Many readers will remember the famous quotation from an animal
character named Pogo by cartoonist Walt Kelly back in the 1950s, “We have met
the enemy and they are us.” Set in the
Okefenokee Swamp of the southeastern United States, the strip often engaged in
social and political satire through the adventures of its anthropomorphic funny
animal characters. As stated by one biographer of Kelly, “It perfectly sums up
his attitude towards the foibles of mankind and the nature of the human
condition.” There is no need to sally forth, for it remains true that those
things which make us human are, curiously enough, always close at hand. Resolve
then, that on this very ground, with small flags waving and tinny blast on tiny
trumpets, we shall meet the enemy, and not only may he be ours, but he may be
us.
Perhaps the U,S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has
finally realized that the enemy is the bishops themselves. After decades of the bishops supporting
liberal social policies, they must now realize who the real enemy is. During
the last election, Catholics voted for Obama by 54 percent. The bishops
promoted this by (1) their support of the health care law which is now
resulting in mandates requiring religious employers to pay insurance coverage
of birth control and abortifacients; (2) ignoring canon 915; and, (3) issuing a
ridiculous, incorrect, and totally useless document titled, Forming Consciences for Faithful
Citizenship.
When did this all begin?
The Second Vatican Council (also known as Vatican II) addressed
relations between the Roman Catholic Church and the modern world. It opened
under Pope John XXIII in 1962 and closed under Pope Paul VI in 1965. No one can
really state that Vatican ll caused the decline of the Catholic Church;
however, the fifty years since the end of Vatican ll have been a disaster for
the Church. The number of priests has greatly declined even as the population
has increased. The religious women have had an even greater decrease in numbers
and those who are left have drifted so far from Church teaching they are now
not even recognizable as nuns - especially those who sport business suits and
mannish haircuts. Catholic schools have closed by the hundreds, and many
parents refuse to send their children to those that remain open. Only a handful
of Catholic colleges can really be classified as Catholic. After Notre Dame
awarded an honorary law degree to Barack Obama it was renamed “Notre Shame” by
true Catholics and even some Protestants. There are currently Pro-Homosexual
(Pride) Clubs at 107 Catholic Colleges. Bankruptcies have occurred in eight
dioceses due to the sexual abuse scandal. And the list goes on and on and on.
How did it happen?
The term "The Spirit of Vatican II" was used to promote
the teachings and intentions attributed to the Second Vatican Council in ways
not limited to literal readings of its documents, but not in contradiction to
the "letter" of the Council. “The spirit of Vatican II” was invoked
for a great variety of ideas and attitudes. Writer Michael Novak described it
as a spirit that "…sometimes soared far beyond the actual, hard-won
documents and decisions of Vatican II. It was as though the history of the
Church were now to be divided into only two periods, pre-Vatican II and
post-Vatican II. Everything 'pre' was then pretty much dismissed, so far as its
authority mattered. For the most extreme, to be a Catholic now meant to believe
more or less anything one wished to believe, or at least in the sense in which
one personally interpreted it. One could be a Catholic 'in spirit'. One could
take Catholic to mean the 'culture' in which one was born, rather than to mean
a creed making objective and rigorous demands. One could imagine Rome as a distant
and irrelevant anachronism, embarrassment, even adversary.”
In 1972 Pope Paul VI said, "Satan's smoke has made its way
into the temple of God through some crack." It is not hard to determine
what is meant by the ‘crack.’
As stated in a recent issue of the New Oxford Review, Tom Bethell states, “John Paul ll’s evident lack
of interest in governing the Church didn’t help. He deserves to be called ‘the
Great’ for his role in ending the cold war, but he seemed inattentive to the
laxity of the world’s bishops (bishops he himself appointed) and the lack of
moral and doctrinal discipline that plagued the Church.” When the clerical
sexual abuse began in 1992, John Paul ll did next to nothing. He made mistakes
in his appointments such as Cardinal Law in Boston and many others. He made
mistakes in tolerating and even supporting errant clergy such as Cardinal
Sodano.
The story of Cardinal Bernardin and
his ”Seamless Garment” is especially sad. Cardinal Bernardin promoted a project
entitled "Catholic Common Ground Project" which was to host a series
of conferences designed to stimulate "a new kind of dialogue" to help
define the future course of the Catholic Church in America. Bernardin's promotion of the Common Ground
Project raised red flags among orthodox Catholics who recognized that this
project, if successful, could drive a wedge between the United States and Rome
and precipitate a schism. Even Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston distanced himself
from the Bernardin initiative. He
stated, "Dissent from revealed truth or the authoritative teaching of the
Church cannot be 'dialogued' away."
