de Montfort ordered it for her daughter's wedding dress. But you do not think the thread is too thin, do you, Marie?" she asked worriedly, bending her head to one side as she held the lace up to the light.

"It's perfect", said Marie. "The bride will look like an angel when she wears it."

But as Marie smiled down into her mother's face, she was troubled. It was a lovely face with its straight, slender nose and its large black eyes full of liveliness. But Marie could see now that her mother looked very tired. Once again she was working too hard.

"Why don't you put your work aside and take a little rest before Father comes home?" Marie asked.

"No, no, dear. I am not tired", replied her mother. "And I have only a little more to finish."

"Well then, there's no excuse for me not to be at work", said Marie gaily. "It's almost time for supper, and Louise will be looking for me in the kitchen." And off she flew.

Louise was the maid who took care of the Martin family. Soon Marie was busy helping her fix the evening meal.

Six-year-old Celine had dropped on the floor beside Therese, who was laughing happily as her sister pretended she was a little dog on all fours, barking and snapping at the chocolate. But the baby held on to it tightly. Everyone in the room was smiling except Leonie.

"Mother," she was saying. "I want to go away to boarding school, like Pauline."

"So you shall, dear, one day," answered her mother.

"But I want to go now," Leonie insisted.

"Why, you are only twelve, Leonie. Pauline, you know, is fourteen."

"But I'm tall for my age, and anyway, I'm tired of it around here."

"Hush, Leonie," said her mother. "You must not let your father hear you say such things. He would be very angry. And he will be home any moment now."

"Father, Father, Father - that's all I hear around this house!" And swooping up her coat, Leonie dashed angrily from the room.

Madame Martin sighed as she laid aside her needle. God had blessed her with five beautiful children. To be sure, had all her children lived, there would have been nine. Yet God was very good to have spared her the five. But why was it that, of these five, there was only one who gave her any trouble? Leonie, Leonie - she must try to help her overcome angry, unhappy moods. Perhaps the reason she was full of moods and hard to please was that she had been quite ill and had almost died when she was a little girl. Perhaps that was why she was not as happy as the others.

When Louis Martin came home, the onion soup was steaming from the heavy kettle that hung in the great open fireplace. Therese heard him at the front door, stamping the snow from hsi feet. Scrambling from her cushion, she toddled as fast as she could to meet him. Her handsoime father swung the child to his shoulder and rubbed his cold cheek against hers. She had her arms tight about his neck, and he went dancing into the sitting room, singing at the same time, "Make way for the Queen! Make way for the Queen!"

That was his special name for Therese; and when he was looking for her, he would always ask the others, "Where is my Little Queen?"

As for Therese, she was never happier than when in her father's arms.

"Leonie, Leonie," called her mother, "your father is home. It's time to prepare Celine and the baby for supper."

As Louis Martin set Therese down and took off his coat, Leonie came slowly down the stairs, thinking, "IF I were at boarding school, I would not have this tiresome task to do every evening." But almost at once she was ashamed of herself for this thought. And when she entered she even managed a smile for her father.

"That's my good Leonie", he said as he kissed her.

Then Leonie felt more ashamed of her bad temper and what it had made her say about him.

When they were alone, Madame Martin asked her husband, "Well, Louis dear, did you have any luck?"

"Yes, indeed, my dear Zelie", he exclaimed as he warmed his feet against the stove. "I showed some pieces of your lace to the head of the great firm of Laurent and Company - the largest in Paris. For the next year, he will buy all we can provide."

"Oh, Louis! How wonderful!" exclaimed Madame Martin. "You are truly very clever at business!"

"Nonsense", replied her husband. "It's only because you are such ana rtist and work so faithfully that the good God has helped us get this order. But now, my dear, you must hire more helpers so that you will be bale to make enough lace for our new customer."

The making of Madame Martin's beautiful lace was not simply. Women had to study and practice for years before they could make it. Madame Martin hired other women to stitch the patterns. But, she herself always did the hardest task; she wove the fine strips together.

"Yes, we shall need more help now that we have this large order. We must double the prayers to our Lady and ask her to keep on blessing the work."

"Do not fear. She never fails us," replied her husband. "It was the same when I had my jewelry shop. Ah, how often did our Lady help me!"

"Your charming shop - and the beautiful jewelry you made with your own hands! You are the artist, not I. Oh, Louis, how I hated to see you give up all that!"

"My dear, your lace brings me as much joy as the other work did. Besides, you were killing yourself with overwork. How could anyone take care of a business, a home, and five children besides? IT was high time that I gave up the shop and turned to helping such a hard-working wife."

Madame Martin smiled gratefully at her husband. "It still troubles me when I think how much you must miss those beautiful jewels."

"I have six beautiful jewels right here in my own home", said Louis Martin, jumping from his chair and lightly kissing her cheek. "And you are the most beautiful of all!"

"Ah, Louis, I shall become vain", laughed Zelie Martin. "Come, let us go to supper."

Therese, holding on to Leonie's hand, now came toddling in with a fresh blue ribbon, the color of her eyes, tied to her tiny curls. Marie was calling them all to supper. When they were seated about the table, her father praised the good onion soup, whose perfume filled the room, and the vegetables Marie and Louise had prepared.

Louise had come toh the Martin family form a French farm. She was almost as wide as she was short, but very strong and active. Now, as she served the meal, she joined in the suppertime talk as though she were one of the family. She laughed loudly at all Louis Martin's jokes, helped Madame Martin to feed Therese, who sat on a high chair at her mother's side, and even gave Celine a quick slap on the hand when she caught her eating too quickly.

When supper was over, Madame Martin herself carried the sleepy Therese up to the bedroom she shared with Celine. While all helped to take care of the baby during the day, it was her mother who always put her to bed at night. When she had undressed her, she said, "Now, dear, it is time to kneel down and say your prayers."

The little girl knelt at her mother's knee and folded her small hands. Already she could say the Hail Mary without any help and the Our Father with very little help. Now she turned her head toward the small statue of the Infant Jesus her mother had given her. She had a special prayer for him, which went like this: "Dear little Jesus, bless my mother and father, my sisters, Louise, and little Therese, Amen."

It always seemed to her that the Chidl Jesus was listening and promising her that he would bless everyone. The statue showed him dressed as a little king with a golden crown. It was a copy of the famous statue of the Infant of Prague, her mother explained. Therese loved it, for in one hand the Infant Jesus held out a ball. She liked to think that at any moment he would toss it to her, and she could toss it back to him, and they would laugh and play together. When she was a little older she was surprised to learn that what the Child Jesus held was not supposed to be a ball after all - but instead the big round world.

When Madame Martin had tucked Therese into bed and kissed her good-night, she blew out the candle and went downstairs to join the others. Celine was also on her way to bed. Then Louis Martin went to the high chest and drew out the checkerboard.

"Who would like a game" he asked.

But his wife said, "Wait a moment, Louis. First I want to read you the letter that came today from Pauline You will be happy to learn how well she is doing in the convent at Le Mans!"

"Good!" replied her husband, settling himself in his comfortable chair.

Zelie Martin took the letter from her pocket, handling it as though it were a treasure. Marie hung eagerly over her mother's shoulder to see every line of it for herself. But Leonie started to leave the room. Her father looked at her in surprise.

"Are you not staying to hear your sister's letter?" he asked.

Leonie stopped at the door and hunger her head, saying nothing.

"Well?" demanded her father sharply.

She looked up angrily. "No!" she snapped. "I'm going to the kitchen to see Louise."

Her father said sternly, "You will remain here until your mother has read the letter aloud. Sit down!"

Leonie sat. But something deep inside hurt. It was as though some small creature inside her were crying.

Her mother gave her a quick smile. Then she began to read from the letter.

"Dearest Mother and Father, I miss you so much. This year the convent seems lonely without Marie. But I look forward to the spring when I shall be with you all again for the holidays. Then you will see how I have grown and how well I shall be able to help Marie with the housekeeping! Is the baby as pretty as when I last saw her? Mother dear, I hope you are not working too hard. You and Father will be glad to hear that my marks were quite good last month. I came out next to the highest. But I can't wait until I see you again! Will you meet me at the station? Already I can imagine myself on the train. Please give my love to my sisters, and give the baby a special hug from me. I close with love and respect to you, my dear parents. Your Pauline.

"P.S. Aunt Elise sends her love and says to tell you that she is proud of me (for my marks). PRay that I shall do as well this month."

Autn Elise was Madame Martin's own sister, who was now a nun in the Visitation Convent at Le Mans, Pauline's school.

"You may go now, Leonie," said her father gravely, and without a word Leonie was off for the kitchen.

As she folded the letter, Zelie Martin smiled happily. "Isn't it wonderful, Louis, that our Pauline is doing so well?"

"Indeed, my dear, very wonderful." Then he added with a twinkle in his eye, "But after all, she should do well. Of all the children, she is the one who is most like her mother!"

"And who am I like?" asked Marie, as she settled herself at the checkerboard with her father.

He looked her up and down teasingly, pretending that he was unable to decide.

