My view for awhile

Back on the road after the great Legatus meeting and a few short days with my mother.

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Now I am heading North, but not immediately to the Steam Pipe Trunk Distribution Venue. No . I get to go to Detroit! Tomorrow I am to speak on sacred art at the Detroit Institute of Art for an event sponsored by the outstanding Call To Holiness initiative.

I still some work to do on the talk, mostly technical stuff, images and all that. Since I never use PowerPoint, I am behind the curve a little. We shall see.

UPDATE:

Waiting for “ground squirrels” to get us to our gate.

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Posted in Events, On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , ,
16 Comments

Canonist Ed Peters tears up anti-Catholic John Cornwell’s falsehoods about Pius X and confession

The Canonical Defender is back!  Canonist Ed Peters has taken it on himself to correct a few of the myriad – and I suggest purposeful – errors/lies in John Cornwell’s new anti-Catholic hit job.

Remember how Cornwell distorted the record about Pius XII in calling him “Hitler’s Pope”?

Peters has no combox over there, so I post here. But do go over and visit his blog and spike his stats in gratitude. It’ll take an instant to CLICK.  Mostly my emphases, some his, and my comments.

How wrong is John Cornwall’s attack on Pope St. Pius X? Let me count the ways.
by Dr. Edward Peters

Warning: It always takes longer, sometimes much longer, to correct mistakes than it takes to make them.

There used to be a job at newspapers called “fact-checker”, staff trained to identify assertions of fact (not of opinion, not of prognostication, but of fact) in draft articles and to check those assertions for their basic accuracy. Fact-checking was a service to readers who were spared false or mistaken claims, it was a service to the editors (whose reputations for reliability used to be more widely valued), and it was even a service to writers who learned not to assert more than they could reasonably prove.

Maybe the Daily Mail Online does not have fact-checkers, or maybe its fact-checkers were on break when John Cornwall’s screed against Pope St. Pius X and Confession was submitted for publication. Or maybe any news outlet that posts headlines like “How a pope called Pius turned the confessional box into a paradise for paedophiles” wouldn’t let quibbles from fact-checkers get in the way of a good old-fashioned Catholic bashing. [That’s more like it.] Still, I’d like to think there are yet some folks who care about facts, and it is for them that I write.

Central to Cornwall’s attack on the sacrament of Confession—celebrated in “a dark box like an upturned coffin, smelling of stale perfume and nasty body odours” (Cornwall actually wrote that, and the Mail Online actually published it) [Maybe it is Cornwall himself who needs to bathe?] —is his claim that: “It was the anxious and pessimistic Pius X, [and Benedict was Freddy Krueger to Francis’ Freddy Rogers] Pope from 1903-1914, who decreed in 1910 that children must make their first confession at the age of seven,” inaugurating, per Cornwall, a practice that reduced “child penitents [to] guinea-pigs in the greatest moral experiment ever perpetrated on children in the history of Catholicism.”

Deep breath time.

In passages such as these, we’re not faced with argument and we’re not dealing with reason; instead we confront invective and contempt. Such attacks are, I grant, better parried with spiritual replies than legal but, as Cornwall has chosen to wrap his claims in the thrice-invoked mantle of “investigation”, I may be allowed to reply based on my investigation. [Canonical Defender for President!]

1. Cornwall’s assertion that Pius X was pope from 1903-1914 is correct.

2. Cornwall’s characterization of Pius X as “anxious and pessimistic” is an opinion and he’s free to express it. [Perhaps Cornwell is a psychic.]

3. Cornwall’s assertion that Pius “decreed in 1910 that children must make their first confession at the age of seven” leaves me wondering, literally, what is Cornwall talking about?

Cornwall does not identify the papal decree allegedly ordering seven-year-olds to make confession—though he says the pope’s order came down in 1910, savoring, I suppose, of a specificity that implies that Cornwall actually read the papal document and noted its date. But considering the centrality of Pius’ alleged decree to Cornwall’s claim, I would think that his failure even to identity the document (let alone to quote from it) should have sent up warning flags in some editor’s office. Apparently Mail editors feel differently.

Oh well, on to my fact-checking.

Canon 989 of the 1983 Code requires Catholics above the age of discretion (generally reckoned about age seven) to confess grave sins (nb: not all sins, just grave ones, if any) at least once a year. That is plainly not the same thing as ordering all seven-year-olds to make confession, but Cornwall must have in mind older legislation.