He then very sharply pointed out the dangers of Bernardin's approach.
Cardinal Law cautioned that popularity--even among bishops--is no guarantee of
orthodoxy. He reminded the faithful that during the time of King Henry VIII,
all but one of the bishops of England had broken away from Rome.
The name Archbishop Rembert Weakland
only needs to be mentioned to invoke horrible abuses by a ‘Catholic’ bishop
during this time.
Views of the Second Vatican Council in the form “The spirit of
Vatican II” were condemned by the Church's hierarchy, and the works of
theologians who were active in the Council or who closely adhered to the
Council's aspect of reform (such as Hans Küng) have often been criticized by
the Church for espousing a belief system that is radical and misguided. However,
discipline of the clergy was sorely lacking.
Canon 915
The number of bishops and cardinals who ignored canon 915 is
mind-boggling. Some canonists argue that the rule of canon 915 which forbids
administering Holy Communion to those who obstinately persevere in manifest
grave sin applies to the giving of Holy Communion to legislators who
persistently support a legal status for what the Catholic Church declares to be
a grave sin, namely, abortion, a matter on which there may be no legitimate
diversity of opinion among Catholics. This is the view expressed by the then
Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger, in a letter sent in early June 2004 to Cardinal Theodore McCarrick.
Cardinal McCarrick refused to disclose this letter, even to his parishioners.
Others have cast doubt on this interpretation, and Cardinal Donald
Wuerl of Washington has declared his view, which he attributes also to the
great majority of bishops in the United States and elsewhere, that canon 915
"was never intended to be used this way."
Examples of cardinals ignoring canon 915 have been numerous. On
January 2, 2011, Governor of New York Andrew M. Cuomo, a Roman Catholic,
received Holy Communion although he was living with the well-known television
personality Sandra Lee, to whom he was not married. Canon lawyer and professor
Edward N. Peters described his reception of Communion as objectively sacrilegious
and that in view of the public character of the two people involved and the
widespread knowledge of their cohabiting, Communion should in accordance with
canon 915 be withheld from Cuomo. It was
not.
Why aren't "Catholics" like Maryland Governor Martin
O'Malley, who introduced a gay "Marriage" bill, excommunicated,
denied Holy Communion, or at least publicly reprimanded? With the Church "leadership"
providing this kind of example, no wonder a majority of so-called
"Catholics" support same-sex "marriage".
Exclusion by canon law from access to Communion is not limited to
the cases mentioned in canon 915. For instance, canon 842 §1 declares: "A
person who has not received baptism cannot be admitted validly to the other
sacraments." Cardinal Wuerl, who ignores canon 915, recently disciplined a
priest, Father Guarnizo, a devoted traditional Catholic priest who tried to
uphold the sanctity of the Holy Eucharist, the actual Body of Our Savior Jesus
Christ, from sacrilegious receipt by a self-confessed lesbian. His actions make
many wonder if he really believes in the Real Presence, and he sets a terrible
example for fellow Catholics.
Thanks to God we have some priests and bishops who refuse to make
a sacrilege of the Eucharist. Cardinal Burke has stated. “If the lack of right
disposition is serious and public, and the person, nevertheless, approaches to
receive the Sacrament, then he is to be admonished and denied Holy Communion.
In other words, the Church cannot remain silent and indifferent to a public
offense against the Body and Blood of Christ.”
Catholic Universities
Education is integral to the mission of the Church to proclaim the
Good News. First and foremost every Catholic educational institution is a place
to encounter the living God who in Jesus Christ reveals his transforming love
and truth. (Pope Benedict XVI, Catholic University of America in Washington,
D.C., Thursday, April 17, 2008)
Why have the bishops allowed Notre Dame to honor the most
pro-abortion president in history with an honoree degree in law? The university
locked up 88 protestors, including two priests and several pastors, and it
still retains its status as a “Catholic” university, thanks to the inaction of
the USCCB. One of the incarcerated priests, eighty-year-old Father Norman Weslin,
recently passed away. He is a hero to many of us in the pro-life movement. See
a video of the arrest at http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2884849/posts. The USCCB sat by and did
nothing but express mild disapproval.
Georgetown University has been allowed to host Kathleen Sibelius,
the author of the anti-religious, conscience-denying clause in the Obama
"health care" law, as a commencement speaker. Sebelius, Director of
HHS, is now subverting the freedom of religion guaranteed by the US
Constitution. Again, Cardinal Wuerl, who has the power to do something such as
withhold the designation of “Catholic” from the university, has done nothing
more than offer a public chastisement of Georgetown University – a literal slap
on the wrist.
