Sunday, December 30, 2007

"Why am I Catholic?" DVD for Sale

The "Why am I Catholic?" DVD was played in EWTN's Life on the Rock recently and I had linked to their website in order for you to purchase their DVDs directly and get the video. However, EWTN has stopped the sale of their Life on the Rock DVDs, so I have burned my own copies and have made them available in my online shop due to many requests.

I have included two other bonus videos along with the "Why am I Catholic?" video. I would be happy to translate the video in any language you desire if you provide me with the complete translation.

Enjoy!

In Christ,
Katerina

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Tuesday, December 18, 2007

St. Thomas Aquinas T-shirt

This is a great gift for philosophy and theology geeks! :)

Here is a simple t-shirt I designed to honor the thought of this Doctor of the Church. This t-shirt is part of a series of simple shirts depicting medieval and modern philosophers and theologians that Michael and I designed to promote the relevance of their thought today.

Show everyone that you are an Aquinas fan! :-P Share your enthusiasm for the work of the great late medieval theologian and philosopher! And whenever you are tired of the dryness of the Summa Theologiae wear your t-shirt again and remind yourself that Aquinas is awesome! :)

If you're interested, you can get it here.

(More Catholic t-shirts and other stuff coming soon to my Etsy shop)

Friday, August 10, 2007

New Blog

I have started a new blog called Civilization of Love and in case you liked some of the more spiritual writings I had on this blog, you may want to check it out. I journal quite a bit on spiritual practices and matters of praxis as well, so I will be sharing these in my new blog. The purpose of the new blog is to encourage readers to help in small ways to create a “civilization of love” by promoting solidarity among the members of the Mystical Body of Christ through penance, mortification, prayer, the Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy, living simply, and practicing voluntary poverty.

Some of the writings there may not fit the purpose of this blog, so I decided to start a whole new one with a different vision. Michael will keep writing at Vox Nova and I will be around there as well, but not as often.

Hope to see you there!

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Sunday, June 24, 2007

Heavier Things

Thanks to everyone who has taken some time to read the posts at Evangelical Catholicism, especially to those who furthered the discussions with their comments and insights.

After careful consideration, Katerina and I have decided to take some time off from blogging here at Evangelical Catholicism. Katerina wants to focus more on the coursework for her MA in theology. I am working on an article that I'd like to submit for publication this summer and I am beginning a manuscript for a book. Aside from our personal study and work in theology, both of us want to devote more time to prayer and the interior life. Blogging is an interesting and occassionally gratifying endeavor, but it can easily interfere with real study, the development of prayer life and the fostering of personal relationships with friends and family. The hours spent writing posts, moderating and responding to comments, and searching for material to post can often times be more fruitfully applied to work, study and prayer.

However, Katerina and I will continue to blog over at Vox Nova, which requires a lot less time due to the number of contributors over there. I invite all of you to read this new blog, especially because it is one of only a few on the web that I find embraces the socio-political teachings of the Catholic tradition and works out these implications in an intellectually rigorous and spiritually motivating manner. It's been a true honor to take part in such a project.

Please keep us in your prayers. Who knows, maybe we'll be back soon! Peace and blessings.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Will Sicko be Sickening?


Katerina and I have acquired tickets for the Houston "Sneak Preview" of Michael Moore's latest project, Sicko. I plan on writing a short review on the film in the coming days. Having already seen Moore's Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11, I believe I am prepared to be critical enough both to cut through any propaganda and to not allow Moore's ideology to keep me from being receptive to whatever facts may be contained in Sicko.
Rumor is that Moore is already working on a sequel to Fahrenheit 9/11, which I suspect will be released, by no small coincidence, around fall of 2008.

Friday, June 22, 2007

The Ressourcement Movement in Catholic Theology (Part 2)

Part 1: Historical Context

Henri de Lubac

Henri de Lubac—French priest, scholar and cardinal—stands at the center of the Ressourcement movement in Catholic theology. While he certainly was not the progenitor of Ressourcement, there seems to be little doubt that de Lubac is its most important and influential exponent. When one attempts to lay hold of the very heart of Ressourcement, one can do no better than to begin with de Lubac’s theological enterprise. Remarking on the manner in which de Lubac’s first book, Catholicisme (1938), affected his own theological orientation, Pope Benedict XVI—then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger—wrote in 1988: “(De Lubac) makes visible to us in a new way the fundamental intuition of Christian Faith so that from this inner core all the particular elements appear in a new light…Whoever reads de Lubac’s book will see how much more relevant theology is the more it returns to its center and draws from its deepest resources.”[1] Indeed, one can extend this sentiment to the whole Lubacian corpus.

What characterizes Ressourcement is that which characterizes the entirety of de Lubac’s thought: the conviction that the treasury of Patristic theology does not wear thin along the historical terrain traversed by Christianity and that Christianity cannot meet the exigencies of modern times without rediscovering its essence through a return to its sources in the Church Fathers.

