The
                first thing one notices about Marjorie Corbman is her age, or
                rather her youth. At 17, this recent high-school graduate is
                among the few writers who have been published before reaching
                adulthood. That notable distinction is soon surpassed, however,
                by Corbman's
                depth of insight. Here is a young woman who has explored her
                faith more deeply and more intentionally than many people do
                during the course of a lifetime. 
            Corbman's
                book, A
                    Tiny Step Away from Deepest Faith, recounts
                    her search for meaning, truth, identity and connection,
                    both as
              an individual and as an American teen growing up in our 
                    materialistic culture. Through her own experiences and those
                    of her friends,
              she depicts young people today struggling to find authenticity,
              yet often characterized by adults as shallow and jaded. 
            In the essay below Marjorie talks more about today's youth, its
              contradictions and its yearning for a meaningful way to live. 
            *** 
             
              
                Young 
                  people… do not allow your youth to mislead you and give 
                  you the false hope that you might be able to realize your freedom 
                  and your happiness on your own. Be aware that other people are 
                  your brothers and sisters and your fellow sufferers in the struggle 
                  against death, but also be aware that this struggle will not 
                  bring freedom. No one can liberate us from death except Christ, 
                  Who is the communion of love in the Holy Spirit. —Patriarch 
                  Pavle of Serbia, 2004 Paschal Epistle 
               
             
            I 
              am a new freshman in college, and, perhaps more importantly, I am 
              a person who was transplanted from one place to another. I am going 
              to a Catholic college, a Jesuit school. Not just a nominally Jesuit 
              school, but a school where faith is expected to be part of everyone's 
              life, and it generally is. Ten p.m. Mass on Sundays essentially 
              empties out the hall of my dorm. People here talk about God, and 
              in terms I am completely unaccustomed to hearing. When we went around 
              the room in my religious studies class, explaining our personal 
              religious background, everyone had pretty clear convictions, and, 
              to my shock, generally a strong rooting in the Christian faith. 
              I realized then how provincial my thoughts were on youth spirituality. 
            Moving 
              from one place to another, touching different parts of a whole, 
              allows for greater insight into the essence of a phenomenon. I had 
              thought of youth today as being obsessed with hating "organized 
              religion" and dogma. But how does that characterization jibe 
              with these devoutly Catholic college students?  
            There 
              are matching strands. For one thing, there is a desperateness. Teenagers 
              today live desperately; this is our spirituality, how we approach 
              the world, how we open ourselves to what is beyond. The problem 
              lies in the older generation’s insistence on compartmentalizing 
              life—in putting "spiritual life" in one spot, "academics" 
              in another and "having fun" still someplace else.  
            In 
              other words, the modern world has managed to completely disassemble 
              the experience of the sacrament— 
              of the spiritual and the material as one, of God coming to us in 
              bread, of the Spirit moving us through every moment of our lives. 
               
            Perhaps 
              the good news is that we recognize the disconnections. A thick cloud 
              of boredom has settled over our age bracket, and so we grope out 
              through the mist. We reach out at extremes, and pull back, disillusioned. 
            We 
              know that we want our lives transformed. We know that we are hungry, 
              and we know that there is a way to appease that hunger. Some of 
              us even believe in traditional theology, where God feeds our whole 
              lives in the Eucharist. 
            We 
              know that what surrounds us is diseased, yet we cannot fix it. 
              How can a generation avoid feeding off the culture that envelops 
              it? How can those coming-of-age create a new milieu? What have we 
              to work with? We recognize the things that are poison to our souls 
              but that is all that society provides for us? We cannot simply walk 
              back into a pre-modern culture. We are desperate for purpose. Without 
              that we are left with no alternative but spinning in the cycle of 
              buying and being bought.  
            Yet, 
              I am optimistic. I strongly believe that young people can reject 
              society, despite the money we give and the shows we watch. Being 
              here at school undergirds that hope. Walking beneath the striking 
              blue sky, through the sun-pierced pines, looking at the ivy-covered 
              buildings with their gold crosses glowing in the light, I am surrounded 
              by beauty just like that of my tree-filled town at home. Like always, 
              the majesty of God's Creation reassures me. But something else here 
              helps my faith: the fact that we all talk about God. Oh, if only 
              we could just keep talking about Him, part of me believes that we 
              won't forget Him. 
            I 
              am not blind. I am well aware that we sway in the winds of whatever 
              fad blows our way. 
              We can be mindless pack animals, slaves to death and instinct. Yet 
              every Sunday at 10 p.m. when my hall becomes deadly quiet, I know 
              that the feast that so many have joined affords the ultimate transformation. 
              The victory over death will not and cannot be won by us. It has 
              already been won for us, finally and irrevocably. Such is the mystery 
              of faith, and such will win out in those who reach out desperately, 
              no matter the darkened mists surrounding them. 
             
               
                Blessed 
                  are you who hunger now, for you shall be filled. —Luke 
                  6:21 
               
             
              
              To purchase Marjorie Corbman's book, 
              A 
              TINY STEP AWAY FROM DEEPEST FAITH,  visit amazon.com. This link is provided as a service to explorefaith.org 
              visitors and registered users. 
             
            
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