"Why, Marie!" exclaimed her mother. "Don't you know? You are just like your father. But you must try to be as good as he is. See how often he goes to church--"

"And fishing," added Marie with a twinkle.

Then they all laughed, and Louis Martin the loudest of all.

"Just for that, I will beat you at checkers, young lady", he said as he began to set out the pieces. His love for fishing was one of the family jokes.

The next day was Sunday, and all, even Therese, went to early Mass at the beautiful old Church of Notre Dame. It was amzing how wel Therese could walk all the way there. She was quick at learning things, thought her father - much quicker than any of the others had been at her age.

On Sundays when the weather was fine, the family would take a walk in the afternoon. These walks always ended again at the church for the evening service of Vespers. Therese loved the stained glass windows of Notre Dame. Their lovely colors were soft and glowing, and the light of the setting sun came through them, casting a rainbow of colors upon one side of the white marble altar. She delighted too in the flickering candles and the music that came from the great organ. She would sit very still, very happy, while the service lasted. Now more and more she looked forward to Sundays...

Some months later, in the early spring, the family set out as usual on their Sunday afternoon walk. Therese, dancing along at her father's side, was in her best blue dress and blue coat. Madame Martin looked at her daughters with pleasure. She was careful about their clothing, and this afternoon they did indeed look very pretty. It was a lovely sunny day, without a cloud in the sky. But they had not gone very far before a high wind arose. Suddenly dark clouds blew across the face of the sun.

"We shall have rain, I fear", said Louis Martin.

A few moments later it came - at first slowly, and then as the wind rose higher, in a great downpour. Luckily, they were near the home of louis Maritn's mother. They hastened to her door. She was delighted to see them, and she helped the children put their wet coats near the fire to dry. Then she started fixing cups of steaming hot chocolate.

Louis Martin stood at the window, drawing aside the lace curtin to gaze out at the weather. "The rian may end as quickly as it began, and I believe we shall be able to go on to Vespers, after all."

But her mother looked at Therese and was uneasy. It would be better not ot keep the little one out in such uncertain weather; much better to send her home. Once could not tell how the weather would be after Vepsers, and she did not wish to risk an illness. A sudden thought struck her that this would be a good way to show Leonie how much the family trusted her and that she was both needed and loved.

"Leonie dear," she said, "I don't want to keep the baby out in this weather. I would like you to take her home now. There is a break in the storm. Perhaps if you hurry you will get home before the next downpour."

A smile lit up Leonie's face. It was an errand of trust. Her mother had not asked Marie, as she usually did, but had asked her! She made up her mind to take every care to fulfill the trust perfectly. "Of course, Mother", she said.

But when Leonie tried to get Therese into her coat, the child cried loudly. She seemed to know that she was being taken home and not to her beloved church, Notre Dame. As Leonie tugged her through the wet streets, Therese kept hanging back and crying. They arrived at the house breathless, and Leonie was opening the door just as the second downpour burst upon them. The skies were now black; it was as dark as midnight. As Leonie pushed open the door, Louise came running out from the kitchen.

"Thak heaven, some has come! The kitchen window is stuck fast. I can't close it alone, and the rain is pouring in, all over everything! Come quickly!"

Not stopping to shut the door, Leonie ran to help her. It took quite a while to close the window. When Leonie got back to the hall, Therese was gone. She ran into the sitting room, looking for her. It was empty. Then she ran upstairs and looked in all the bedrooms. Therese was no Therese anywhere. She became very frightened. Running down the stairs, she called out to Louise, "The baby! She's gone!"

Then she noticed the open door and went cold with fright. With beating hearts, Louise and Leonie peered out into the darkness and the rain. But there was no sign of Therese. Only torrents and torrents of rain - and darkness. Leonie sat down ont he stairs and began to cry. "Oh, Louise, they trusted her to me, and I've lost her! We may never find her. Father will be very angry. He will - he may - he will never forgive me!"
Excerpted from Saint Therese and the Roses by Helen Walker Homan Copyright 1955, Ignatius Press, Used with permission.

Sample Pages from [em]Surprised by Truth 2[/em], edited by Patrick Madrid

Conclusions of a Guilty Bystander

Patrick Madrid


I'm writing this in front of the Blessed Sacrament, in the quiet solitude of a monastery chapel near my home. Being alone here with the Lord helps me gather my thoughts as I search for the right way to recount my story.

St. Peter's words echo in my mind: "Lord, it is good for us to be here." Christ had led him and James and John to the lonely heights of Mount Tabor one day and there revealed things to them that evoked Peter's exclamation, startling things, previously hidden.

"Lord, it is good for me to be here with you in the Eucharist," is the refrain that resonates within me as I write. For in this setting, before the tabernacle, Christ has shown me many things about myself that I needed to see and repair. His hammer and chisel of grace delivered their most effective blows to my heart during those times when I knelt in front of Him, head bowed, in the silence of another Catholic church, years ago and far from here.

I'm not a convert in the standard sense of the term. I was born into a Catholic family, raised in the Faith by devout and loving parents, and have remained in the Church, believing all her teachings with all my heart. ("So what is your story doing in a book like this?" you ask yourself.) I'm not a convert to the Catholic Church, but I am the unworthy recipient of the grace of a conversion of the heart, a recommitment to Christ at a time when I thought I knew what it means to be Catholic. How wrong I was.

In my mid 20s, I went through a kind of creeping spiritual crisis that led me into a reconversion that was neither sudden nor dramatic, although it shook me powerfully and reached the deepest recesses of my heart.

Like a painful, prolonged medical treatment that's necessary to save a patient's life, my reconversion entailed pain and uncertainty, but the result, thank God, was a cure - not an instant one, forever banishing the symptoms of the disease we call "sin," but a cure nonetheless. As St. Paul explained, "Through one man sin entered the world, and through sin, death." This malaria of sin, contracted in the Garden of Eden through the bite of an apple, courses through our veins with all its deadly effects. Only God's grace can combat and overcome it. His love is the sole antidote.

At the height of my conversion of heart, I discovered, or more specifically, the Lord showed me, that through years of infrequent and minimal use, I had allowed the "muscles" of my interior life - prayer, mortification, and recollection - to atrophy and wither. My spiritual "arteries" - which carry the love of Christ as the lifeblood of the soul - had hardened and Iconstricted as a result of the lukewarm, halfhearted complacency into which I had settled.

I think my situation wasn't unlike that of many Catholics. We who are born into the Faith easily take it for granted, and we make the fatal mistake of assuming that conversion is for Protestants or Mormons or atheists who, being outside the Church, make their way into it. Many Catholics - I being a good example - lull themselves into a state of comfortable, "do not disturb" spiritual incapacitation. They make no real or consistent effort to grasp Christ with all their might and to work daily at keeping and strengthening that grasp, as His grace enables.

Simply being Catholic isn't enough. What is required by Christ is love, and true love means effort, work, and time spent in prayer - things that so often fall by the wayside in the daily lives of many Catholics. We call him Lord in our prayers, but so often we don't live our lives as if He really is. Membership in the Church, even a strong conviction about things Catholic, is in itself no guarantee of a real friendship with Christ.

That's the condition in which I found myself. I lived a life of Catholicism that comprised good and important but largely external things such as regular Sunday Mass attendance, grace before meals, and praying the Rosary occasionally. These weren't enough. I lacked a deep interior commitment to Christ, to living virtuously and to deepening my prayer life. My parents had taught me the Faith and how to live it, but these lessons were surprisingly easy to forget, at least for a time, once the powerful distractions, temptations, and concupiscence of young adulthood crowded them into the background.

But our Lord is kind and faithful. "If we are unfaithful, He will remain faithful, for He cannot deny Himself." He seeks out, not just the lost sheep that has wandered far from the flock, but also the one that remains within the flock but gradually grows dull and lazy and becomes deaf to the sound of the Shepherd's voice. I was once like that second sheep, and this is the story ofhow the Good Shepherd rescued me from my spiritual stupor and gathered me to Himself.

California dreamin' ...of Christian martyrdom

I was born in 1960 into a devout Catholic family. My parents were loving and wise in the way they raised us children, especially in the way they taught us about Christ and imparted to us the truths of the Catholic Faith. I grew up and lived most of my life in Southern California. In 1970 our family moved to Mission Viejo, a sparkling new, "master planned" bedroom community in Orange County, about forty-five miles south of Los Angeles. It was a great place to grow up, each tract of newly built homes filling quickly with an influx of young families. In our neighborhood, one thing became noticeable: ours was by far the biggest family.

One important lesson I learned from my parents' example was the importance of generosity with God and openness to life. As the oldest of eight children, I lived in a world where it was natural for parents to spend themselves totally in their love and devotion to their family. Only later, as I began to encounter secular culture, in high school, college, and beyond, did I see how deliciously radical and countercultural my parents were in having a large family in the 1970s. But I certainly didn't realize that while I was growing up. As far as I could see, my parents never saw themselves in that light. They never put on the "We're the parents of a large family and you're not" sort of airs one sometimes encounters in others. Nor can I recall my mom and dad ever rolling their eyes or looking askance at another family with the maximum one or two children that modern society tells people to have. At that time, the only Iarge families people generally saw were on television: the Brady Bunch, which had six (although the plot line for their Iarge family was a consequence of remarriage), and the Bradford family on Eight Is Enough. Even the title of that show betrayed the media and cultural disapproval of large families.