Henri de Lubac entered the Jesuit order in 1914 and immediately gravitated toward a study of the Church Fathers, particularly of Origin and Augustine, during his formation. He was also quite drawn to the works of Rousselot and Blondel, and to a lesser extant Maréchal, all of whom he read alongside the staple Neo-Scholasticism of the religious reformation. What these authors addressed and assailed in the largely theoretical sphere became for de Lubac a concern in the practical and social sphere: the gradual disappearance of the sacred in every element of human existence. In a rarely quoted essay from 1942, de Lubac writes: “Now, basically, this world is not by itself either sacred or secular, for it receives its significance only through man. It can become one or the other according to the way in which man behaves in its regard.”[3]

At the heart of de Lubac’s theology is a concern to re-establish in the consciousness of humanity the Christian principle that the sacred—the presence of God’s saving activity—is not some foreign, invading force in an otherwise mundane, secular world. Rather, nature is always incomplete and unfulfilled without the gratuitous sanctification wrought by grace, and it is peculiar to human nature to release the full splendor of the grace given to it. For de Lubac, as for the Fathers, anthropology and ecclesiology are fully intelligible only in light of one another.

Marking de Lubac’s first two works (which can rightly be described as a sort of the programmatic for the Ressourcement movement) is his utter dismay at the utter secularization of modern European society. His first book, Catholicisme (1938), was published in Yves Congar’s Unam sanctam series. Illumining the historical, social and personalist understandings of the Church with constant reference to the Fathers, it contains the seeds for all of de Lubac’s subsequent thought, and was extensively read and translated throughout Europe. While primarily an historical study on the social character of the ecclesiology postulated and developed by the Fathers, it is undeniably clear that in it de Lubac is seeking to underscore the pervasive presence of grace in the world and the corresponding destiny of all humanity in Christ through the Church.

With the 1946 publication of his Surnaturel and its criticism of the neo-Scholastic theory of “pure nature,” de Lubac became the eye of the theological storm turning throughout Catholic Europe. De Lubac took issue with the hypothetical model of pure nature, which postulated a hypothetical natural end or telos for humanity in the absence of grace, in part due to its absence from the patristic and medieval traditions of the Church. He also noted what he saw as an increasing separation between the secular and sacred, the root of which was not modern philosophy or political circumstance, but the dry, logic based polemic of neo-Scholasticism against Baianism on the one hand, and ‘Cartesian’ rationalism on the other. Neo-Scholasticism, claimed de Lubac, was implicitly sanctioning the efforts of post-War Europe to banish religion and faith from the public sphere! In portraying nature as an autonomous system capable of attaining its end by means of its resources, Catholic theology was conceding nature—and humanity itself—to secularism.

The Ressourcement movement, therefore, was not simply an effort to recover the riches of the Church Fathers so as to counter an impending ossification of Catholic theology. The Ressourcement movement was a valiant attempt by a number of theologians, de Lubac taking the lead, to breathe new life into the soul of Catholic theology so that it might simultaneously rediscover the very essence of Christianity through a return to its sources and respond to the needs and trends of modern, secular European society. Ressourcement restores relevance to theology by means of connecting with, and developing from its roots in the living reception and exposition of the revelation of Jesus Christ by the Fathers.

Notes:
[1] Joseph Ratzinger, “Foreword” to Henri de Lubac, Catholicism, trans. Lancelot C. Sheppard and Elizabeth Englund (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1988), 11.


[2] In typically dramatic fashion, Hans Urs von Balthasar writes: “With Surnaturel, a young David comes onto the field against the Goliath of the modern rationalization and reduction to logic of the Christian mystery. The sling deals a death blow, but the acolytes of the giant seize upon the champion and reduce him to silence for a long time.” The Theology of Henri de Lubac: An Overview, trans. Joseph Fessio and Michael M. Waldstein (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1991), 63.

[3] “Internal Causes of the Weakening and Disappearance of the Sense of the Sacred,” in Theology in History, trans. Ann Elgund (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1996), 232.

Suggested Reading:

Henri de Lubac, At the Service of the Church: Henri de Lubac Reflects on the Circumstances that Occasioned his Writings, trans. Anne Elizabeth Englund (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1993).

Hans Urs von Balthasar, The Theology of Henri de Lubac: An Overview, trans. Joseph Fessio and Michael M. Waldstein (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1991).

Susan K. Wood, Spiritual Exegesis and the Church in the Theology of Henri de Lubac (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1998).

John Milbank, Henri de Lubac and the Debate concerning the Supernatural (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2005).

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Happy 50th Anniversary of Ordination to Cardinal Martino


Renato Cardinal Martino's 50th Anniversary of Ordination is today!

He's been called "an idiot" by one Catholic blogger. He was told by another blogger to "hush up!" Still another has described some of his actions as "act[s] of stupity." A Catholic apologist has unabashedly characterized his work as "unworthy of responsible churchmen" and "the kind of sloppy language on social topics that regularly comes from some European churchmen." A law professor submits that some of his vocalized ideas have "has brought the Church as a whole into disrepute." An amateur theologian and economist has declared him "anti-American." A journalist who reports many rumors as facts calls him a "loose canon" and that he has "created serious difficulties for the Vatican authorities."