The modern canon on confession can be traced back to the 1917 Code, Canon 906 of which required Catholics above the age of discretion to confess their sins. Now, those who know little beyond how to find canon numbers in a book might think this norm requires all Catholics above age seven to confess all sins. Those who actually know canonical jurisprudence, however, would find that canonists overwhelmingly interpreted Canon 906 to cover only grave sins (if any), and not all sins. Woywod I (1957) 512; Ayrinhac (1928) 267; Abbo-Hannan II (1952) 33-34; et c. Still, we’re almost back to 1910, so maybe Cornwall has in mind Pian legislation that pre-dated the 1917 Code.

What can I say? I have the Gasparri’s footnotes of the 1917 Code open before me, and I don’t see Pope Pius X listed as a source for Canon 906. Now, given that Gasparri was not shy about crediting Pius (the same pontiff who entrusted Gasparri with the codification project) for hundreds of contributions to canons (Gasparri’s Fontes IX: 83-85), it would be very strange for Gasparri to omit this papal contribution . . . had it actually happened. [If you can’t see the invisible duck swim, or hear it’s inaudible quack, maybe there isn’t a duck there at all.  I’m just sayin’.]

About this point one begins to wonder about another of Cornwall’s [stale and nasty] claims, namely, “that young children were not allowed to go to confession before [Pius X’s decree in] the 20th Century”. A glance at Gasparri’s footnotes suffices to destroy that claim.

The very first reference under Canon 906 takes one back to the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215. That holy council (c. 21) expressly required Catholics above the age of reason to confess grave sins once a year. The Council of Trent reiterated that requirement in 1551 (Sess. XIV, de poen., c. 8), and in 1910 a decree of the Congregation of Sacraments, Quam singulari, rebuked parents and priests who were preventing children above the age of reason from approaching the sacrament of Confession based solely on their age.

Nineteen-ten, you say? Could that be what Cornwall has in mind? Cornwall doesn’t identify the Pian decree, so readers are ultimately left guessing, but Quam singualri (which admittedly deals much more with Eucharist for children than it does with Confession) was approved by Pius X before it was published in 1910. Would that approval make it a Pian document?

No.

[NB] Roman dicasterial documents, which often boast ‘papal approval’, come in two types: those many approved by the pope “in forma communi” or those very few approved by him “in forma specifica”. Only if that latter sort of papal approval is expressly asserted in the document does the dicasterial document take on papal authority. Otherwise, the document “retains the juridical weight of the particular curial dicastery that has formulated the document and does not carry the added weight of a papal document or papal act.” Bretzke, Consecrated Phrases (1998) 62. I checked the original publication of Quam (AAS 10: 577-583) and papal approval was not given in forma specifica. In fact, Quam is printed in the AAS right alongside all the other dicasterial statements issued that year, not with the pontifical documents. [This, friends, is why Peters is so good.]

What then to make of Cornwall’s claim that Pius X, for the first time ever, ordered all seven-year-olds to confess their sins? [That he is talking out of his … hat?] Well, I find no such papal decree, certainly not directed at all sins (but only at grave sins, if any), and which even then would not, by centuries, have been the first time that Church authority directed Catholics age seven and older to confess their grave sins.

Except for those three things, Cornwall’s assertion about Pius X’s unprecedented order in 1910 to seven-olds to confess their sins stands up as well as any assertion wrong in so many respects stands up—if it’s made in a fact-free zone.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Ed Peters.

Kudos.

Finally, GO TO CONFESSION!

If you are Catholic and above the age of reason you are bound by law to confess your mortal sins once per year.  If you are smart, unless you are really holy, you will go more often than once per year.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Fr. Z KUDOS, GO TO CONFESSION, The Drill, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, You must be joking! | Tagged , , , , , ,
19 Comments

Latin… making a comeback?

Amusing.

From a reader:

 

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
19 Comments

Facebook: 58 new “gender” choices. Blech.

This would be funny, if it weren’t so bizarre, twisted and sick.