We weren't poor, but we certainly weren't what people would call middle-class comfortable. Although my parents' monthly budget was pretty tight most of the time, my mom chose to pursue her vocation as a homemaker; and for that I thank God. My dad went to work to pay the bills, and my mom stayed home to cook, clean, change diapers, do laundry, and chauffeur the kids around town on an endless series of treks to school, Little League games, and dance practices. (Someday, I'll film a documentary tribute to her career behind the wheel of our family station wagon. I'll call it "Taxi Driver.") She made our home comfortable and beautiful, settled disputes, spanked us when we needed it, and otherwise rode herd on her thundering pack of kids.

My dad, a brilliant, under-appreciated, overworked computer engineer, daily endured the mind-crushing drudgery of a Southern California commute from our home in the 'burbs of Orange County to his workplace in Los Angeles and back.

The Madrid family sprawl was a great environment in rich to grow up Catholic. It was loud, loving, rambunctious, and devout without ever being kooky or weirdly pious - generally a pretty happy place.

I wasn't by any stretch bad, but, like most kids, I was accomplished and diligent in the arts of boyhood mischief, chore-shirking, impertinence, and random acts of slacking and disobedience. I received plenty of spankings, groundings, and "How many times do I have to tell you to clean up your room?" lectures. I loved playing sports, swimming, and rough-housing with my neighborhood pals, but I was also a bookworm and spent a lot of time engrossed in adventure tales, lives of the saints, and war stories. I remember countless hours ensconced in my room, mesmerized by some book or another, imagining myself as a brave, "laugh in the face of the pagan emperor" early Christian martyr, or as an explorer, or as Teddy Roosevelt, waving his men forward with saber in one hand, a colt revolver in the other, charging up San Juan Hill into a hail of Spanish bullets and artillery Then my mom would call me downstairs to take out the trash. (Sometimes, being grounded wasn't so painful - although I never told my parents that - because being banished to my room for the day meant along stretch of uninterrupted reading. )

From Kumbaya to Kyrie

Another important element of my Catholic upbringing was being an altar boy. For several years, I actually dwelt in two different liturgical worlds, serving at the ancient Tridentine rite on weekdays at my school and at a freewheeling Novus Ordo guitar Mass on Sundays in my parish. That strange, although providential, circumstance gave me valuable insights into what the Catholic Church is as ail entity, established and safeguarded by Christ regardless of its outward circumstances and the frailties of its members.

The latter part of my grammar school career was spent at the Mission San Juan Capistrano parochial school. The parish church adjacent to the school is one of the many California missions established by Bl. Junipero Serra, the Spanish Franciscan who planted the seeds of Christianity throughout California, shortly after the Spaniards arrived in Mexico. Built in 1776, this church was the oldest thing I had ever seen, and its hoary beauty impressed me. The chapel still has its original high, whitewashed adobe walls, timber and tile roof, stone floor, and ancient wooden pews. In fact, of all the twenty- one California missions, San Juan Capistrano has the only intact chapel where BI. Junipero Serra had celebrated Mass. And it was there, at the early daily Mass, that I served as an altar boy.

The elderly pastor of the parish had received a special indult from Pope Paul VI to continue the celebration of the sacraments there in Latin, according to the pre-1963 Tridentine rite. So while I was an altar boy at Sunday Mass at the parish near our home { where the Novus Ordo Mass was celebrated exclusively), on 'weekday mornings, when I served the Latin Mass, I could step back in time for half an hour, away from the din of the Southern California kaleidoscope of traffic jams, fast-food restaurants, and shopping malls. Inside the dim, incense-Iaden sanctuary of the Old Mission chapel, I felt profoundly connected with the ancient, timeless Catholic Church. Now I can understand and articulate a fundamental truth that, even as a boy, I sensed clearly: the Catholic Church, like Christ, her Spouse {and because ofHim), is the same yesterday, today, and forever.145 She has sojourned on His behalf for more than twenty centuries on this earth, has seen every epoch's unique set of problems and challenges come and go, and she is still here.

Years later, writing about the Liturgy for a Catholic journal, I recalled that remarkable experience fondly: "1 have vivid memories of serving Holy Mass in that elaborate sanctuary, cloudy with incense, where Bl. Junipero Serra had celebrated Mass two centuries earlier: on my knees, reciting the acolyte's responses in Latin, watching the priest's every motion. So many realities of the Faith were communicated to my young soul by the elements of that Traditional Latin Mass."

Herein arose a strange dichotomy. During the week, I was an acolyte at the Traditional Mass. On Sundays, I was an acolyte {although they never used that word there) at our local parish. The pastor was a good man and by all appearances personally orthodox, but he wasn't forceful in the way he ran the parish. His "hang on loosely" approach to dealing with the various lay ministries and the srrong egos of some of the parishioners meant that the parish was liturgically liberal- not kooky liberal, but it had a general atmosphere of "almost anything goes." This included relatively new practices such as hand-holding during the Our Father, out-of-tune folk guitarists twanging through sappy songs being written in those days, a stark interior with no statues or votive candles, and a bizarre orange-and-silver-foil wallpaper that formed a space-age, floor-to-ceiling backdrop behind the altar {it drove my dad crazy).

Mass at the Old Mission was, in its externals; the polar opposite: majestic and mysterious. The incense and Gregorian chany the Latin prayers, the imposing, intricately carved, gold-Ieaf reredos that towered above the altar, the flurry of bells rung at the moment of Consecration -all of these stamped on my young imagination a powerful imprint of the Mass's mystical, transcendent beauty. (Now I see clearly and appreciate that the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, whether celebrated according to the New Order promulgated by Vatican II, or according to the ancient Byzantine form of the Divine Liturgy, or according to the ancient Latin Tridentine rite codified by Pope Pius V, is still the same Holy Sacrifice.)

A faith built on imagination

As odd as it might sound, it's here, I believe, that the beginnings of my gradual decline into lukewarmness began. My imagination was being fed with all the richness and glory of the Faith and its history. I avidly read the lives of the saints - particularly those martyrs who died for the Faith by being burned alive or speared or beheaded. The more gore, the better. It was so easy to imagine the Catholic Church and its romantic, fiercely beautiful, two-thousand~year panoply of saints, sinners, and martyrs. On that rich diet, my ravenous imagination was very well fed- and that in itself isn't bad -but whether it was due to some character flaw of mine, or a general spiritual and intellectual laziness (which is a character flaw, I suppose), I allowed my Catholic Faith to subsist almost entirely at the level of imagination. That, I think, was a significant cause of my later bout with lukewarmness.

As Scripture tells us, God created humans "in His own image." This means each of us was fashioned as a person, just as He is a person. As such, God created our human nature to have an intellect and a will, the two rational faculties by which we know and love. The intellect is the apparatus of reason with which a human person perceives, measures, and makes decisions about himself and the world around him. The will is the component of the person that assents to and carries out one's decisions and actions based on what his intellect tells him.

Now, since God also created us to be material and spiritual beings (i.e., body and soul), we must contend with the input that our physical senses give to our minds. This is where the imagination comes into play. The imagination isn't the entire intellect, but merely a component of it. The imagination is what provides the mind with "pictures," images of our experiences that come through the senses. And our imaginations are powerful and often vivid in the images - both good and evil - they present to our mind.

This is why many people gradually lose interest in using their intellects to penetrate deeper into the spiritual and moral (and even scientific) truths of the world around them. Like a muscle, the intellect must be exercised regularly or it will become lazy, flabby, and unable to heft the weight of the many moral dilemmas and choices we face in life. When the intellect is weak and ineffectual as a result of laziness, the imagination sets itself up as dictator. It feeds the mind on a steady diet of mental junk food. Those images and impressions it generates soon become mistaken for acts of the intellect. At that stage, a person finds himself reduced to the shabby condition of living in a world constructed predominantly (and governed ruthlessly) by his imagination. It becomes an ever, present ringmaster at the center of a circus of swirling images, smells, sounds, and feelings with which the five senses constantly bombard the mind. Such a person becomes hostage to his own emotions and appetites. Left unchecked, his imagination works solo while his intellect stays quiet and sluggish in the background. This gradual abdication of the intellect will inevitably cause the Christian to drift into indifference to the spiritual struggle raging around him, or worse, he may lay down his anus entirely and give up the fight.

In my case, the drift started when I was a high school senior.

Minor seminary days

When I was in eighth grade, I thought that God might be calling me to the priesthood. It wasn't an overwhelming call, but I sensed that the thing to do was to "come and see," as Christ told the Apostles when He first called them to follow Him.147 Through the generosity of the kindhearted pastor of our parish, who agreed to pay for my tuition, I was given the privilege of spending nearly three years in Our Lady Queen of Angels diocesan minor seminary in San Fernando, California. It was a good if uneventful time for me; I enjoyed my studies, developed an appreciation for a more regimented prayer and liturgical life, and formed some friendships that have lasted even to today. Eventually I saw that God wasn't calling me to the priesthood. So, near the end of my junior year, I left the seminary and enrolled at the local public high school. It was like being dropped into a very large aquarium filled with hoards of exotic and sometimes beautiful fish, as well as some dangerous predators.

