Rod Dreher asks a good question at the Crunchy Con blog.
I’m 39 years old, and the sort of person to resort quickly to anger at the previous generation for so thoroughly trashing our heritage, especially within the Catholic Church. But as is often remarked, things wouldn’t have collapsed so suddenly within 1960s Catholicism in the US and Europe if everything had been okay in the 1950s. I guess I’m not really interested in wasting any more energy deploring the revolutionaries, and instead want to understand what made them revolutionaries so that those of us whose task it is to rebuild from the ruins they left us don’t make mistakes that could lead our children and grandchildren to such a suicidal backlash.
Any ideas? Was the 1960s-1970s upheaval in the U. S. Church just part of the general, whole-culture zeitgeist, or was there something sinister lurking in 1940s and 1950s style Catholicism specifically? Something that the 60s-70s people were trying to correct, and wound up overcorrecting?