From ABC:

Here’s a List of 58 Gender Options for Facebook Users

Facebook introduced dozens of options for users to identify their gender today – and although the social media giant said it would not be releasing a comprehensive list, ABC News has found at least 58 so far.
Previously, users had to identify themselves as male or female. They were also given the option of not answering or keeping their gender private.
User’s can now select a “custom” gender option.
“There’s going to be a lot of people for whom this is going to mean nothing, but for the few it does impact, it means the world,” Facebook software engineer Brielle Harrison told the Associated Press. Harrison, who worked on the project, is in the process of gender transition, from male to female.
Facebook will also allow users to select between three pronouns: “him,” “her” or “their.”
The following are the 58 gender options identified by ABC News:

  • Agender
  • Androgyne
  • Androgynous
  • Bigender
  • Cis
  • Cisgender
  • Cis Female
  • Cis Male
  • Cis Man
  • Cis Woman
  • Cisgender Female
  • Cisgender Male
  • Cisgender Man
  • Cisgender Woman
  • Female to Male
  • FTM
  • Gender Fluid
  • Gender Nonconforming
  • Gender Questioning
  • Gender Variant
  • Genderqueer
  • Intersex
  • Male to Female
  • MTF
  • Neither
  • Neutrois
  • Non-binary
  • Other
  • Pangender
  • Trans
  • Trans*
  • Trans Female
  • Trans* Female
  • Trans Male
  • Trans* Male
  • Trans Man
  • Trans* Man
  • Trans Person
  • Trans* Person
  • Trans Woman
  • Trans* Woman
  • Transfeminine
  • Transgender
  • Transgender Female
  • Transgender Male
  • Transgender Man
  • Transgender Person
  • Transgender Woman
  • Transmasculine
  • Transsexual
  • Transsexual Female
  • Transsexual Male
  • Transsexual Man
  • Transsexual Person
  • Transsexual Woman
  • Two-Spirit

This is crazy.  Again, I am reminded of the downfall of Númenor.

 

Posted in Liberals, Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, You must be joking! | Tagged ,
117 Comments

Vanishing Transparency, Disappearing Freedom

In other news, under the Obama Adminstration statists’ dreams are coming true!

From The Washington Times,

Survey: U.S. press freedom plunges under Obama to 46th in world, after Romania

The Obama administration’s handling of whistleblower Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency leaks and the investigation of a string of leaks produced a plunge in the country’s rating on press freedoms and government openness, according to a global survey released Tuesday.
The U.S. under President Obama, who once promised to run the “most transparent” administration in the country’s history, fell from 32nd to 46th in the 2014 World Press Freedom Index, a drop of 13 slots. The index, compiled by the press advocacy group Reporters Without Borders, analyzes 180 countries on criteria such as official abuse, media independence and infrastructure to determine how free journalists are to report.
Officials of the group said press freedoms were under attack around the world as governments grow increasingly sophisticated in collecting sensitive data and in tracking down those who leak it.
“Journalists are being caught up in what is, I think, fairly characterized as a rapidly growing surveillance apparatus, and this is happening all over the world,” said Geoffrey King, Internet advocacy coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists.

[…]

Another milestone for the American people!

Posted in Liberals | Tagged , ,
8 Comments

Wyoming and 18 states defend 2nd Amendment against New Jersey, federal courts

From FNC:

19 states join legal fight against New Jersey’s concealed weapons law

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Wyoming is leading a coalition of 19 states asking the U.S. Supreme Court to let them submit a brief supporting a New Jersey man’s challenge to that state’s concealed weapons law.

The Wyoming Attorney General’s Office, acting as lawyer for Wyoming and the other states, on Wednesday asked the Supreme Court to grant a hearing to John M. Drake and others who are challenging a recent appeals court ruling.

A three-judge panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last summer ruled against Drake’s challenge to a provision in New Jersey law that says people seeking permits to carry a concealed firearm must prove to police that they have a justifiable need. [Booo!]

The brief from Wyoming Attorney General’s Office says that Wyoming and the other states are concerned that if the appeals court ruling stands, it could threaten their less-restrictive concealed carry laws. [Booo!]

“This decision out of New Jersey impacts the right to keep and bear arms outside of the home,” Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead said Wednesday. “So, I felt it was necessary to have the attorney general support a petition to the Supreme Court to hear this case.

“If the current decision stands, states providing greater protections than New Jersey under the Second Amendment may be pre-empted by future federal action,” said Mead, a Republican. [Booo!]

Wyoming is among the most pro-gun states in the nation. Although Wyoming still issues concealed carry permits to its citizens, the state in 2011 changed its laws to allow concealed carry without a permit.