While these individuals seem to form a concensus, not one of them seems to really understand Cardinal Martino's work at the Vatican, the contemporary mind of the Church on socio-political issues or the trust and confidence both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI have placed in him.

My opinion on Martino? He is outspoken in his conviction and uses the media effectively to deliver biting comments on the evils in the world. I think he is exactly what the Roman Curia has needed.
Some highlights of Martino's career:

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

10 Commandments of Driving

Early news reports from AsiaNews, CNN and Reuters describe a new document issued by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People which outlines "10 Commandments for Drivers." CWNews also has a write-up.

The document is entitled, "Guidelines for the Pastoral Care of the Road." It appears to address a growing need to remind us that reckless or careless driving is a threat to life and well-being, and therefore can qualify as a sin due to neglect for respect for the value of life. It also notes that driving can bring about "primitive" or immoral behavior such as: "impoliteness, rude gestures, cursing, blasphemy, loss of sense of responsibility or deliberate infringement of the highway code." The Shrine of the Holy Whapping reminds us that reckless driving can be a grave sin.

As mundane as driving can be, especially to Americans, it is good to be reminded that virtuous demands are not suspended when we buckle-up and hit the gas. This document, as unusual as its content is, reminds us that grace and charity penetrate into every form of human action and that we are always accountable for our choices. Driving, as a human act, is not part of the "authentically secular."

Here is an outline of the document's "10 Commandments" for drivers:

1. You shall not kill.

2. The road shall be for you a means of communion between people and not of mortal harm.

3. Courtesy, uprightness and prudence will help you deal with unforeseen events.

4. Be charitable and help your neighbor in need, especially victims of accidents.

5. Cars shall not be for you an expression of power and domination, and an occasion of sin.

6. Charitably convince the young and not so young not to drive when they are not in a fitting condition to do so.

7. Support the families of accident victims.

8. Bring guilty motorists and their victims together, at the appropriate time, so that they can undergo the liberating experience of forgiveness.

9. On the road, protect the more vulnerable party.

10. Feel responsible toward others.

For more on the Pontifical Council's pastoral work on road issues, see their Apostleship of the Road page.


UPDATE: The Holy See now has the document available online here.

Monday, June 18, 2007

Website devoted to women's spirituality

I just came across a wonderful Catholic website: Secretum Meum Mihi. Kristen West McGuire, the administrator, describes it as a site devoted to "a Catholic spirituality for women centered on the feminism articulated by Edith Stein." You may know Edith Stein, the great phenomenologist, Thomist, spiritual writer and martyr, as St. Teresa Benedicta of the cross. If you get a chance, be sure to check out this unique and moving site.

Resources for parents for "the talk" with their children

As a follow-up to my post on "The birds and the bees... how do you tell your children?" I would like to provide a couple of good resources that were mentioned in the comment box.

Gregory Popcak, recommended his own book, Beyond the Birds and the Bees as well as the Pontifical Council for the Family's guidelines for Education of the Family on this issue called The Truth and Meaning of Human Sexuality.

If I missed any other recommendations or if you have more, please let us know so we can write another post with all your book, DVD, CD or any other media recommendations.

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Sunday, June 17, 2007

Big Mouth Strikes Again

I stumbled upon the following blusteringly brash remarks over at the Cafeteria is Closed:

I know I know - because (a lot of) German theologians have a history of being whiny *******. (see also: Luther, Martin). Honestly, the word "theologian" makes me shudder the same way the word "liturgist" does. Now, obviously there are many good people who have these professions, but the major part of destruction comes from these two groups. I'd say that Pope Benedict is an atypical German theologian, maybe because he's Bavarian. I remember from my time in Austria the endless stream of whiny theologians, given ample space in the media. Even then, not Catholic, I thought, well if you dislike Church teaching so much, just bloody leave.

German philosophy/theology in general tends to be a very painful matter. A common reaction to prolonged exposure is a certain discomfort with life, expressed maybe by "That's it, f*** it all."

One often encounters such obviously uninformed commentary in the Catholic blogosphere, not infrequently among recent converts to the faith. Theologians in the Church have collectively been a favorite whipping boy among Catholic converts, ranking just above the U.S. bishops, especially for those converts whose initiation into the faith has followed the cliff-notes Catholicism of contemporary apologetics where the likes of Jimmy Akin and Ludwig Ott compose a sort of unofficial magisterium that doubles as a touchstone for the faith and a standard against which the works of Catholic theologians is measured. Now, some may accuse me of constructing a straw man here, but given my own experience in my conversion (I was an apologetics lackey myself) and my years at both a Catholic Newman Center and Franciscan University, this tendency among Catholics to be wedded to contemporary apologetics (as opposed to the more intellectually rigorous traditional apologetics) is deeply embedded. Not that contemporary apologetics is a bad thing--indeed, I owe my faith to the craft. It just needs to recognize its boundaries, one of which is its reality as fundamentally defensive rather than constructive.

My difficulty with Gerald's remarks is not wholly unlike the difficulties that Dr. Edward Peters had with Dr. Stephen Bainbridge when the latter attempted to use canon law to launch a call for the resignation of Cardinal Mahoney of Los Angeles. Peters wrote:
I am uncomfortable, though, when non-canonists like Prof. Bainbridge, grappling with complex canonical issues, make unguarded statements....