Georgetown University alumni, students and others are preparing a
canon lawsuit to be filed with the Archdiocese of Washington and the Vatican,
seeking remedies including the removal or suspension of Georgetown’s right to call itself Catholic in
its fundraising and representation to applicants. It is very sad when you must
sue the bishops in order to require them to perform their duties.
As noted by the Cardinal Newman Society, eleven scandalous commencement
speakers at Catholic colleges and universities are scheduled for this year.
Forming Consciences for
Faithful Citizenship
It is incomprehensible why the USCCB issued a 40 page document
instructing Catholics on the why and how to vote without clearly naming the
five intrinsic evils. Did they expect the average parish to provide this huge
document to each parishioner? Did they
expect anyone to really read it?
To put it bluntly, this USCCB document has played a decisive role
in empowering Catholic supporters of abortion by providing the escape clauses
needed to convince Catholics they could in good conscience vote for a
pro-abortion candidate. There are two major loopholes in the document. First,
it states that Catholics are allowed to vote for a supporter of abortion rights
so long as 1) the voter does not intend to support that position, or 2) there
are offsetting "morally grave reasons." The document never explains
what constitutes "morally grave reasons," leaving it to the reader to
make his own determination which, lacking explanation or direction, could be
quite erroneous.
Common sense indicates the bishops must have been aware this
document allowed voting for pro-abortion politicians as long as these
politicians supported the progressive ideas sponsored by certain bishops and in
some cases, provide the money they sought for their own causes. Many writers
have contended that money has been the major influence for this document and
the socialist agenda of the USCCB. It is hard to deny this.
Although
several bishops have spoken out forcefully, saying the document is being
abused, it was never changed or clarified by the USCCB.
What is needed is a simple, two-page document stating: (1) the
need for Catholics to vote; (2) the need to investigate the candidates, and (3)
the five non-negotiable principles. This
document should be published repeatedly in every church bulletin months before
the election and supported by an applicable homily..
Homilies need to stress that intrinsically evil actions are those
actions that fundamentally conflict with the moral law and can never be
performed under any circumstances. It is a serious sin to deliberately endorse
or promote any of these actions, and no person who really wants to advance the
common good will support any action contrary to the non-negotiable principles
involved in these issues. These issues are (1) Abortion, (2) Euthanasia, (3)
Embryonic Stem Cell Research, (4) Human Cloning, and (5) Homosexual
"Marriage". Obama, who the majority of bishops and 54 percent of
Catholics voted for, supports all five of these evils. .
The Future:
Will the bishops wake up? The current administration has taken the
bishops for a ride, and the bishops finally appear to be awakening to the fact
they have been lied to. If the Supreme Court does not abolish the
unconstitutional health care law, the bishops will soon have to close Catholic
hospitals and schools. This will most certainly be true if the current
administration is voted in again. We
cannot have 54 percent of Catholics voting against our own principles. The Evangelical Christians may be the ones
to save us from our own bishops.
The bishops should hang their heads in shame knowing that by their
actions they helped elect the most pro-abortion president in history. They
should hang their heads in shame realizing they were duped, and most of them
took it in as gullible, naive men lacking basic common sense.
We must pray
to God that the bishops realize the harm their lack of decisive actions have
caused and will assume the leadership demanded by their position in the Church.
The Faithful Laity have waited a long time for a detailed, critical, look at what and where their Church is today, and the reasons which contributed to such a mess. While every point in this rendering is, in my opinion, true, the bishops have been chided by the laity on many of these issues. A priest I respect once told me that if a pastor attempts to teach his parishioners about their political obligations in relation to their religion, they will find out, in a hurry, that the laity's loyalty lies with their party, not their religion. I have witnessed first hand collection withholding and orchistrated distruction of the financial system that allows parishes to operate. Catholic schools close, and Catholic Churches are put on the market for sale. While the bishops have prompted these problems, we became willing participants. Catholics must remember that we were not baptized into a political party.
ReplyDeleteTess208
True - we aren't. However, we must face the fact that one of the major political parties has enshrined a gross intrinsic evil (abortion) into its very party platform - namely the Democrats. The other - Republicans - have not.
DeleteWithout knowing the particulars of the situation to which you allude, I cannot comment on it. Suffice it to say that there are indeed times when collection withholding is the only means we have to make our voices heard, since $$$ seems to be the only language the hierarchy understands.
The scribes and pharisees are still with us!!
ReplyDeleteSo, because bishops and cardinals are also sinners, they have let money and pride get in the way of caring for their flock and the Church.
ReplyDeleteSpot on, DC:
ReplyDeleteYou and I and hopefully many others are on the same page concerning the Van Winklesque Bishops. I also wrote a post yesterday that is quite similar to yours, and it includes a conspiracy theory to also consider.