Small-time rocker, part-time Catholic

I quickly slipped into the groove of dating, going to parties, hanging out at the beach, and many of the other pastimes teens pursued in sunny Southern California. My upscale high school had about three thousand students and was awash in drugs, alcohol, sex, recklessness, and materialism. There were many good students and teachers, but many students lived lives of excess and pleasure-seeking. They came from affluent homes, and Mommy and Daddy had the bucks to buy them stylish clothes, a new car on their sixteenth birthday, and pretty much anything else they wanted. I found myself swimming in the pleasant, warm waters of this aquarium of hedonism.

When I got into public high school, I didn't go berserk with my new relative freedom. I didn't dye my hair purple or pierce any body parts (that silliness among teenagers was still several years away). There were no shouting matches with my parents, or sneaking out of the house at night, or any of those things. My slide into complacency was furtive and unobtrusive; even I wasn't fully aware of just how slippery the slope had become.

I grew lazy in prayer and no longer made an effort to cultivate virtue, but compared with many of my peers, I was still a "good kid," and I didn't get mixed up with a lot of the craziness around me.

I never took drugs of any kind -not even once. I'm grateful to God for protecting me from that snare. Large amounts of marijuana, cocaine, various mind-bending pills, acid, and even hardcore injectables such as heroin were used all around me by many young people.

In 1979, I heard from a friend that a drummer I had played a few gigs with and whom I had known from school - a guy my own age and an excellent musician - had died of a heroin overdose the month before. He was eighteen.

I can't take much credit for avoiding drugs; God protected me from that scourge. I have a vivid memory of being at a party one night and being offered a joint by a cute girl. "No thanks," I muttered sheepishly, glancing at the mari, juana cigarette she held out to me. I looked down in embar, rassment. I knew she was surprised and was thinking, "What a geek." She wrote me off with a roll of her eyes and walked away. I can see now that that was a moment of grace - one of many unrecognized moments of grace - and it taught me that although my willingness to avoid sin had been weakened through compromise, it hadn't been destroyed.

I didn't follow the crowd in its pot, addled, binge, drinking quest for new chemically induced highs, but I'm sorry to say that I hung out with many who did. Not everyone was a bleary-eyed pothead, but many of the young people I knew were. Some graduated from "weed" to the harder stuff: acid, hash, and cocaine were common fare at parties.

Easy access to the party scene and all the temptations that entailed came as a result of my growing involvement with rock 'n' roll. If anything was a passion for me, it was playing music. I had a solid background in music, having studied violin for a short time and played the trumpet in the school orchestra for several years. When I was fifteen, I taught myself to play the bass guitar and quickly discovered I was good at it.

I spent countless hours in my bedroom with my bass guitar, practicing and learning how to play the songs on the radio and on my albums. Chicago, the Cars, Boston, the Stones, Kansas, Fleetwood Mac, The Police, America, and especially the Beatles were among the rock groups whose music I loved and learned, note by note. By the time I was seventeen, I was playing with several pretty decent garage bands in Southern California. One particularly successful band I played bass for was Geneva Brown. We never did make it to the "medium time" {much less the big time), but we developed a local following and played at parties, weddings, and clubs. Besides playing songs by Top-40 groups, we wrote and performed a lot of our own music, mostly bouncy pop tunes, which even today I can honestly say were pretty good.

For me and many others, this interlude as a wannabe rock star contributed to the growth of narcissism, superficiality, and vanity. It engendered a vivid fantasy world that catered to my ego and my appetites. Not virtue or strength of character, but seeing myself as a "popular, talented, successful" musician was the measure of success. My desire for success as a rock star wasn't balanced with a strong spiritual life and good spiritual direction, so it fed and empowered my imagination, at the expense of my intellect.

In 1979, Geneva Brown won first place in a widely publicized, well-attended "Battle of the Bands" competition, beating twenty other local bands. I'll never forget the adrenal in rush I felt when we walked onto the stage in front of a couple of thousand screaming teens and young adults and knocked them dead with our first number, Warren Zevon's "Werewolves of London." A few songs later, we finished our set, unplugged our guitars, and sauntered offstage to the roar of boisterous applause.

We thought for sure we were headed for big things in music. But when you're nineteen and stupid, as I was, what do you know? We collected our trophy, posed for some cheesy publicity pictures, and piled into our cars and went home to celebrate. Back at the house we shared, there was a big party that lasted into the early morning.

When I woke up, the shadow across the room showed it was nearly noon. I had a throbbing headache - too much beer- and my head felt as if it were the size of a filing cabinet. My mouth was dry. There seemed to be small mittens on my teeth. I trudged into the bathroom, looked into the mirror at my bloodshot eyes, threw up, and went back to bed.

Small-time rock 'n' roll was doing nothing to enhance my spiritual life.

During this time, I remained Catholic, but all around me were drugs, girls, alcohol, and the band's ubiquitous hangers- on. It was inevitable that these negative influences would harm me. I dated different girls, although I was never a predator with only one goal in mind. With dating came many of the dangers inherent in being alone with a pretty girl. It was fun, I thought, and I found it easy to push aside the lessons I had learned about chastity and moderation. While I didn't get drawn into the worst excesses that were common among many young people at the time, I look back with remorse (and with gratitude for (God's mercy) on the sins I committed during my "young and stupid" period.

I now find it odd that, even amid my spiritual laziness, the music, and the party~scene craziness, I still went to Mass every Sunday, prayed before meals, and went to Confession every few months. I also enjoyed defending Catholicism against the criticisms of non~Catholics - and was even good at it.

Protestants force me to think about the Faith

The truth is, I had been doing this for years. For example, the summer before my senior of high school, I was going out with a beautiful girl named Christi. She was a sweet, lively person, and her parents took a strong interest in me. Christi and her family were what I call "hardcore" Baptists. They talked a lot about the Bible and seemed to have an appropriate Bible verse to quote at any moment and in any situation. Christi's parents knew I came from a strong Catholic background, of course, and I think these two good, sincere people saw me as a challenge - especially since I was dating their daughter - and they went to work on me with vigor. Since Christi and I spent a lot of time at her house, listening to music and swimming in her pool, her parents had plenty of time to work oil their "Pat Madrid" project. They often sat with us, a well-worn King James Bible open on her dad's knee, and posed friendly but pointed questions to me about my Catholic Faith.

"The Bible says in Exodus 20:4 that God condemns the use of statues and other graven images," her mom would say with a smile. " As a Catholic, Patrick, and since the Catholic Church promotes praying to statues, doesn't that bother you?"

Of course I knew we Catholics don't worship or pray to statues, so I knew enough to reject that part of her argument, but what I lacked was a solid knowledge of Scripture that would have enabled me to point out passages such as Exodus 25:18-20, Numbers 21:8-9, and 1 Kings 6:23-28, where God approves of and even commands the carving of religious statues. I would have been able to show Christi's well-meaning mom that what God condemned in Exodus 20 was not graven images per se, but idolatry - the worship of graven images. Idolatry under any guise is a sin, and the Catholic Church has always strenuously condemned it. If I had had this family's level of biblical knowledge, I could have stood my ground better.

Over several weeks, Christi's parents and their circle of Evangelical Protestant friends presented me with a variety of biblical challenges to my Faith: "Mary worship," the Catholic Church's alleged "false gospel of salvation by works," the heresy of infant Baptism, the Pope and his outrageous claims of being infallible, the magic of the sacraments, especially the issue of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist - these and other arguments against the Catholic Faith were thrown (smilingly, of course) in my face.

Such arguments were often accompanied by a venomous anti-Catholic "Chick Tract" dredged up from a seemingly limitless supply that came from a hidden stash somewhere in their house. I read these garish anti-Catholic comic books carefully. Time after time, I could see that they offered slick but bogus arguments against the Catholic Church. It was so obvious that the wild, angry charges these tracts made against Catholicism weren't true -and I was able to check Scripture to see this for myself. I soon began to refuse the anti-Catholic literature that Christi's parents proffered. Once, I even had the gumption to invite them to come to Mass with us, so they could see what the Catholic Church taught and that it resembled nothing like the caricatures in the tracts they gave me.

I recall one particularly tense conversation about the Eucharist with Christi's parents. Her dad said, "Hang on a minute" and went into the house. He came back with a Chick Tract called "The Death Cookie," which he handed to me with great seriousness, asking me to read it prayerfully. I was asked repeatedly if I had "been saved." As a Catholic, they regarded me as a "lost soul," an "unsaved" person who still needed to "find Christ" (even though they let me see their daughter, for which I give them credit).