The qualm Peters had over Bainbridge straying into difficult canonical territory is similar to my uneasiness over Gerald's broad stroke comments on German theology and philosophy. As someone who has completed a graduate degree in theology and is working through another one in philosophy, I take exception to Gerald's attempt to characterize a breed of theology and philosophy in such squalid terms as if Gerald himself has specialized in either discipline. Not that a non-specialist cannot ever comment on a given subject matter; the problem rests in the non-specialist painting in such broad, negative strokes.

This does not mean that those who have worked hard for their graduate degrees are being pompous when they criticise non-specialists who make sweeping or unguarded remarks on a discipline that they have not studied formally. I encourage all my friends and the readers of this blog to read theology and philosophy for themselves. The specialists have no monopoly on their discipline. However, specialists may feel compelled to defend that discipline, especially when it has become the subject of ridicule by those who masquerade as reliable sources who, in reality, display very little knowledge of the discipline in question.

Has Gerald, an immigrant from Austria, read and studied extensively contemporary philosophy or theology? If he has, it certainly is not apparent. The dearth of theological reflection is grossly superseded by the idiosyncratic knee-jerking at the Cafeteria is Closed. But isn't German Gerald's native tongue? Surely he must have read the most important German philosophers and theologians, right? Well, do we typically expect American Catholics, even faithful ones, to have a good working knowledge of the most important contemporary American philosophers and theologians such as Avery Dulles, David Tracy, Jaroslav Pelikan, W.V.O. Quine or Robert Sokolowski? Of course not, making language facility irrelevant.

Which specific theologians does Gerald find doing a "major part of the destruction" in Germany today? This statement smacks of common Catholic folklore of those conspiringly tyrannical theologians bent on the dissolution of tradition, piety and liturgy circumscribed by those cute and convenient, yet vacuous catchphrases such as "liberal". I'd love a list of these "whiny theologians" so I know that Gerald is not simply playing to his own crowd, singing to his own choir. I caution Gerald from characterizing anyone as "whiny" in order to criticise given the propensity at the Cafeteria is Closed to whine about virtually every facet of Catholic life today.

And what does Gerald mean by his remark that Pope Benedict XVI is an "atypical German theologian"? What does this mean? I agree that Pope Benedict XVI is atypical among his peers, but for reasons other than Gerald thinks. Benedict was one of only two experts at Vatican II who wrote their doctoral dissertation on a subject other than Thomism. But beyond this, Benedict XVI is a very moderate, centrist voice from among the German academy. When I think of other superb theologians who were intellectually formed in the same 20th German theological systems as Benedict (e.g. Walter Kasper, Michael Schmaus, Aloys Grillmeier, Karl Rahner, Johann Baptiste Metz, Christoph Schönborn, Basil Studer, Joachim Schmiedl), I am tempted to call into question Gerald's entire knowledge of German theology.

With regard to German philosophy, Gerald exhibts a real lack of understanding and familiarity with his unfounded remark that it is "a very painful matter." Based on what I have read at Gerald's blog, his knowledge of German philosophy begins and ends with Nietzsche, though he drops Wittgenstein's name occasionally with an incorrect reference (it's the last paragraph, Gerald, not the first). A lot of excellent philosophy has emerged in the 107 years since Nietzsche's death. Truth be told, Nietzsche's influence is stronger today in comparative literature than in philosophy.

Has Gerald forgotten about the most powerful and central movement in contemporary continental philosophy, which emanated from the mind and flowed from the pen of the great German thinker, Edmund Husserl? Phenomenology has effectively changed the entire scope of German philosophy and, to a great extent, faith. Some of Husserl's brightest and most famous pupils and associates became Christian, many of which became Catholic: Max Scheler, Dietrich von Hildebrand, (St.) Edith Stein and Adolf Reinach--all of whom moved and worked in the German university system. And think of the affect phenomenology has had on Catholic thought in the 20th century! I've already mentioned von Hildebrand and Stein. But think also of John Paul II's Theology of the Body, which is largely based on the development of "embodiedment" developed by Husserl, Stein, Roman Ingarden and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Think of Robert Sokolowski. Think of Hans Urs von Balthasar, a theological mentor of Pope Benedict XVI. Think of Jean Luc-Marion. How can Gerald claim any credibility in philosophical matters when he cannot even see the profound affect phenomenology has had on orthodox Catholic thought?

What about the Critical Theory school of Frankfurt? It's prime representative today, Jürgen Habermas, impressed Pope Benedict XVI with his socio-political and cultural analysis of contemporary Europe. You can read the product of Benedict's and Habermas' discussion in Ignatius Press' The Dialectics of Secularization.

No, I am afraid that there really is no reason to trust Gerald's overview on any element of contemporary German theology and philosophy. I regret that he made his unrestrainted remarks in the first place. But once they hit the web, they inevitably are put to the test.

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Friday, June 15, 2007

Who's conceptually confused, Mahony or Neuhaus?