Mead and other statewide officials this month approved $13 million in grants to help a Colorado producer of ammunition magazines for guns move its manufacturing operations to Wyoming. Magpul Industries of Erie, Colo., pledged to move out of Colorado after lawmakers in that state enacted gun control measures last year. [Hurray for Magpul!]

[…]

The Star-Ledger quoted Chris W. Cox, executive director of the NRA’s Institute for Legislative Action, saying, “Law-abiding citizens have a constitutional right to defend themselves beyond their front doorstep.” [Exactly.]

The other states joining in the effort are Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota and West Virginia. [If your state isn’t on this list, perhaps you should make some phone calls.]

Yet another reason to appreciate Wyoming.

Speaking of Wyoming, if you are thinking about colleges, consider Wyoming Catholic College.  Click their ad on my sidebar.  When I was at the Legatus summit last week, I stopped at their display.  They still have this great t-shirt:

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And also speaking of Wyoming, when was the last time you refreshed your supply of …

[CUE MUSIC]

… Mystic Monk Coffee?

You know how it is, don’t you.  Every day you wake up, yawn, stretch and get out of bed thinking, “What did Pope Francis do this time that I am going to have to spend my day explaining?” Well, maybe that’s just the first thing I think.  What the rest of you out there think first off is, “What have those wacko liberals done to restrict my constitutional rights today?”  Right?  I’m right, aren’t I!

That’s when you pad off to the kitchen and make that first dose of strong coffee.

You’ll need that coffee, pal, because those liberals are crafty.  You need to stay alert.  You need to stay frosty.   Ohhhhh yes.  They’re coming for you and for your copies of the Constitution.  They know when you’ve been sleeping.  They know when your awake.  But unlike Santa, they take things away from you, like your civil liberties!   As a matter of fact, they’ve already sneaked into your house, no, slithered into your house and planted bugs in your phone and in your dog and in your …  your… coffee maker, too!  FIGHT BACK!  Just like the Devil hates holy water, liberals hate Mystic Monk Coffee.   Give ’em a good solid punch in the nose each day when that fine dark roasted aroma spreads out into your living space and starts to interfere with their … their… secret liberal smello-technology bugging software device monitors and stuff.

Remember, it was a lack of Mystic Monk Coffee that brought down Tsar and caused the rise of Communism and eventually led to Notre Dame giving Pres. Obama an honorary doctorate!   In doctorate in LAW for pity’s sake!

And those same liberals are out there right now trying to take your coffee away!

The Carmelites have tea also, for those of you who like that sort of thing… even those goofy flavored teas.  Click HERE  It might be that a liberal will visit your house and you can offer her some herbal stuff with … eucalyptus in it.  That‘ll confuse them!  Heh heh.  She’ll wonder what you are really up to, but she’ll be so distracted by the chamomile and hibiscus flower that she’ll forget to tell her controllers where to find your stash of ammo.  “Where’s that ammo!”, they ask her, but she’ll say, “Ummm… that Peaceful Monk infusion was so pleasant… maybe it’s okay for them to have ammo…. I dunno.”

You can get a grinder and also religious items and gifts through these traditional Carmelites out there in the wilds near Powell.  No liberals out there.  Nosiree.

And this month’s Coffee of the Month is…

Mystic Monk Coffee has been and remains swell and a great weapon in the fight against creeping liberalism.

Be a patriot!  Click now or lose your country forever!

And… have you ever noticed that WCC is CCW backwards?  Hmmm….

Posted in Brick by Brick, Liberals, Lighter fare | Tagged , , , , , , ,
79 Comments

The Party of Death: Iowa Dem says colicky (crying) baby is reason for abortion

From LifeSite:

The Iowa House of Representatives passed a bill recently to ban telemed abortions – abortions done with the dangerous RU 486 drug where the abortion clinic prevents a woman from seeing the doctor in person.

During the debate on the pro-life measure, one Democratic legislator suggested that a colic, crying baby is a good reason for an abortion. Pro-choice? No, here’s the definition of abortion on demand.

From a local news source (video below):

iowa

In particular, longtime abortion proponent Beth Wessel-Kroeschell of Ames railed against House Republicans for advancing the legislation. She also read off a laundry list of inconveniences a baby would cause for women, including colic. Colic is an infant crying for more than three hours per day.

Wessel-Kroeschell has been dubbed a “champion” for abortion by Planned Parenthood. She was clearly advocating for abortion as a form of birth control while speaking on the House floor.
[…]

Ain’t she a peach?