It's ironic that in one sense, their view of me was actually not far from the truth. My intellectual certitude, even as a teen, was insufficient to save me. I needed a "personal relationship with Jesus Christ," and I'm grateful that these encounters helped me see how important that is. Of course, Catholics don't typically speak in this way, but semantics aside, I was beginning to learn a deep truth.

There were times when I'd think to myself in frustration, "I just want to spend time with Christi! I don't want to be put on trial about the Bible." Looking back on those months of being grilled regularly by these good but deeply anti-Catholic people, I realize how beneficial this experience was for me. It forced me to defend my Catholic convictions, to move beyond my imagination and use my intellect to grapple with these challenges and the truths I claimed to believe in, and to determine for myself why I believed what I believed as a Catholic. I thank Christi's parents for conducting this project on me, because even though Christi and I soon drifted apart, they helped propel me into a more mature, more introspective level of Faith. Little did I ( or they) realize then how they were preparing me for my later work as a Catholic apologist.

My so-called spiritual life

Even though my theological jousting with Christi's parents and other aggressive Evangelicals forced me to think more deeply about why I believed what I did, I was still being moved along by the current of those things that appealed to me in life. Without even realizing it, by the time I was nineteen and in college, I had slipped almost entirely into relying mainly on imagination, fed by my senses. Parties, beer, music, and cute available girls had become the fixtures of my life.

True, I went to Mass every Sunday; I believed in and loved the Catholic Church; I said my prayers, but sporadically and without much fervor. (I did experience fleeting moments of fervor that I now believe were moments of God's prevenient grace, like the tugboats that nudge an ocean liner in the direction it should move while it's building its own head of steam.)

I knew enough to get to Confession when my sinful actions thrust me out of the state of grace, but my spiritual life had be, come little more than a sentimental fondness for the image of Catholicism I had created. It didn't dawn on me that I was empty. Outwardly, intellectually, even emotionally, I was a Catholic. But in that hidden place where the soul and God are alone with each other, I was mushy and superficial.

I spent far more time with Paul McCartney, learning to play the bass guitar exactly as he did, than I did in prayer with Jesus Christ. I cared much more about dating and having fun than I did about cultivating virtue. Although I was never tempted to leave the Catholic Church, I had drifted into the comfortable cult of Myself.

My assent to Catholic teaching and practice was still simply an edifice of faith, not Faith itself. Just as a mansion may appear solid and well built from the outside, but on the inside may well be cold, dreary, and empty of the furnishings that would transform it from a hulk of wood and plaster into a home where people live, so it was with me: the externals were there, but there was little inside. Still, the edifice was sturdily built and, in spite of my drift, the Lord continued to protect me and even bless me with new and amazing graces. Foremost among these was the grace of discovering my future wife.

...Then comes marriage

She was sixteen and I was seventeen when I met her. Slim, lovely, and always smiling, Nancy was one of those vivid young women people instinctively like and want to be around. For a year and a half, we were just friends, and we dated other people. We often saw each other casually, and I sometimes even played bass for the parish choir she sang in. When the relationship with my girlfriend fizzled, I got my nerve up to ask Nancy on a date.

The next year was a blur of happy times spent with Nancy: long walks on the beach, bike rides, holding hands and talking for hours, playing Frisbee, laughing, quiet moments gazing at the stars on warm summer nights. She was fantastic and wonderful, alive in a deeper and more attractive way than any girl I had ever known. She was Catholic and beautiful, and I loved being with her. Best of all, Nancy never allowed herself to get caught up in any of the typical teenage vices, and that was immensely attractive to me. I was drawn by her radiant goodness as much as her beauty and sweet personality. She amazed me with a wisdom and depth of vitality that was beyond anything I had to offer her. She loved with chaste yet stirring intensity. Her love was a current of goodness that was wide, deep, and unstoppable, the way a mountain stream surges onward to find its waterfall. I came to realize that I loved her.

Even though they knew I wasn't a "high confidence" candidate for her affection, Nancy's family was very patient with me. They were worried by my frivolity and aimlessness, but guided Nancy as she and I grew closer.

My parents and family all loved Nancy, and I can remember one particular conversation with my dad: He put his hand on my shoulder, looked me in the eye, and said, "Pat, you have no idea what a wonderful girl you've found in Nancy. If you let her get away from you, it will be the worst thing ever to happen to you. If you don't grow up and turn away from the music scene, you'll lose her." His words cut me; I knew he was right. His remark was one of the milestones in my journey back to a serious practice of my Faith.

But I still had a long way to go.

After a year's courtship, we got engaged in July of 1980. I had no idea how dramatically this young woman was about to change my life for the better.

We were married on February 7, 1981. She was nineteen; I was twenty. Young, yes, but we knew that marriage was what we wanted. Our parents supported us in our decision, and we saw no reason for waiting. After an idyllic if simple honeymoon driving up the coast of California, we came home and started the process of setting up house and adjusting to married life. We were very happy. I worked as a clerk at a nearby bank, and Nancy taught at a local preschool. In the evenings, we'd talk about our dreams for the future, especially the dream of starting a family. God was already beginning to draw me home. Getting married and assuming the responsibilities of husband and father signaled the death of my rock 'n' roll days. The band wanted to keep playing and start recording, but I let them know I needed to be home with Nancy, not on stage.

And so I left the band.

As if they had been written for and about me personally, I found myself learning firsthand the meaning of St. Paul's words: "When I was a child, I used to talk as a child, think as a child, reason as a child; when I became a man, I put aside childish things." I was slowly, but not entirely, putting away my childish thinking and ways. The next several years were the stage on which the drama of my reconversion unfolded fully.

The crisis was drawing near.

Nancy and I had no specific plans for starting a family, but decided to see what would happen. It happened quickly. I got laid off by the bank a few weeks after we got married and then was quickly hired in the retail field. I had just started a new job as a store manager and was unloading boxes one afternoon when Nancy showed up unexpectedly.

"I just came ftom the doctor," she said, her eyes wide and brimming with tears of happiness.

"You mean. .." I stammered, slackjawed with the impact of her unspoken news.

She hugged me. "Yes, we're going to have a baby."

Phase Two of God's "Patrick Madrid reconstruction project" was underway. Becoming a husband was a big step toward maturity, but becoming a father was even more dramatic. Our first son, Jonathon, was born on Thanksgiving of 1981. By 1985, we had bought our first home and had two more children, Bridget in 1983 and Timothy in 1985. We had a happy, fun-filled marriage, and I marveled now and then at how dramatically different my life had become. I was, happily, being forced to grow up and get away from my earlier selfish ways as I did my best to shoulder the load of being a father and husband.

A soul divided cannot stand

In time, the effects of my years of immoderation and lukewarmness began to catch up with me. I can't recall when the feeling started, but I eventually became aware of a growing sense of discontent and restlessness. Even though I was now married with kids, a mortgage, and car payments, I hadn't shed many of the lax, pleasure-seeking attitudes I had cultivated earlier. These attitudes shaped aspects of our marriage, and iince we both had enough training in the Faith to know better, there were things in our marriage that Nancy and I mew didn't conform to what God wanted. I take the blame for being the one who led the way down wrong paths.

In many ways, I was still immature and superficial. My combination of doctrinal staunchness and moral laziness was very much at work in my life. Even as I found time to develop skills as an apologist (relishing opportunities to debate religion with Protestant and other non-Catholic friends), I did other things I knew I shouldn't have. I knew what was right, but still did what was wrong. St. Paul's words were reflected in me: "1 do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do."

I was empty inside, a vacuum of selfishness where my interior life with Christ should have been. I grew frustrated about who I was and wanted to know what I was supposed to be doing with my life. In my twenty-sixth year, I went through an identity crisis, precipitated by God's grace. Lovingly but firmly He shook me out of my stupor.

First, I grew deeply troubled about my past and present sinfulness. Guilt is the nervous system of the soul. In the physical body, the nerves alert us to danger, galvanizing us toward self-preservation. Guilt is a spiritual pain that alerts us to spititual dangers we're in; it's our conscience's way of prodding us to repent and amend our ways. Over the course of that year, my conscience prodded me ruthlessly. By now, I had abandoned the drudgery of my retail job (too much time away from Nancy and the kids) and was working in sales. I enjoyed my new work and was successful at it, but even that didn't muffle the anxiety and discontent that rang like a bell in the gathering dark night of my soul.

This pain of conscience commingled with frustration at knowing that I wasn't doing with my life what God had planned for me to do. I'm not referring here to marriage and family; I knew with certainty that this was His plan for me. But I thought my job was a dead-end; I sensed that there was something particular I should be doing, and I wasn't doing it. No matter how I tried to discern what it was, I came up empty. I felt like an explorer without a map or a compass. I had no des- tination. Alii knew was where I didn't want to go. I felt like a bystander to my own life.

My emptiness, spiritually and emotionally, couldn't be filled with various and sometimes sinful fixes I tried. Nancy and I, although still very much in love, were also suffering the effects of my year of discontent. Our marriage was under stress, I was unhappy, she was unhappy, and neither of us really knew why.