Father Richard John Neuhaus has a post up today entitled "Who Speaks for the Church?" at the First Things On the Square blog. Neuhaus proffers scattered criticism of Roger Cardinal Mahony's presentation on immigration reform at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. Without offering us any remedy for what he perceives to be the deficiencies in the Cardinal's presentation, Neuhaus consistently misrepresents Mahony, suggesting to me that Neuhaus has not carefully considered the force of the Cardinal's message. This all amounts to a disservice rendered by Neuhaus. He underestimates the knowledge and resource of his readers in this latest On the Square post by means of his irresponsible distortion of Mahony's message and accusation of Mahony being "conceptually confused" in his view of national sovereignty.

Allow me to first fill-in the details conveniently left out in Neuhaus' post. The "account" to which Neuhaus refers was Cardinal Mahony's lead talk at the Fifth John M. Templeton Jr. Lecture on the Constitution and Economic Liberty, held on May 8, 2007. Mahony's lecture, entitled "The Challenge of ‘We the People’ in a Post-9/11 World: Immigration, the American Economy and the Constitution," is not really aimed at presenting "the Church’s position on comprehensive immigration reform," as Neuhaus suggests, but is rather a cursory overview of the manner in which the biblical tradition of compassion for the stranger can be applied to the practical issue of undocumented migration in the United States. It is well worth the time to read, especially because it concisely conveys many of the similar concerns expressed by Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI on the problem.

It is imperative to note that neither the Church nor Cardinal Mahony has a concrete and comprehension immigration reform policy, and Neuhaus' adumbration that Mahony presented any sort of official policy--in the name of the Church, no less--bespeaks of a tragic incomprehension of the Cardinal's remarks.

So what exceptions does Neuhaus take to Mahony's lecture? There seem to be four issues that Neuhaus raises: 1. Mahony does not touch on ways to encourage the economic and social development of Mexico; 2. Mahony tends toward biblical fundamentalism in his presentation of scriptural norms; 3. Mahony confusedly attacks the "nation-state," which is not warranted in Catholic social doctrine; 4. Mahony does not speak for the Church.

Let's put Neuhaus' reading comprehension and ideology to the test by address these four issues.

Mahony does not touch on the economic and social development of Mexico

Cardinal Mahony’s concern for the well-being of illegal immigrants is laudable—and unavoidable in view of the population mix of Los Angeles and southern California. It is a concern we all must share. The difficulties many of these people encounter are severe but not, in their own judgment, as severe as the difficulties they encounter south of the border, or else presumably they would not be here. It is a pity that the cardinal’s comprehensive address on these questions does not touch on ways to encourage the economic and social development of Mexico. Such ways are persuasively suggested in, for instance, the 1991 encyclical Centesimus Annus, which is the teaching of the Catholic Church.
The title of Mahony's lecture, mind you, is "The Challenge of 'We the People' in a Post-9/11 World: Immigration, the American Economy and the Constitution." The title of the lecture alone invokes the first words of the U.S. Constitution, the socio-political consequences of 9/11 (which occurred on U.S. soil), and the U.S. economy. Obviously, Mahony's brief lecture (nine pages as a PDF document) was intentionally limited to some remarks on the economic and social affect of immigration in the U.S. It may behoove Neuhaus to not only notice that Mahony does not exclusively or explicitly speak of Mexican immigrants, but also to recall that the problem of undocumented migrants, though a serious matter between Mexican migrants and the U.S., is a multi-cultural reality.

Mahony defines the scope of his lecture in the first sentence of the first paragraph: "I am grateful for the invitation to be with you this evening and to offer remarks on the topic of immigration, the economy and the Constitution." There you have it. Mahony wishes to speak on the interrelatedness of immigration into the U.S., the U.S. economy and the U.S. Constitution. Plain, simple and explicit. Did Mahony anywhere suggest that his lecture would be "comprehensive," as Neuhaus suggests? The objection that Mahony is reticent on the plight of Mexico's citizens is utterly irrelevant in the context of Mahony's specifically and intentionally limited presentation, a critique that is nothing more than a phantom.

But how could the readers of On the Square know the scope and direction of Mahony's lecture, anyway? Neuhaus did not even think to link to Mahony's lecture so that readers of On the Square could weigh Neuhaus' seemingly informed objections with Mahony's actual words. But no such service is provided by Neuhaus. Presumably, he's earned our trust without any need for verification.

Mahony resembles a biblical fundamentalist

Neuhaus seems to take issue with Mahony's use of Scripture to illustrate the Judeo-Christian tradition of care and concern for the stranger and the marginalized. Here is Neuhaus' charge followed by the rather meager case he presents for painting Mahony as a fundamentalist:
A greater difficulty with the cardinal’s lecture, however, is the facile move from Bible quoting to public-policy prescription. That move is less characteristic of Catholic social thought than of the habits of biblical fundamentalists. The cardinal’s position is devoid of respect for what Pope Benedict repeatedly stresses as the role of reason in rightly ordering the sphere of the “authentically secular.”

---

At points in his presentation, it seems that God’s household is the Church; at other points, it is the people of Israel. In the latter connection he cites Deuteronomy 10, “You shall also love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt,” and Exodus 22, “You shall not wrong or oppress a resident alien, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt.” At yet at other points, God’s household seems to be the entire human race.

