Media coverage of the LCWR: ignorance, bias and laziness, sloppy and incomplete

This is a little dated, but it helps to explain some prominent errors about what is going on the the Holy See’s reforming efforts concerning key women religious.

This was by Ann Carey on NRO.

Nun Too Accurate Reporting
By Ann Carey
June 4, 2012

The mainstream media has had a field day with the June 1 press release of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) accusing the Vatican of causing “scandal” and “polarization” by identifying doctrinal problems within the LCWR that need to be corrected. What is really an internal Church matter about the proper role of an organization that has canonical standing in the Catholic Church has become a hot topic in a media that seems to delight in any controversy within the Church, especially one that involves challenges to its authority.

Headlines like “U.S. Nuns crack back at Vatican crackdown” (USA Today, June 1) and “American nuns come out swinging against Vatican” (CNN, June 1) might be funny if they weren’t so very ignorant. In fact, ignorance and bias have marked much of the media’s coverage of the doctrinal assessment of the LCWR by the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). Or perhaps it’s laziness, for it is clear that many of the people writing about this issue know little about the Catholic Church and even less about the background for this story.

The June 1 New York Times editorial “When in Rome, Speak Up for Reality,” is a prime example of this ignorance/laziness/bias. For starters, the LCWR does not represent 80 percent of the sisters in the U.S., as the Times and many other media outlets claim. It represents only its 1,500 members, and sometimes even that is questionable, for it was only the LCWR 21-member national board that met and issued the June 1 press release well in advance of the August LCWR annual membership meeting.

Further, only members of leadership teams of religious orders belong to LCWR: The grassroots sisters in religious orders do not belong to LCWR, and have neither voice nor vote in the organization. Many of these sisters have told me they resent the LCWR claiming it represents them.

The Times editorial also claims that “many” see the Vatican action as “retaliation” for the LCWR endorsement of Obamacare, which the U.S. bishops opposed because of abortion funding and lack of conscience protection. If the editorial writers had read the CDF document, they would have seen that the decision to conduct the doctrinal assessment was made in 2008, when George W. Bush was still president and Obamacare was just a dream.

The Times and other media also persist in interpreting the Vatican action as insensitive to the good works sisters have done and continue to do. Again, if one actually read the CDF document, it would be clear that the good works of sisters are generously acknowledged and praised, and the CDF made clear that its action applies only to the 1,500-member LCWR.

However, good works do not justify doctrinal deviations, and again, the Times and most media have ignored sections in the Vatican document that discuss serious doctrinal problems such as a “rejection of faith.” And the issues cited in the document under the heading of “radical feminism” (a term called “a particularly dated canard” by the Times) include distortions of faith in Jesus and the structure of sacramental life, as well as undermining the doctrines of “the Holy Trinity, the divinity of Christ, and the inspiration of Sacred Scripture.

These are all major doctrines of the Catholic Church, not just “basic, nonheretical questions about gender equality in the church,” as the Times editorial claims.

Such sloppy and incomplete reporting leads one to think that the Times and other secular media rather enjoy playing up any controversy related to the Catholic Church, even when they do not know the facts.

— Ann Carey is author of Sisters in Crisis: The Tragic Unraveling of Women’s Religious Communities.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Biased Media Coverage, Magisterium of Nuns | Tagged , , , ,
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RECENT POSTS OF INTEREST

Thank you for your prayers while I was ill.

Some posts as they scroll along:

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Obama receives a key endorsement

Hey, this is a coveted endorsement!

O’Grady: Castro Endorses Obama

The dictator’s daughter gets a visa to make speeches here while the regime continues to hold an American hostage.

President Obama has received yet another endorsement, this time from the daughter of Cuban military dictator Raúl Castro. Mariela Castro proclaimed her support for the sitting president 10 days ago, during a visit to the United States. “I believe that Obama needs another opportunity and he needs greater support to move forward with his projects and with his ideas, which I believe come from the bottom of his heart,” she said in a CNN interview in New York.

[…]

I know that Hugo Chavez has health problems, so we can cut him a little slack.  He’ll endorse The First Gay President pretty soon.