I find Christ in the tabernacle

One day - for the one and only time in our marriage - we actually spoke the words: "I don't know if I want to be married to you." Tears and silence overcame us after that remark. We knew that divorce was not an option. As unhappy as we were, we knew we loved each other and realized we wanted to be together. That was the grace of marriage coming to our rescue. We never again felt the cutting despair and loneliness that raked us that dark afternoon. By God's grace, our marriage was going through - and surviving - "the worse" of "for better or for worse," the often-forgotten words of our marriage vows.

I was like a sailor trapped in a sunken ship. I had my head above water in a small pocket of air, only enough to breathe for a short while before I drowned. And so I did the one thing I knew was my only hope: I went in search of Christ to ask Him to rescue me from the danger I found myself in.

I found Him where I knew He would be waiting for me - where He had always been waiting for me - in the tabernacle. I was working as an account executive for a firm whose offices weren't far from a beautiful Catholic church. For about a month, I spent my lunch hour in that church on my knees in front of the Blessed Sacrament. Day after day, I skipped lunch as a minor act of mortification, asking God to purify me. As noontime hunger gnawed at my belly, I knelt down, closed my eyes, and surveyed my life, grateful to the Lord for giving me Nancy and my children, but also shuddering at other things I saw.

For the first time, I saw my life in perspective: the time I had wasted, the frivolity, the furtive sins, the laziness, vanity, and even the smug intellectual certitude I had felt for so long as a Catholic. My years of compromise and complacency accused me. Christ's words resonated in my soul: "Why do you call me 'Lord, Lord, and not do what I tell you?"

A fountain of anguish burst forth inside me, and I wept. I was overwhelmed with contrition and a desire to be close to Christ in a way I never had before. I felt clawing pangs of sorrow for sin and a hunger for virtue and renewal, as I'm sure St. Mary Magdalene felt as she wept over Christ's feet and anointed them with oil.

I spent a holy hour with Christ in the Eucharist each day, prayerfully listening and asking - begging - Him to show me what He wanted me to do with my life. Even though I could discern no answer to that question, I sensed that I had finally begun my climb out of the darkness. The ascent wasn't smooth, though, and I saw that my journey homeward with Christ would be extensive and arduous.

During one of those holy hours, I ran across a phrase of St. Thomas Aquinas in a book someone had left in the church: "Inordinate self-love is the cause of every sin." I recognized the truth of that teaching and began asking Christ as part of my petitions to help me overcome and uproot the self-love that, like a weed, had choked my interior life and nearly suffocated me. I saw how I had for so long conspired against myself, allow, ing temptation to take root and flourish, bringing forth its in, evitable dark fruit of sin - a harvest of my own planting.

Praying the Rosary, slowly and with concentration, was a huge benefit to my progress. I asked Mary to pray for me and with me that I would become the person her Son wanted me to lbe. Her words of guidance and encouragement from the Gospel wafted gently through my soul: "Do whatever He tells you."

Lord, answer me!

After a month of holy hours before the Blessed Sacrament, imploring Christ to tell me what to do, I still had not heard an answer. On one hand, I had emerged from the crucible of self, reproach and repentance. I was strengthened and determined to avoid sin and cultivate virtue and a serious interior life. On the other hand, God still hadn't shown me what to do with my life. I felt a sense of healing and inner peace, and Christ's loving admonishment stilled my fears: "Take courage, it is I. Do not be afraid."153 In response, I called to the Lord from my storm-tossed fishing boat: "Lord, if it is y ou, command me to come to You on the water."And He said, "Come." The problem was that I didn't know how.

So I decided to force the issue. I quit my job that Friday so I could find the new career to which God was calling me, regardless of where it might be. Nancy was extremely loving and supportive during this month-long process, and I had shared with her the general outline and even many details of the struggle through which I had come. Our marriage was happy and peaceful again. Nancy encouraged me to do what I thought best and prayed for me to see and follow God's will for my job. I had a little money saved up, so I figured I'd have a few weeks to sort out what my next step would be.

God didn't wait that long.

God makes me an offer I can't refuse - but I do

That weekend I talked with my friend Karl Keating, a Catholic layman and attorney in San Diego. He and I shared a deep interest in apologetics (defending the Faith), and he had recently started a modest part-time apologetics apostolate called "Catholic Answers." Karl and I had become phone friends and talked frequently about our mutual interest in apologetics. That conversation with Karl changed my life forever.

After sharing with him a little about my recent spiritual renewal, I got to the punch line: "I quit my job on Friday, and I'm trying to determine what my next move should be. Would you keep this intention of mine in your prayers as I figure out what to do?"

Karl's response was immediate. "Sure, I'll pray for you, but I can do something even better. I'm getting ready to close up my law practice and open an office to do apologetics work full-time. Why don't you come work with me at Catholic Answers? We'll build it into something big."

It never entered my mind that apologetics could be a career; I hadn't devoted even a moment to contemplating that as an option, so even as Karl brought it up, I declined. "Thanks, Karl, but I don't think this is what God wants from me. I appreciate the offer, but whatever God wants me to do, it's not apologetics."

But God's grace can penetrate even my thick skull. Karl persisted in his invitation, and twenty minutes later, I had promised to give it a try.

That was in early 1988. Several months later it struck me that apologetics work was exactly what God had called me to do. It was the answer to my prayer. I laughed when I thought of the saying: "There is none so blind as he who will not see." I thank and praise God for the privilege of being able to work in the apostolate of apologetics and evangelization. I see it as a way that I can make at least partial restitution for the wasted time and bad decisions of my youth.

His grace abounds! Praise Him!

How poetic are God's ways. Here I am now, years later, again in front of the Blessed Sacrament reliving the details of my experience. It was here that my story began, and it's appropriate that it should end here. In the light of grace that radiates from the tabernacle, we see many things about ourselves that would otherwise remain obscured.

As I look back on my reconversion to Christ and the way in which it came about, I am struck by how ordinary the circumstances were. There was no dramatic, "bolt of lightning" moment of conversion, no voice from Heaven. I didn't have to forsake family or friends to recommit my life to Christ.

The gradual way I supped into my spmtuallaziness was all so ordinary. In fact, I think it's a common problem with Catholics who live a life of outward allegiance to Christ, but inwardly find themselves empty and arid. Perhaps you see yourself reflected in my story.

Conversion of the heart is a long, difficult process - not a quick fix. We remain vulnerable to sin and prone to the tendencies and weaknesses we suffered from before. The difference is that we recognize these things for what they are and the road to Heaven.

As He called me out of spiritual lethargy, so Christ is calling you now. Before you turn the page and move on to the next story, close your eyes and spend a moment meditating upon these words of Christ. Let them flood your soul with peace and draw you close to his Sacred Heart: "Come to me, all you who are heavily burdened, and I will give you rest."
Excerpted from Surprised by Truth 2 edited by Patrick Madrid Copyright 2000, Sophia Institute Press, Used with permission of the author and the publisher

Sample Pages from [em]The Borrowed House[/em] by Hilda Van Stockum

Chapter One

The Ring of Power

THE BARN SMELLED of stale hay, chicken droppings, and cabbage. Lorelei, the white hen, cackled. With a swift glance over her shoulder, Janna took the broom and chased the bird off her nest. Sure enough, there was an egg. Janna slid it into her apron pocket. The barn door creaked as Frau Kopp came in, towering over Janna, a mountain of authority.

"Kill me a couple of chickens, Janna, quick," she said. "I’ve unexpected company." Janna looked around in dismay. What she saw were not chickens but Lorelei and Ilsebill, the leghorns; Wilhelm, the rooster; Fritz and Franz, the cockerels; Lieschen, Gretchen, and all the other cackling, scratching friends she knew by name. How could you kill something that had a name? But what could you do against a grownup? Janna began to sweep vigorously.

"Johanna," repeated Frau Kopp, "did you hear me?"

Janna looked up, shaking the hair out of her eyes. "I can’t," she said, trembling at her own audacity.

"You can," Frau Kopp insisted. "I showed you. You wring their necks, like that . . . it’s easy. What a fool they have sent me—and the other one so good, so willing! Why did she have to leave?"

"I’m on duty," said Janna desperately. "We have a Youth meeting."

"But it isn’t Wednesday," protested Frau Kopp. "I know

"I know, I know," Frau Kopp interrupted, "you’ve told me before. Isn’t it early for you to go? Your meetings are always later."

"Not this one," said Janna.

Frau Kopp looked at her suspiciously, opened her mouth to say something, and then closed it again. It was not wise to tangle with the Youth groups; she’d heard stories. . . . on Wednesdays you have your Heim Abend and have to leave early. But today is Tuesday and you can help in the kitchen, can’t you?"

"It’s a special meeting," said Janna, noticing the frustrated expression on Frau Kopp’s face. No one was allowed to interfere with the Hitler Youth meetings: not the church, or the school, parents or employers.

"A special meeting, a special meeting," grumbled Frau Kopp. "You are always having these special meetings and I think it’s just to escape work. What’s this meeting for, then?"

Janna’s face lit up. "It’s a rehearsal," she said. "We’re going to do a play our group leader has written. And imagine . . . they’ve chosen me to be Brunhilde!"