Now is not the time to remind Neuhaus how fundamentalist he tends to be in his attempts to garner biblical and papal fragments in defence of his socio-political views. Rather, I want to stick strictly with Neuhaus' post on Mahony.

Is Neuhaus fair to Mahony? Consider this liberal sampling of Mahony's biblical perspective:
Deuteronomy 10:19 You shall also love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.

Exodus 22:21 You shall not wrong or oppress a resident alien, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt.

Leviticus 19:33-34 When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the LORD your God.

Deuteronomy 24:17 You shall not deprive a resident alien of justice…


This wise and urgent teaching to care for the stranger and the alien who responds to hope and despair is emphasized just as powerfully in the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, who directly teaches His followers to treat the stranger and welcome them as if we welcome Jesus Himself among us:

Matthew 25:35 for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me. . .

Finally, the head of the Jerusalem Church, the Apostle James, sternly warns us never to take advantage of those who work among us as guests, or their despair will reach the ear of God just as the cries of Hebrew slaves under Egypt once did:

James 5:4 Listen! The wages of the laborers who mowed your fields, which you kept back by fraud, cry out, and the cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord of hosts.

As a Christian, there are no prior commitments that can overrule, or trump, this Biblical tradition of compassion for the stranger, the alien, and the worker. In whatever economic, political, or social policies we discuss – whatever discussion of constitutional rights and liberties – we cannot turn our backs to this Biblical legacy of hope.
I don't see Mahony doing anything along the fundamentalist lines of say, Catholic Answers, an organization of whose publications Neuhaus has been critical in the past. Mahony is not doing fundamentalism; synthesizing passages from the scriptures without divorcing them from their significant context is not fundamentalism, especially when these passages prescribe the same charitable response with remarkable clarity and consistency. Did Neuhaus fail to notice that Mahony's biblical synthesis and ensuing commentary strongly resemble the following remarks:
The Church considers the problem of illegal migrants from the standpoint of Christ, who died to gather together the dispersed children of God (cf. Jn 11:52), to rehabilitate the marginalized and to bring close those who are distant, in order to integrate all within a communion that is not based on ethnic, cultural or social membership, but on the common desire to accept God's word and to seek justice. "God shows no partiality, but in every nation any one who fears him and does what is right is acceptable to him" (Acts 10:34-35).

Man, particularly if he is weak, defenceless, driven to the margins of society, is a sacrament of Christ's presence (cf. Mt 25:40, 45). "But this crowd, who do not know the law, are accursed" (Jn 7:49), was how the Pharisees judged those whom Jesus had helped even beyond the limits established by their precepts. Indeed, he came to seek and to save the lost (cf. Lk 19:10), to bring back the excluded, the abandoned, those rejected by society.

"I was a stranger and you welcomed me" (Mt 25:35). It is the Church's task not only to present constantly the Lord's teaching of faith but also to indicate its appropriate application to the various situations which the changing times continue to create. Today the illegal migrant comes before us like that "stranger" in whom Jesus asks to be recognized. To welcome him and to show him solidarity is a duty of hospitality and fidelity to Christian identity itself.
These remarks were made by none other than Pope John Paul II in his Message for World Migration Day in 1996. Would Neuhaus be comfortable characterizing the Pontiff's synthesis of scriptural passages as a "facile move from Bible quoting to public-policy prescription" or as "less characteristic of Catholic social thought than of the habits of biblical fundamentalists"? Considering that Neuhaus points to John Paul II as a more balanced alternative to Mahony, I do not think that he would be comfortable levelling a similar critique against the former Pope. Perhaps Neuhaus' political persuasions in immigration reform have prevented him from seeing how similarly Cardinal Mahony and John Paul II apply the scriptures to the practical issue of immigration, be it legal or illegal.

That said, I am suspicious of Neuhaus' intentions to push-aside Mahony's biblical remarks. Could it be that Neuhaus recognizes the strongest case for Mahony's perspective in the pages of Scripture and that he must resort to characterizing the Cardinal as if he were possessed by proclivities to biblical fundamentalism? If Neuhaus wants to undercut Mahony's interpretation of Scripture, he must likewise do so in the case of Pope John Paul II. But perhaps Neuhaus' appeal to the "characteristics of Catholic social thought" as a foil for Mahony's exegesis is merely a desperate diversion concocted to distract his readers from the biblical force of Mahony's argument. This could be the reason that Neuhaus makes no attempt to provide what he may deem the proper reading of the quoted verses. In any case, Neuhaus is regrettably confused in his presentation of Mahony's remarks.

Mahony attacks the nation-state

Neuhaus accuses Mahony of attacking the nation-state in "unmistakable" fashion:
But most striking and, I believe, unfortunate is the cardinal’s conceptually confused but unmistakable attack on the nation-state, both in its domestic responsibilities and in the international order. Such an attack has no warrant in Catholic social doctrine.
For the life of me, I have no idea why Neuhaus is attempting to portray Mahony as an enemy of the state. As Morning's Minion has already noted, Neuhaus' extremism in this silly accusation smacks of a covertly operating nationalism that Neuhaus himself may not wholly detect. Does criticism of immigration policy amount to an attack on the nation-state? Neuhaus' preoccupation with U.S. sovereignty almost makes his concern for the "economic and social development" of Mexico appear as mere tokenism.

