06.09.2024 Views

Angelus News | September 6, 2024 | Vol. 9 No. 18

On the cover: Father Richard Sunwoo, pastor of St. Louise de Marillac in Covina, stands on the sidelines of an LA Chargers preseason game at SoFi Stadium in August. This year, Sunwoo is one of several LA priests with a side gig like no other: celebrating Mass for NFL teams before games. On Page 10, associate editor Mike Cisneros tells the story of the little-known ministry helping teams meet their spiritual needs.

On the cover: Father Richard Sunwoo, pastor of St. Louise de Marillac in Covina, stands on the sidelines of an LA Chargers preseason game at SoFi Stadium in August. This year, Sunwoo is one of several LA priests with a side gig like no other: celebrating Mass for NFL teams before games. On Page 10, associate editor Mike Cisneros tells the story of the little-known ministry helping teams meet their spiritual needs.

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The secret<br />

life of Jim<br />

Illustration of Huckleberry<br />

Finn and Jim. |<br />

SHUTTERSTOCK<br />

A prize-winning author’s reimagining of<br />

‘Huckleberry Finn’ is the kind of imaginative<br />

fiction Pope Francis thinks we need more of.<br />

BY MSGR. RICHARD ANTALL<br />

In his new letter on the importance<br />

of reading fiction and poetry for the<br />

formation of priests, Pope Francis<br />

makes a bold argument: that reading<br />

not only expands the horizons of the<br />

mind, but is also good for the soul.<br />

Francis, who taught literature in<br />

his younger days as a priest, quotes<br />

C. S. Lewis, who said that in immersive<br />

reading, “as in worship, in love,<br />

in moral action, and in knowing, I<br />

transcend myself; and am never more<br />

myself than when I do.”<br />

The pope sees that personal transcendence<br />

in terms of evangelization<br />

and the understanding of other persons<br />

and other cultures. He quotes his<br />

fellow Argentinian, Jorge Luis Borges,<br />

as saying literature was “listening to<br />

another person’s voice.”<br />

My latest reading experience certainly<br />

proves the pope’s point.<br />

Acclaimed writer Percival Everett<br />

released a novel this year based on a<br />

character in Mark Twain’s “Huckleberry<br />

Finn.” That book, although controversial<br />

in some parts, was described by<br />

Ernest Hemingway as the “best book<br />

we’ve had. All American writing comes<br />

from that. There was nothing before.<br />

There has been nothing as good<br />

since.”<br />

Many would beg to differ with<br />

such a sweeping judgment. After all,<br />

Nathanael Hawthorne and Herman<br />

Melville produced their classics before<br />

Twain published “Huckleberry Finn,”<br />

but it is true that the book is practically<br />

American myth. It is our homegrown<br />

“Don Quixote” — which it resembles<br />

in more ways than one — and has an<br />

iconic value that extends beyond those<br />

who have read the book.<br />

Years later, T.S. Eliot would write<br />

about the poetry he found in “Huckleberry<br />

Finn,” and identified the two<br />

themes that explained Twain’s creativity:<br />

“the Boy and the River.”<br />

Eliot said that Huck was Mark<br />

Twain himself, the careful, ironic and<br />

24 • ANGELUS • <strong>September</strong> 6, <strong>2024</strong>

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