If interested, please feel free to check it out at
http://vlogicusinsight.wordpress.com/2012/05/23/a-conspiracy-theory-worth-thinking-about/
God Bless!
DB
I read it. One where I would differ is your supposition that there might have been a time when the Church and civil government could ally themselves in charity. I contend that there never was such a time since there is no provision under the US Constitution for government meddling in areas that are the purview of private citizens and other associations (such as churches). Moreover, that involves income redistribution, i.e., socialism (or its beginning stages). That is the trap in which the Church fell hook, line and sinker. We are paying through the nose for that impropriety and still too many in the hierarchy refuse to learn that lesson.
DeleteIt is difficult to take decisive actions when the principle of decisiveness has been replaced by a principle of consensus.
ReplyDeleteIt is impossible to make such decisions under the latter circumstance, when there exists no consensus.
It will take this Pope, or another, to stand up and lead us out of this diabolical disorientation.
Good heavens, the California bishops are already grousing about the decision to file the HHS mandate lawsuits- *publicly*!
Yeah, right, Vatican II did not cause the decline in the Church. Funny stuff. Otherwise, well-written piece that any newbie in the Vatican II discussion would do well to read.
ReplyDeleteA close read of the article will make clear that Mr Fritz is not criticizing Vatican II per se, but the deliberate misinterpretations by progressives to justify both their socialism and disregard for eternal matters, aka, the "spirit of Vatican II".
DeleteThanks, Restore-DC-Catholicism:
ReplyDeleteActually, this is what I write in my post:
"Perhaps there was a time when the US government could be trusted to stay away from seeking to gain power over religion, and so various partnerships with Catholic organizations to better serve the poor were acceptable. That time has long passed, and there is currently much greater danger in cooperating with this increasingly ravenous Leviathan that may help to feed bodies, but at the expense of many more souls."
This is most certainly not an endorsement of "government meddling," and the less government the better as my post clearly advocates in my criticism of the bishops' viewing the US government as the primary provider of care for the poor, along with their wrongheaded calling on the government to always do more. However, it is also an acknowledgment of the likely reality that perhaps many years ago, the US government might have been trusted to not seek to gain power over religion. In that sense alone (trusting that the government would not seek to gain power over religion), a partnership could have been acceptable to better serve the poor.
The constitutional issue of whether or not and to what extent the government should ever be involved in such actions is not addressed by yours truly. Of course, the Church does accept that such involvement is moral via the Principle of Subsidiarity among others. Sadly, the US bishops are all too willing to skip to the end of the Subsidiarity chain without exhausting the lower levels of private sources followed by local government action beforehand.
I believe you and I are still pretty much on the same page overall, and I refer you to one more of my recent posts that you might find even more simpatico with your views and concerns:
http://vlogicusinsight.wordpress.com/2012/04/27/moralnomics-what-the-us-bishops-fail-to-realize/
God Bless!
DB
Restore:
ReplyDeleteI am puzzled. Vatican II was authentically promulgated by the bishops, who then returned to their diocese to implement it.
Why is it asserted, then, that what we got is not what was intended?
I am honestly curious.
Look at the Mass, for example. Never did Vatican II mandate the vernacular; in fact it upheld the primacy of Latin. Moreover, Vatican II never dispensed with the prayers of Pope Leo XIII after Low Masses. But they disappeared.
DeleteWhy did that happen? Your guess is as good as mine.
"The other - Republicans - have not."
ReplyDeletewhile there is no question the Democrats have enshrined intrinsic evils, the GOP is not really far behind. The GOP overwhelmingly approves of torture (with a few standout exceptions) and its "preemptive war" attitude at a minimum flirts with unjust war, if not crosses the line entirely. I suppose a valid argument could be made that the Dems are "worse" or "more evil", but that does not make the GOP good.
I notice that torture and unjust war are missing from the five non-negotiables. Does that mean they are negotiable? Spare me the "prudential judgment" line - if a war is unjust, it is not negotiable. And Pre-emptive war does not meet the requirements for just war by definition.
The five non-negotiables have been stated to make plain that if a candidate is opposed to torture of war captives but calls him/herself "pro-choice", then that candidate is not deserving of a Catholic's vote. Along the lines of "unjust war" and "torture", these evils are inflicted upon 3500 helpless infants every day vis-a-vis abortion.
Deletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LT0FGB24l8M
ReplyDeleteIf EWTN again goes back to no Communion in the hand, the rest of the Church just may eventually follow. They are a big influence in the Church. Let us pray!
-Dawn