Some video of this charming example of the Democrat Platform:

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Liberals, The Coming Storm, You must be joking! | Tagged , , , , ,
52 Comments

Harvesting Conciliar “fruits”: half of adults polled think Harry Potter and Hunger Games could be Biblical

It often seems that, these days, the odds are never in our favor.

I take time out from my furious conference preparation (on art coming up in Detroit) to present something that only confirms the great fruits of Vatican II and the magnificent benefits we have gained from decades of liberal Left domination of Catholic education, the breakdown of clear preaching, the erosion of the family, timidclerical oversight, shabby liturgical worship unworthy of the name….

First on display, this (biretta tip Pewsitter) comes from WND:

POLL: ‘HUNGER GAMES,’ ‘HARRY POTTER’ ARE BIBLICAL
Stunning results also reveal 1 in 3 don’t know Nativity is in Scripture

A new poll conducted by the Bible Society reveals that more than half of the adults who responded believe “The Hunger Games” are biblical and one in three say “Harry Potter” could be a storyline from the sacred text.

“While these statistics may appear surprising at first glance, they are symptomatic of the fact that many children indicate they have never read, seen or even heard these stories,” the poll of respondents from the United Kingdom explained.

Of the parents questioned, 46 percent did not recognize that the account of Noah’s Ark comes from the Bible, according to the results of the January survey of 800 children ages eight to 15 and 1,000 parents.

The survey was taken in preparation for the launch of the organization’s “Pass It On” campaign which is intended to raise the level of knowledge about the Bible.

[…]

How about your kids? How about your kids at home and in Catholic schools?

Do they know more about Harry Potter’s family and story than their own forebears in the history of salvation, their own Christian family presented in the pages of Scripture and in the lives of the saints?

Next up, this is from the Cardinal Newman Society (which has a great RRS feed on the right side-bar of this blog!):

Students Tout 15 Years of ‘V-Monologues’ as Play Continues on Several Catholic Campuses

At least 10 Catholic colleges and universities will be hosting productions of The Vagina Monologues or have officially recognized student groups that are performing the play in 2014, The Cardinal Newman Society has learned. Many of the institutions with connections to the play in 2014 have reportedly hosted the play in past years, and students from at least one institution are advertising 15 years of performances.
The Monologues seriously distorts human sexuality and celebrates sinful behaviors, including lesbian activity and masturbation. One scene even declares a lesbian rape of a teenage girl her “salvation” which raised her into “a kind of heaven.” The play’s production on Catholic campuses has been criticized by several bishops.

[…]

While critics of the play have acknowledged that it is often used as a fundraiser to support women’s shelters or AIDS research, they have cited the inappropriateness of using the play as a fundraising vehicle, especially at Catholic universities.
The Newman Society has closely monitored showings of the play on Catholic campuses for several years. In 2003, the number of campuses with performances of the play reached a high of 32.
The Society has discovered that at least 10 Catholic institutions are hosting or have recognized student groups performing the Monologues in 2014.

The College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., […] Georgetown University Women’s Center in Washington, D.C., […] DePaul University in Chicago, Ill., […] Bellarmine University in Louisville, Ky., [… ] Saint Louis University (Mo.) […] Fordham University (N.Y.) […]Loyola University New Orleans (La.) […] Loyola University Chicago (Ill.) […] Saint Mary’s College of California […] Seattle University (Wash.) […] Santa Clara University’s […]

A few Jesuit schools there, no?

BONUS EXCERPT…

One theology course offered at Santa Clara during the Winter semester titled “The Christian Tradition” even required students to read Boston College professor Cathleen Kaveny’s defense entitled “Be Not Afraid: The ‘Vagina Monologues’ on Catholic Campuses.”

Go there and see the actual descriptions of the productions at the schools listed above.

We have so much to be proud of, thanks to a couple generations of bishops and priests and Catholic educators.

From LifeSite:

‘Faithful dissent’? Catholic school board sponsors lecture on how to oppose Church moral teachings

KITCHENER, Ontario, February 11, 2014 (LifeSiteNews.com) – An Ontario Catholic school board sponsored a lecture last week [damage is done] focused on how Catholic schools can “value … faithful dissent” as a way of opposing Catholic teaching on “ordination, homosexuality, and contraception.” [Because we need more dissent?  Right?]