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Fishwrap’s Sr. Maureen Fiedler uses her ruler on those pesky Wisconsin Bishops!

Readers want me to fisk one of our favorite contributors to the National Catholic Fishwrap, the perennial Sr. Maureen Fiedler.   Alas, I two tags for Sister, the other is here.

This week Sister has knuckle-slapped the Bishops of Wisconsin for not defending the poor, the oppressed, the unions and the union-backed candidate in the recent gubernatorial election in which Gov. Walker handily prevailed.

The Wisconsin bishops were silent!  How dare they not speak out?

On the other hand, the Bishops of Minnesota have consistently and vigorously defending natural marriage.

Has Sr. Fiedler praised the Bishops of Minnesota for their bold public statements in this the matter of this great social issue?

I don’t remember seeing her praise of Archbishop Nienstedt of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the other bishops for being so active in the public square.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Lighter fare, Magisterium of Nuns, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , , ,
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The Bold And The Beautiful

I have been mulling over the recent support given by the Catholic Theological Society of America to Sr. Margaret Farley.

Let’s be clear about a large slice of the group. There is in the CTSA a serious percentage of self-legitimating theologians who have the smugness of the academic elites. They don’t want to admit that – as the trends are changing – they are more and more irrelevant in their Catholic institutions. Thus, they can bask in Sr. Farley’s celebrity for a moment or two and be heroes by supporting her!

Think about the objections the liberals have to what the CDF has done. They don’t say that proper procedures weren’t followed. They don’t deny that the CDF reflects the Church’s promulgated teachings. They don’t say that Farley’s book is not in harmony with what you find in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. They cede that what the CDF Note reflects is “official” teaching. What they are saying is that what the CDF Note reflects shouldn’t be official teaching.

They say catholics believe other things. Therefore, the theology “of the Vatican” is not the theology of “the majority of Catholics”. They juxtapose two different kinds of Magisterium.

Also, the CTSA should be a scholarly group. They laud Sr. Farley’s book as a great piece of scholarship. The problem is that Sr. Farley’s book isn’t all that impressive from that point of view. It doesn’t reflect a lot of hard work or research. Sure, there are a few footnotes and a little bibliography, but hers is not the well-researched book one would expect at a high level of theological reflection. Or is the standard for certain authors a bit more … relaxed?

To be fair, Farley doesn’t cite Oprah, but she does The Kinsey Report.

Instead, what substitutes for work in Sr. Farley’s book is personal experience.

You might think about it this way.

The Poor have experience X, therefore Y should be done for them.

Sr. Farley wants justice for the “oppressed”. She morphs something like the “preferential option for the poor” into something like the “preferential option for the lesbian”. Lesbians are the new poor and marginalized. Lesbians are the new anawim!  They need a new sexual ethic.

Research might be a little thin when it comes to this claim.

So, where do you ground your arguments? In your personal experiences and those of your students.

Think about it this way:

A 20 year old would-be lesbian comes to your office during office hours and breaks down crying. She was abused, she is a little over-weight, she is in tears. She comes out: she is a lesbian. You think, this is God’s daughter and she is in pain. I have to give her a sexual ethic that will free her from oppression.

Sr. Farley is perfecting soap-opera theology.

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I’m on pins and needles!

If I am not mistaken, tomorrow, Tuesday, the leadership of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR – a subsidiary of the Magisterium of Nuns) will be meeting with the leadership of the Congregation for Doctrine of the Faith.

What do you want to bet that  – from their deep conviction that the Church simply must know about the drama of their plight – almost immediately after the meeting with Card. Levada the gals will hold a press conference, even if it is outside with a single and handheld camera?

Frankly, I’m on pins and needles.

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A critic of the CDF Note about Sr. Farley’s dreadful book

Several people sent me links to an piece on Religion Dispatches about pro-abortion Mary E. Hunt’s defense of pro-abortion RSM Sr. Margaret Farley’s dreadful book.

My readers wanted me to fisk Hunt’s arguments.

Since I have a little jet lag and a lot to do, I will sum my comments up this way.  You should be able to figure out Hunt’s arguments and motivations from this.

