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Angelus News | April 9, 2021 Vol 6 No 7

Nineteenth-century sculptor Philippe Lemaire’s relief sculpture of the risen Christ on the exterior of St. Isaac’s Cathedral in St. Petersburg, Russia. For this year’s special Easter issue, on Page 10 Kathryn Lopez offers a meditation on where Easter finds Catholics after a long year of fear. On Page 26, Greg Erlandson reflects on the recent shootings in Georgia and the scandal of God’s forgiveness for the worst of sinners. And on Page 28, Angelus talks to Catholic filmmaker Roma Downey about her perfectly timed new film, “Resurrection.”

Nineteenth-century sculptor Philippe Lemaire’s relief
sculpture of the risen Christ on the exterior of St. Isaac’s
Cathedral in St. Petersburg, Russia. For this year’s special
Easter issue, on Page 10 Kathryn Lopez offers a meditation on where Easter finds Catholics after a long year of fear. On Page 26, Greg Erlandson reflects on the recent shootings in Georgia and the scandal of God’s forgiveness for the worst of sinners. And on Page 28, Angelus talks to Catholic filmmaker Roma Downey about her perfectly timed new film, “Resurrection.”

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More rules,<br />

less boredom<br />

In search of balance between chaos<br />

and order, Jordan Peterson’s latest book<br />

comes to some surprising conclusions<br />

BY CHRISTOPHER KACZOR<br />

In his runaway 5 million copy bestseller<br />

“12 Rules for Life: An Antidote<br />

to Chaos” (Random House<br />

Canada, $25.95), Jordan Peterson<br />

emphasized the need for order. In his<br />

new book “Beyond Order: 12 More<br />

Rules for Life” (Portfolio / Penguin,<br />

$29), he worries about the opposite<br />

danger: the attempt to eliminate<br />

chaos.<br />

A meaningful life, Peterson argues,<br />

is lived on the border of order and<br />

chaos, of conservatism and liberalism,<br />

of preserving the wisdom of the past<br />

and creating transformation for the future.<br />

Without order, the present is too<br />

tumultuous, dangerous, and unpredictable.<br />

Without chaos, the present is<br />

too stultified, stifling, and sterile. We<br />

need yin, but we also need yang.<br />

Peterson is known for his simple<br />

piece of advice, “Clean your room.”<br />

But cleaning your room is not<br />

enough.<br />

In “Beyond Order,” Peterson advises<br />

us to make one room in our home<br />

as beautiful as possible: “As it is said,<br />

‘Man shall not live by bread alone’<br />

(Matthew 4:4). That is exactly right.<br />

We live by beauty. We live by literature.<br />

We live by art. We cannot<br />

live without some connection to the<br />

divine — and beauty is divine —<br />

because in its absence life is too short,<br />

too dismal, and too tragic.” We need<br />

beauty as a window to the transcendent.<br />

“If of thy mortal goods thou art<br />

bereft, / And from thy slender store /<br />

two loaves alone to thee are left, / Sell<br />

one, and with the dole / Buy hyacinths<br />

to feed thy soul.”<br />

Peterson quotes poets like Walt Whitman,<br />

William Blake, and William<br />

Wordsworth, and notes the hushed<br />

awe that people have in museums<br />

before priceless works of art.<br />

A great artist manifests creativity that<br />

renews society, and this renewal is<br />

always necessary.<br />

“Everything changes,” Peterson<br />

writes. “Pure traditionalism is doomed<br />

for that very reason. We need the new,<br />

merely to maintain our position. And<br />

we need to see what we have become<br />

blinded to, by our very expertise and<br />

specialization, so that we do not lose<br />

touch with the Kingdom of God and<br />

die in our boredom, ennui, arrogance,<br />

blindness to beauty, and soul-deadening<br />

cynicism.”<br />

We cannot live in the past, pretending<br />

as if time has stopped. Of<br />

course, as C.S. Lewis pointed out in<br />

critiquing chronological snobbery, the<br />

need for change does not mean that<br />

24 • ANGELUS • <strong>April</strong> 9, <strong>2021</strong>

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