"And who is Brunhilde?" asked Frau Kopp sourly.

"Don’t you know? She is Siegfried’s bride. He gives her the magic ring, which was stolen from the Rhine maidens. But there is a curse on it. Siegfried drinks an evil potion, forgets Brunhilde, and marries someone else. Brunhilde is furious and causes him to die, but she is sorry afterward, and when she lights his funeral pyre she jumps on it herself, and as they burn all the gods burn with them."

Frau Kopp had listened open-mouthed. "Where do you get all that heathenish nonsense?"

"Oh, it isn’t nonsense," said Janna. "It’s all in Wagner’s operas."

"It’s heathenish anyway," sputtered Frau Kopp. "And for that they keep you from honest work!"

"Learning a part is work too. My parents have to do it all the time. They’re famous actors, their pictures are often in the papers, and Hitler has praised them. It’s in an article . . . I’ll show it to you. . . . He says they are an outstanding example of true Aryan culture."

Adjusting her black shawl, she shrugged her shoulders. "All right, go if you must and leave me with all the work." She bent and made a grab at the unsuspecting Lieschen. Janna lifted her coat from a nail and fled.

It was the last half of February. The thick blanket of snow was raveled and torn, showing patches of earth and yellow vegetation. Streams rushed singing down the hills, sweeping mud and pebbles along. The mountains, wrapped in fog, loomed like ghosts. Janna’s boots picked up the sticky snow as she clumped along. A stiff wind tore at her hair and slapped her cheeks. She passed Frau Kopp’s farmhouse with its steep, overhanging roof, half himself on his chain trying to get to her. She patted his straw, half shingle. Bruno, the mongrel dog, almost choked shaggy head, climbed a fence, and stood on the road, where puddles gleamed between ridges of mud. In the distance the church steeple lifted a warning finger at a flock of crows that seemed to be weaving swastikas against the sky.

Janna took a deep breath. She had managed to evade the cruel task Frau Kopp had laid on her because she was a Hitler Youth. Frau Kopp was afraid of Hitler. All grownups were.

"Oh, it isn’t nonsense," said Janna. "It’s all in Wagner’s operas."

"It’s heathenish anyway," sputtered Frau Kopp. "And for that they keep you from honest work!"

"Learning a part is work too. My parents have to do it all the time. They’re famous actors, their pictures are often in the papers, and Hitler has praised them. It’s in an article . . . I’ll show it to you. . . . He says they are an outstanding example of true Aryan culture."

Adjusting her black shawl, she shrugged her shoulders. "All right, go if you must and leave me with all the work." She bent and made a grab at the unsuspecting Lieschen. Janna lifted her coat from a nail and fled.

It was the last half of February. The thick blanket of snow was raveled and torn, showing patches of earth and yellow vegetation. Streams rushed singing down the hills, sweeping mud and pebbles along. The mountains, wrapped in fog, loomed like ghosts. Janna’s boots picked up the sticky snow as she clumped along. A stiff wind tore at her hair and slapped her cheeks. She passed Frau Kopp’s farmhouse with its steep, overhanging roof, half himself on his chain trying to get to her. She patted his straw, half shingle. Bruno, the mongrel dog, almost choked shaggy head, climbed a fence, and stood on the road, where puddles gleamed between ridges of mud. In the distance the church steeple lifted a warning finger at a flock of crows that seemed to be weaving swastikas against the sky.

Janna took a deep breath. She had managed to evade the cruel task Frau Kopp had laid on her because she was a Hitler Youth. Frau Kopp was afraid of Hitler. All grownups were. hero who had fearlessly slain a dragon yet trembled at the sight of Brunhilde’s beauty. And that was another problem: Janna knew she was no beauty. Well, maybe they could do things with stage lights.

What would it be like to have a magic ring that gave you power over everybody? thought Janna. And why hadn’t Brunhilde used it to save Siegfried and conquer her enemies? Why had she given it back to the Rhine maidens? They had hidden the ring and now no one could get it, though some people said it had been given to Hitler and that that was why he had conquered all those countries.

A girl hailed Janna from a neighboring farm. She came running across the fields, darting around rocks and shrubs, her long braids dancing on her back. It was Greta, a classmate.

"Wait for me, Janna!"

"You got away early too," said Janna.

"I said we had a Youth meeting."

"So did I!" The girls burst into laughter.

"They’ll think it’s funny when we have our rehearsal on Friday. They’ll say we have too many special meetings!"

"They can’t do anything," said Greta. "We’re allowed as many meetings as we like."

"As long as our group leader doesn’t tell on us."

"She won’t. Hildegarde is nice. The other group leader we had, Hannelore, was awful, really strict. She used to make us march with heavy packs and take cold baths in freezing weather because she said we should be as tough as the boys. We were going to be the mothers of future German soldiers and she wasn’t having any weaklings."

"Did you bag anything today?" asked Janna.

"Not much. I think Frau Hahn is noticing. But if she says anything, I’ll tell on her. I’ll tell she slaughtered a pig illegally."

"Did she?" asked Janna.

"Of course. They’re always doing it, those farmers. They don’t care if our soldiers starve. I got some onions anyway. They’re good in soup."

"I got an egg," said Janna.

"An egg? But they count those!" exclaimed Greta.

"I got it before it was counted." They walked for a moment in silence, listening to a robin chirping on a bare branch.

The old mailman, his brown leather bag over his shoulder, was bicycling past. He was bent over the handlebars against the wind, treading down the pedals heavily with his big boots. Slush sprayed up and the girls jumped back.

"Gr�ss Gott!" said the mailman, nodding at them.

"Heil Hitler!" answered the girls, arms outstretched. Janna thoughtfully picked her way among the puddles.

"Did you ever see Hitler?" she asked.

"Yes, once," said Greta, "at that Youth rally we went to."

"There were too many people, I couldn’t see a thing."

"I climbed a tree," said Greta, enjoying Janna’s look of admiration. "But I didn’t see much," she confessed. "Only the back of his head and his raised arm. And do you know, he didn’t raise it high enough, not even as high as his shoulder!" Hildegarde made the girls raise their arms well above their heads, and no matter how long the occasion lasted, you were never allowed to rest your arm on the girl in front.

But of course Hitler didn’t have to raise his arm at all; the greeting was to him. Besides, laws were for other people, not for Hitler.

"Why did you want to go home early today?" Janna asked.

"Because of the test tomorrow," said Greta, looking worried. "They keep us working so late, I’m too tired to do my homework. I did badly all this term. Race science is our most important subject and I want to do as well as I can, but I can’t memorize all that stuff. Those terribly long words!"

"I know, like ‘brachycephalic,’ " said Janna. "That’s a kind of skull. There are round, square, and long ones, and it’s very important which kind you have. The Aryan ones are the best."

"Why?"

"It has something to do with room for your brains. Monkeys don’t have much. Aryans have the most. We’re Aryans, the only true race. We’re supposed to become supermen."

"What other races are there?"

"Oh, Slavs and Mongolians and Semites . . . that’s the Jews. When you don’t know the answer to a question, just say something bad about the Jews and they’ll give you a good mark. They’ll forget what they asked."

"Really?"

"Sure, I tried it. It sometimes works with Slavs too, they’re almost as bad as the Jews . . . that’s the Russians, you know. But the Jews are the worst. They made us lose the First World War. We were winning the war, the soldiers were winning it—and Hitler was a soldier then so he knows—but the Jews in Berlin made us sign the Treaty of Versailles and that made us lose the war. We lost a lot of territory so we hadn’t enough Lebensraum and we had to pay so much money to our enemies that we became poor. We even used our paper money in the toilets!"

"Why?" asked Greta.

"Because it was worth less than toilet paper. No one had work and people fell dead in the streets with hunger, but the democratic government did nothing. When Hitler came, he got back our lost territories and everyone had work. We had an army again and enough food. That’s why we have to thank Hitler before and after meals."

"But what has that got to do with race?"

"Don’t you see, Greta? It’s race that makes the Jews so bad. They’ve got the wrong blood. We were pure Aryans before the Jews came and we must become pure Aryans again. That’s why our boys have written on their daggers: ‘Blood and honor.’ It’s shameful to let your race deteriorate by mixing it with inferior races. In the ancient days of Atlantis the Aryans had magic powers. The swastika is a magic Aryan sign, you know. But the Jews have weakened us and we’ve lost those powers. Hitler wants to give them back to us, but he can do it only if we stamp out the evil influence of the Jews."

"Did you ever see a Jew?" asked Greta.

"No, only in pictures."

"A Jew used to visit our village before you came," said Greta. "Every Friday he stood in the marketplace, selling a pig. He had a big yellow star on his coat. But there was always something wrong with the pig. We were glad when he didn’t come any more."

"I think they’re like the Nibelungen dwarfs in our play . . . sly and dangerous," said Janna. "It’s the Jews in England and America that are Wghting us. All the Aryan people would like to belong to us. And the Jews gave us Christianity, which is making us weak. Christians have to love their enemies, do good to those who hate them, and give more to those who steal from them. If you believe that, how can you be a strong nation and conquer the world? Hitler says it’s impossible to be a good German and a Christian at the same time."