The Waterloo Catholic District School Board sponsored Graham McDonough, PhD, to speak at St. Jerome’s University (SJU) Friday night as part of the University’s lecture series on “Catholic Experience.”

Catholic schools often find themselves dealing with disagreements with Church teaching [and rather than teach they cave…] on topics such as ordination, homosexuality, and contraception as well as with complaints that schools are not properly teaching doctrine,” reads a description of the lecture, titled “Faithful Disagreement: an opportunity for rediscovery in Catholic education.”

“This lecture proposes that Catholic schools can do more to include and nurture internal disagreement as a powerful opportunity to embrace intellectual diversity, learn the value of faithful dissent and enable greater participation in the Church and the world.” [Total B as in B, S as in S.]

McDonough, an assistant professor of education and an associate fellow at the Centre for Studies in Religion and Society at the University of Victoria, released a book in 2012 titled Beyond Obedience and Abandonment: Toward a Theory of Dissent in Catholic Education.

[…]

McDonough draws heavily on dissident theologians Profs. Thomas Groome and Gregory Baum. Both are laicized priests, and Baum is called by some Canada’s leading dissenter since the 1960s.

[…]

What could possibly go wrong?

This is being peddled with the implicit approval of the pastors whose God-entrusted responsibility it is to guard the flock precisely from this sort of dreck.

Friends… what we have here is:

Reason #20 for Summorum Pontificum.

Thank you, Benedict XVI. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Liberals, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Pò sì jiù, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, Vatican II, You must be joking! | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
61 Comments

Have the civil rights of any group (besides the unborn) been trampled by U.S. courts more than Catholic priests?

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is being torn limb from limb by the hyper-liberal MSM in the Twin Cities.

There are some clerical abuse cases in the spotlight right now.  It is a kind of perfect hideous storm.  Homosexualists hate Archbp. Nienstedt with the intensity of a white-hot star for his support of the Marriage Amendment to the Minnesota Constitution.  Cases involving priests were mishandled.  A former-employee has been showing the Archdiocese all the love that Herodias showed John the Baptist. And the notorious Catholic Church hater lawyer Jeff Anderson has his HQ in St. Paul.  Add to that some real bungling and the over-arching liberalism of the metropolis and you get serious problems for the Archdiocese.

I don’t know how this will play out, but from where I sit it looks pretty ugly.  I grieve for my home town.

Today I saw an article in the local paper with an line that fired me up.  Ever-more-invasive and hostile judges are demanding documents that have little to do with the actual cases under scrutiny.  They are demanding files concerning any priest ever accused, credibly or not.  Get this:

Judge John Van de North also ordered the archdiocese to create a list of all priests accused of sexually abusing minors since 2004. The list, which must be prepared by Feb. 18, is in addition to a list of clergy accused before 2004, which was released in December and would include all priests who had been the subject of abuse complaints, not just those church officials had determined were “credibly accused.

I ask you.

Can you think of any other group in recent U.S. history (besides the unborn) whose civil rights have been trampled on by the U.S. courts more than Roman Catholic priests?

I can’t.

Being accused with no credible evidence is enough to have your name and reputation destroyed permanently.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Clerical Sexual Abuse, Goat Rodeos, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, The Religion of Peace, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
31 Comments

“Who am I to judge?”, thrown in your face? Fr. Z says, “Don’t let them get away with it!”

Mention the Pope’s interview “on the airplane” and we all know immediately what phrase is going to pop up.  The rafters are still rattling.

“Who am I to judge?”

What did the Pope really say? (Italian HERE)

Remember the context: he was asked about a priest, Msgr. Ricca, who was into some nasty stuff while on diplomatic assignment in Uruguay, and his appointment to I.O.R. (“the Vatican Bank”) and about a “gay lobby” of people who work in the Vatican.  Francis wasn’t talking about all homosexuals everywhere.

There’s a lot of talk about the gay lobby, but I’ve never seen it on the Vatican ID card.

When I meet a gay person, I have to distinguish between their being gay and being part of a lobby. If they accept the Lord and have goodwill, who am I to judge them? They shouldn’t be marginalized. The tendency is not the problem … they’re our brothers.

If they “accept the Lord”, and “have goodwill”… pretty clearly meaning, “if they are trying to live a good Christian life”, which involves continency and chastity, then I can’t point a finger at them and say they are evil, etc.  “Who am I to judge?”, depends on what went before in the same sentence.  It does not mean, “Anyone can do anything and we don’t have a right to make a moral judgement.”