I invite all to read Cardinal Mahony's lecture carefully, searching for any hint of an attack on either the conceptual or existent "nation-state," a term Mahony does not once use. You will find no trace of a subversive attempt to undermind the nation-state, and in particular, the U.S. I'm afraid that here is yet another place where Neuhaus is displaying his adept skill in employing the logical fallacies of constructing men of straw and question begging: Not only does Neuhaus mischaracterize Mahony, but he also assumes from the start that the questioning and criticism of current immigration policy is an affront to the nation-state's domestic and international responsibilities!

Now, Neuhaus writes, "There is a passing reference to respect for “national sovereignty,” but this likewise is a mischaraterization of Mahony's lecture. Mahony affirms national sovereignty twice in his lecture, the first reference being at the very heart of his analysis of the current approach to enforcing immigration laws in the U.S.:
Church leaders would agree that we are a nation built on a system of laws and that a sovereign nation has the right to protect its borders. But the term “rule of law” refers to how we are governed, and suggests that no one, not even our leaders, are free from honoring the law. Even if the most powerful citizen breaks the law, he or she is accountable to it. This is the basis of our democracy and is one of the elements that distinguishes our system from monarchy or dictatorship.
---
In summary, then, the Church’s position on immigration seeks to change an unjust law to a just one, within the democratic system, while also respecting the rule of law. It respects the place of national sovereignty – based on moral principles and freedom – not a fiction of artificial national security. It also is grounded in a proper view of economics, true to the etymology of the term which emerged in ancient civilizations and in early Christian history to describe the arrangement of a household – God’s household which is ordered and open to those who long to sit at the table which they helped set. Finally, it rests upon a basic moral principle: that we should not, either systemically or individually, undermine the basic dignity or God-given rights of every human person.
No evidential threat to the nation-state or to its sovereignty in these passages.

Mahony does not speak for the Church

Cardinal Mahony says that he speaks for the Church. Fortunately, and while he is undoubtedly an important voice in the Church, that is not true.
Let me ask, for the sake of argument: If Cardinal Mahony does not speak for the Church on immigration, then who does according to Neuhaus? To whom does Neuhaus refer us in order to come to a better understanding of the Church's perspective on the migrant? Would Renato Cardinal Martino, the Pope's man on issues of justice and peace, be a worthy herald? Does the pope alone speak for the Church? Does Richard John Neuhaus? I do not understand Neuhaus' ecclesiology here, nor do I understand why Neuhaus leaves us with such a concluding remark, inevitably leaving open the very question with which he titled his own post: "Who Speaks for the Church?" In truly Socratic, Neuhaus is brilliant at closing a critical piece with a question rather than an answer.

But issues of spokesmanship aside, perhaps Neuhaus' beef over Mahony's authority is found in earlier remarks in his post:

He very specifically and repeatedly asserted that he was setting forth “the underpinnings of the position of the Catholic Church on immigration reform legislation.” His lecture is sprinkled with expressions such as “the church leadership argues that . . .”; “the Church maintains that . . .”; and “the Church’s position is . . .” We are clearly given to understand that he is not merely expressing his own views or speaking in his capacity as the archbishop of Los Angeles but is speaking for the Catholic Church.
We can put aside the obvious and precarious problem that Neuhaus faces when he suggests that Mahony could speak "in his capacity as the archbishop of Los Angeles" yet would not be "speaking for the Catholic Church." The greater difficulty with Neuhaus' remarks here is his propensity to pull Mahony's comments out of their proper context in order to give the impression that Mahony was, in fact, claiming to speak with the full authority of the Catholic Church. Mahony never once suggests in his lecture that he is expressing or legislating official Church teaching.

Allow me to place each of Neuhaus' citations in the foregoing quote within their context (I italicise the quotes Neuhaus tears away):

These Scriptural and theological foundations can be applied to the current debate on immigration in our country. They also provide the underpinnings of the position of the Catholic Church on immigration reform legislation.
This comment immediately follows from his brief biblical presentation on the need to care for the stranger. Mahony does not suggest that his own analysis of the economic and constitutional consequences of immigration, which comes later in his lecture, provides the underpinnings of the Catholic Church's position on immigration reform. Indeed, Mahony is absolutely correct when he states that his interpretation of the biblical mandate to welcome and care for the stranger and migrant provides these underpinnings, as even Pope Benedict XVI's 2007 and Pope John Paul II's 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2000 Messages for World Migrant Day make clear through their use of many of the same biblical passages. It is not apparent that Neuhaus is completely familiar with the Church's approach to immigration, a familiarity that must be demonstrated before any critique of Mahony's alleged fundamentalism can take place.