"Do you believe that?" asked Greta.

"Hitler says so," said Janna.

"And why are the Slavs bad?"

"They’re Communists; the Jews gave them Communism. They say that everyone is equal, and that’s a lie. There’s a master race, that’s us, and inferior races. The inferior races must serve the master race."

"You make it sound so simple, Janna. I wonder how you do it . . . all those long chapters in Mein Kampf . . ."

"I suppose it’s because of my parents," said Janna. "They’re famous, you know. Hitler said . . ."

"Yes, you told me," Greta broke in. The only thing she disliked about Janna was the way she boasted about her parents. "Here’s my road. See you tomorrow."

Greta lived in a hut in the mountains, while Janna’s home was in the village with her nurse Erna and Erna’s mother. The celebrated Mechtild and Otto Oster, Janna’s parents, had been traveling about for over two years, entertaining troops in foreign countries. They kept writing Janna that they would get a house soon and send for her, but so far it hadn’t happened. Janna consoled herself by writing them long letters and talking about them to anyone who would listen. They were always present to her, an admiring audience for all she did.

Erna took great interest in Janna’s Youth meetings, but the old mother, who mumbled away her last days in a rocking chair beside the huge blue porcelain stove, a rosary in perpetual motion between her fingers, disapproved of the Youth movement. She said it was wicked to hold meetings on Sunday mornings so that Janna could not go to church. She warned Janna not to listen to the pagan things she was being taught. She would go on to mutter threats against a mysterious being called Antichrist and predict all manner of evil for Germany, till Erna made her be quiet.

"Don’t mind her," Erna would say contemptuously. "The old one is crazy."

Janna loved her Youth group. It was the only pleasant thing in her life. All the rest was grim. School from eight to twelve, much of the time taken up preparing bandages or doing other work for the soldiers, as well as writing letters to them. Then midday dinner, which consisted of potatoes with a flavor of meat. Then farm work in the afternoons. When there was no Youth meeting, Janna often had to work late, so that her homework suffered. The farmers forgot how young their helpers were and they piled on the work. If it had not been for the Hitler Youth, Janna didn’t think she could have stood it.

The Youth meetings were delightful—except for readings from Mein Kampf or lectures on early Germanic tribes, which were dull. But the girls also learned handicrafts, practiced on musical instruments, played games, acted in plays, held songfests, and went on hikes. In the summer there were camping trips and excursions to Youth rallies. Those were the high points. When Janna was on a camping trip with her group, she felt confident, strong, and alive. The fresh air, the lovely woods and mountains, the comradeship of the other girls: it was glorious. They all felt they mattered, their country needed them—and what a beautiful, beautiful country it was!

In the evenings, tired out, they would gather around a leaping bonfire. Then Hildegarde would tell stories: old tales grown from the soil they sat on. They heard of the great Norse gods and their fiery matings, of curses and spells, of heroes with magic powers and of their malicious foes . . . till their eyelids pricked and the fire dwindled to a few glimmering worms. Then the night wind would blow them into their tents to dream of blond gods.

Janna loved it all. She sang enthusiastically with the rest:

"Today we own Germany,

Tomorrow the world."

She was nearing the village and looked forward to Erna’s face when she saw the egg. Erna would tell her to thank Frau Kopp. Janna grinned. Frau Kopp would as soon part with her false teeth as with her eggs!

She had passed the first pastel-colored village houses with their wooden latticework, smoke curling from their chimneys. Usually Hans, the shoemaker, sat in front of his window, nodding at her, but today the window was empty. A bit farther on lived the clockmaker. His shop was full of interesting, carved wooden clocks, ticking and wheezing away, but Janna did not linger to look. She saw an ambulance standing before the little hotel. Frau Bauer, the hotelkeeper’s wife, was opening the door for two men, who were carrying out Frau Bauer’s old aunt on a stretcher. She was covered with a blanket and her face looked pale and anxious as she clutched the blanket with emaciated fingers.

"Now remember, Aunt Hedwig, it’s for your own good. They are going to make you better," said Frau Bauer.

"I know . . ." quavered Aunt Hedwig. "They have this new treatment . . . but . . ."

"You don’t want to go on having those pains," said Frau Bauer.

"But it’s so far . . ." complained Aunt Hedwig. "You won’t be able to visit me!"

"I wouldn’t be able to anyway. The hotel . . ."

"I know, I know . . ." Aunt Hedwig’s voice trailed off.

A group of villagers had gathered around the ambulance. The men carrying the stretcher had no expression on their faces. They did not talk to Aunt Hedwig or to Frau Bauer. They waited till the goodbyes were over; then they pushed the stretcher into the ambulance and slammed the doors shut. They climbed into the front seat. A stink came from the exhaust pipe as the ambulance sputtered into action, its wheels spraying slush, and growled off. The villagers watched it getting smaller and smaller till it disappeared down the hill. Frau Bauer sobbed and hurried into the hotel, her handkerchief pressed against her face.

"If she had to have new treatment, why not send her to the hospital in Freiburg? Why to Hademan? It’s so far away," said a woman.

"I think that’s decided by the government," another voice remarked.

"Hademan is for the aged and for incurables and feebleminded," said Hans, the shoemaker. "It’s a special place."

"That’s true," the postmistress chipped in. "My sister’s boy wasn’t right in the head and they took him there, but he died soon after. They said it was pneumonia."

"Grandpa went there with a sore foot, and he died of pneumonia too," said a messenger boy. "It must be drafty in that place."

"He was old; perhaps the change was too much for him."

"Maybe," said the postmistress grimly. "But has any of you ever heard of anyone who came back from Hademan alive?" There was a silence. Somewhere a radio blared:

"Adolf Hitler’s favorite flower

Is the simple edelweiss."

Janna shivered. Was something wrong? Was something dreadful going to happen to Aunt Hedwig? Gentle Aunt Hedwig, always lying on her long chair in front of the window and welcoming children with a box of homemade candy. She had been like a grandmother to Janna, telling her stories of long ago, when women wore long skirts and men had whiskers. Together they had pored over albums with stiff pages full of dried ferns and faded brown snapshots. If Aunt Hedwig had been in pain she had never shown it.

The tall youth standing beside Janna saw her distress. He belonged to the Jung Volk the older boys’ group. His name was Kurt Engel.

"Don’t listen to those gossips," he said, putting his hand on Janna’s shoulder as he walked beside her. That was a great honor.

"Do you think she’ll be all right?" asked Janna timidly, gazing up at him. Kurt looked away into the distance. The main street was sloping down steeply now, and they could see the misted valley with row upon row of snowcapped mountains melting into a haze of purple.

"Does it matter?" he asked. "Aunt Hedwig is a useless old woman of no further value to our nation. Why worry about her? Don’t you realize what is happening to our young people, our soldiers in Russia? Have you seen the list of the dead? Why don’t you worry about them?" He was gazing at the sky where the last rays of the sun slanted down like spears from a gap in the clouds.

"We’re in a crisis," he said. "Only four times in history was there a similar crisis in Europe: when the Greeks warded off the Persians, when Charles Martel defended France against Islam, when Vienna held out against the Turks, and when the Teutonic knights stopped the hordes of Genghis Khan at Liegnitz. Now, once again Europe is threatened by barbarians from the East and we Germans are called to save it." Kurt’s closely cropped head, lifted against the sky, looked stern and noble, thought Janna.

"There is a prophecy," Kurt went on, "that after the gods were killed, the horn of Heimdall, the guardian of the border line between gods and men, would sound one day to awaken the Germanic race. I think it has happened: Hitler is that horn. He has special powers and is sent to lead us to a great victory, which will be spoken of for centuries to come. We must trust him and follow him, even unto death."

"Oh, I hope not death," cried Janna.

Kurt looked down at her as if he had just discovered her. His smile lit up his face. "You’re all right, Janna," he said. "Don’t worry. Hitler is invincible, a man of destiny. With him we can do anything. See you Friday. I suppose you know I’m playing Siegfried . . ." Nodding affably at her, he strode off, tall and handsome in his leather jacket. Janna stared after him. So he was to be Siegfried! What a stunning Siegfried he would make! She began to think about her costume: a flowing white dress with silver breastplates, a girdle studded with jewels, and a helmet on her head. She also needed silver sandals and a spear. She wondered where she’d get all that, but Hildegarde would help, she always did. Janna was almost home before she remembered the egg.

"See what I’ve got for you, Erna!" she cried, bursting into the kitchen. Erna looked around. She was holding a letter.

"Janna!" she exclaimed, scarcely noticing the egg. "I’m so glad you are early! We just got this special-delivery letter. Your father and mother have found a house in Amsterdam. They want you to join them as soon as possible. You’ll be traveling with a Frau Mueller, an officer’s wife who is visiting her husband. So much to do, I don’t know where to start! But . . . what’s the matter? Don’t you want to go to your parents?"


Excerpted from The Borrowed House by Hilda Van Stockum Copyright 1975, Used with permission from Bethlehem Books

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