I saw this point addressed another way.  It is good to see this from different angles, because that phrase “Who am I to judge?”, is being hijacked by the ignorant and the malicious alike.   When you hear it, red flags should wave in your head.  When Jesus protected the women taken in adultery from being stoned to death (John 8:1-11), he said, “Neither will I condemn thee. Go, and now sin no more.

From Catholic Insight:

A lesbian couple in Missouri were denied Holy Communion at one of the women’s mother’s funeral when it came to light that the two were in a same-sex relationship. [I wrote about that HERE] The two women had been parishioners at St. Columban Catholic Church for twelve years. Ms. Parker, one of the women, was quoted as saying that she hoped the priest, Fr. Kneib, would “open his eyes and fully receive the LGBT community into the church.” She further added: “We’re all God’s children and we have every right to receive Communion. … Even the Pope has said, ‘Who am I to judge?’” [There it is.]

If Ms. Carol Parker, and presumably her same-sex partner Ms. Josephine Martin, had thoroughly read what Pope Francis said in the famous interview on the plane home from Rio, she would have realized that he wasn’t condoning her disordered relationship with another woman. [Nor did Jesus, in saving the adulterous woman, condone the adultery.] While he wasn’t about to hand down a final judgement on the person, the sin is still a sin. But I suppose she, along with many other people, conveniently ignored that part.

Increasingly, “who am I to judge” and its partner “don’t judge me” have become an over-used defence that validates every sort of behaviour and excuses us from being accountable to moral truths. Too many people wrongly believe that by judging the sinful behaviour, we are judging the person. This isn’t true, of course, and when we are called to charitably speak out against the sin, we are really showing love of our neighbour and a concern for their soul. [Who thinks it is truly charitable to ignore sin?]

The truth is, we all have a moral conscience that enables us to make right judgements. Our conscience “judges particular choices, approving those that are good and denouncing those that are evil. It bears witness to the authority of truth in reference to the supreme Good to which the human person is drawn, and it welcomes the commandments” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1777).

Our moral conscience has been placed in our innermost being by God. Unfortunately, in a world that is loudly booming with distractions it is easy for us to avoid looking within ourselves and therefore we don’t hear the voice of our conscience. It becomes easier to fall under the influence of a secular culture that denies Christ. We need to follow the advice of St. Augustine who tells us to “return to your conscience, question it … Turn inward, brethren, and in everything you do, see God as your witness.”

Who, then, are we to judge? Well, actually, our moral conscience tells us that we have to judge—but we never judge the person. We do however have to judge the act in light of God’s laws to determine whether or not it is sinful.

The last word on this subject belongs to Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI: [Remember this?  From his Way of the Cross in 2005 for Good Friday just before his election.]

How many winds of doctrine we have known in recent decades, how many ideological currents, how many ways of thinking. The small boat of thought of many Christians has often been tossed about by these waves—thrown from one extreme to the other: from Marxism to liberalism, even to libertinism; from collectivism to radical individualism; from atheism to a vague religious mysticism; from agnosticism to syncretism, and so forth. Every day new sects are created and what Saint Paul says about human trickery comes true, with cunning which tries to draw those into error (cf Ephesians 4, 14). Having a clear Faith, based on the Creed of the Church, is often labeled today as a fundamentalism. Whereas, relativism, which is letting oneself be tossed and “swept along by every wind of teaching,” looks like the only attitude acceptable to today’s standards. [“Who am I to judge?” improperly understood.] We are moving towards a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as certain and which has as its highest goal one’s own ego and one’s own desires. However, we have a different goal: the Son of God, true man. He is the measure of true humanism. Being an “Adult” means having a faith which does not follow the waves of today’s fashions or the latest novelties. A faith which is deeply rooted in friendship with Christ is adult and mature. It is this friendship which opens us up to all that is good and gives us the knowledge to judge true from false, and deceit from truth.

This is one way to parse Pope Francis’ off-the-cuff, non-magisterial, remark made during an interview on an airplane.

If you hear the phrase “Who am I to judge?” and Pope Francis being hijacked in a sly attempt to condone immoral behavior, you must challenge that usage.

Don’t be a self-absorbed promethean neopelagian!  Love the sinner but don’t accept the sin.

Don’t let them get away with it.  Don’t accept their premise.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Liberals, Linking Back, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill | Tagged , , , , , ,
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