Mary Hunt is a lesbian.

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Geeky and Beautiful

For your “Look! Up In The Sky!” file, you Transit of Venus fans will want to watch the ultra-hi-def video of different views of the transit.  This is from the Sun people at NASA and Astronomy Pic of the Day, so the shots are the best around.   I guess that, now that the The First Gay President, Pres. Obama, has gralloched NASA, and with that gralloching our collective dreaming, NASA has more time to make these nice videos.

In any event, this is geeky and beautiful.  Venus is shown moving across the Sun’s variously filtered surface.

The music is sort of new-agey or movie soundtracky but I don’t think Sousa’s Transit of Venus March would have produced quite the effect they were aiming for.

[wp_youtube]4Z9rM8ChTjY[/wp_youtube]

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes

Share some good points from the sermon you heard for Sunday (in most places Corpus Christi).

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Sr. Farley SPEAKS or “Did God say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the garden’?”

From NCFishwrap:

Vatican-criticized nun addresses fellow theologians
Jun. 10, 2012
By Joshua J. McElwee

ST. LOUIS — Mercy Sr. Margaret Farley addressed for the first time publicly Friday evening the Vatican’s harsh criticism of one of her books, saying it points to “profoundly important” questions facing the Catholic community regarding the roles of truth and power.
Speaking slowly, and at times faltering for words, Farley, a prominent moral theologian, addressed the issue during a session at the 67th annual meeting of the Catholic Theological Society of America (CTSA) that saw some 300 colleagues gather to ask what the Vatican’s critique might mean for the future of their discipline.
Ultimately, said Farley on Friday, the critique of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith of her book Just Love, indicates different understandings of the role of theologians in the church and how our tradition changes and grows over time.  [They think they have their own “magisterium”.  The phrase “Magisterium of Nuns” might apply, as a matter of fact.  In any event, Sr. Farley and the CTSA do not determine what the ecclesial vocation of the theologian is.  There was a document on this important question.  HERE.]
“We clearly have grown in many spheres of knowledge — about humans, about the way the universe runs,” said Farley. “It seems reasonable … that if we come to know even a little bit more than we knew before, it might be that the conclusions that we had previously drawn need to be developed. Or maybe even let go of.
“Because it would be a contradiction to Roman Catholic frameworks for doing moral theology to say that we can’t. That would be to imply that we know everything we can know and there’s nothing more to be done.” [I think what she might be saying, in fact, is that we are all grown up now.  We have evolved out of the old human being, and into a new sophisticated modern person who can chose her own morality.]
In her talk Friday, which came during an hour-long session set aside by the CTSA specifically to address the Vatican’s critique, Farley also spoke of her reason for writing her book, which explores how theories of justice might be applied to help create “norms” to guide our sexual actions.  [Yahhh…. not so much.]
The Vatican’s critique, released in a formal “notification” June 4, did not mention that aspect of the book, only citing Farley’s positions on a number of specific issues, which are only briefly discussed in the work. [How much of the book has to be dedicated to the errors?]
Among the areas criticized by the Vatican are Farley’s treatment in the book of the morality of masturbation, homosexual relationships and unions, and divorce and remarriage.
“My reasons for thinking its important for everyone to think about these issues,” said Farley, “is because people are suffering. All over the place, people are suffering.” [Is that an argument for the things she defends?]
Ending her talk, Farley asked what she called “profoundly important” questions.
The issue is, finally, in our tradition, is it a contradiction to have power settle questions of truth? Or to say we all have a capacity to know what we ought to do?” asked Farley.  [Gen 3:1 Now the serpent was more subtle than any other wild creature that the LORD God had made. He said to the woman, “Did God say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the garden’?” 2 And the woman said to the serpent, “We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden; 3 but God said, ‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.'” 4 But the serpent said to the woman, “You will not die. 5 For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”]
“We can make mistakes, we can disagree — but is it the case that natural law is let go when we really only know the answers because of grace of office? This is a profoundly important question in our tradition today.”  [Repeat after me: “Magisterium of Nuns” over and against that of the bishops and Holy Father.]
[…]

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