Our Constitution was written to ensure that justice is achieved in our land and that all receive due process under the law. In our democratic system we can change unjust laws, and, I would add, are obligated to do so.In the area of immigration, the Church leadership argues that our country has a moral obligation to change the law because it violates the order of God’s household and undermines basic human dignity.

---

Given this reasoning, the Church maintains that our immigration laws must be
changed. The remedy to our broken system is to provide legal status and an opportunity for permanent residency for those in the country currently as well as legal avenues for future migrant workers to enter, depart and reenter the country safely and legally.

Throughout his lecture, Mahony makes constant reference to "our constitution," "our democratic system," and "our country." He is referring always to the U.S., and this is how he intends us to understand his invocation of "Church leadership." The context of the lecture dictates a reference to the U.S. hierarchy, and any one who has followed closely the declarations of the USCCB, groups of bishops such as the Arizona Catholic Conference and individual U.S. bishops such as Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver, Archbishop Wilton Gregory of Atlanta, Archbishop José Gomez of San Antonio and Archbishop John Vlazny of Portland understands that Cardinal Mahony's remarks do, in fact, represent the opinion of a clear concensus among the U.S. bishops on the question of undocumented migration. Thus, Mahony quite appropriately expresses this concensus as the "argument" of Church leadership in the U.S.

Conclusion

I can do no more than conclude that Neuhaus has saddly misrepreseted Cardinal Mahony's lecture, which in itself is a very thoughtful, very balanced and very informed overview of how the U.S. bishops perceive the failure of current U.S. immigration policy to protect the natural rights and dignity of the undocumented migrant. Basing his argument on undeniably Christian biblical principles, Mahony gives a cursory guide to applying these principles to the concrete sitution in the U.S. today. When individuals such as Neuhaus begin to substitute in other questions, however related, about border control, the absolutism of law or the socio-economic questions of a migrant's homeland without first considering the Church's consistent teachings on justice and human dignity, they inevitably obfuscate the truly radical contribution that Christianity can make toward a just and peaceful solution to the problems of immigration.

In the case of Neuhaus, I cannot but discourage Catholics from considering his opinion on immigration in today's On the Square post. He certainly does not exhibit the marks of a "good, well-known, outspoken, tough" Catholic thinker on the topic of immigration, as one blogger has curiously suggested. Rather, Neuhaus betrays his proclivity to think sheerly in political terms in today's post rather than displaying the healthy combination of faith and reason ordering the "authentically secular."

As a sort of negative answer to Neuhaus' own question, I can assure him that he most certainly does not speak for the Church. In fact, his analysis of Mahony's address places him a bit outside the Church's pastoral views on immigration. And say what you will about Mahony's liturgical and legal record; the Cardinal's lecture is an excellent representation of the manner in which the Church, from Pope to local bishop, is thinking on the problem of undocumented migration.

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Thursday, June 14, 2007

The birds and the bees... how do you tell your children?

I am working from home today, because I have a bad back pain and I was watching Rachael Ray's show, because I only have a handful of channels (that is the only reason why I would watch it). Her show today was about how to talk to children about S-E-X and I remembered of the time I found out what sex was all about. I was twelve and I was walking to school. One of my best friends was also my neighbor so she saw me walking to school and ran to meet me. She was laughing and covering her mouth and asked me: "do you really know where babies come from?" And at this point all I knew was that babies came whenever our mom and dad kissed each other, so she proceeded to tell me what REALLY happened, physically speaking. I guess that she just had the "sex talk" with her parents. My reaction? "Ewwwww!!" And I promised myself I would never go through that, so I was not going to get married... EVER!

My parents never really talked to me about sex. We had many talks about modesty and waiting until marriage, but not the real talk. Even after I found out what sex was all about, I was not terribly curious: it did not ruin my childhood or my innocence... I just thought that it was "gross"! I think is the greatest fear that parents face when deciding whether to talk about sex or not with their children is that their children will "try" things and get curious, but specialists say that children usually have the opposite reaction if their parents establish a honest and open conversation about such important topic.

Our faith definitely gives a much more dignified and beautiful meaning to the marital embrace than how the media portrays sex and, therefore, should not be something that we are ashamed to talk about to our children. But, still, how old should children be whenever parents talk to them about sex? Perhaps when they are reaching puberty? How should the conversation be framed? I know that as Catholics, somewhere in the conversation, we should talk to them about the sacredness of marriage, chastity, and even celibacy, but would that be too much? Or perhaps not?

Still, I think that parents should be the first to talk to their children about the conjugal act and not for the latter to find out about it from their friends. What is your experience? Any thoughts?

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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Catholics, Stop Supporting Amnesty International

According to BBC news, the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace is urging all Catholics to discontinue any monetary support for Amnesty International due to the organization's recent turn toward the promotion of abortion rights. BBC reports:

The Vatican has urged all Catholics to stop donating money to Amnesty International, accusing the human rights group of promoting abortion.

The Vatican also said it was suspending all financial aid to Amnesty over what it said was the group's recent change of policy on the issue.

Amnesty said it was not promoting abortion as a universal right.

But the group said that women had a right to choose, particularly in cases of rape or incest.

"No more financing of Amnesty International after the organisation's pro-abortion about-turn," said a statement from the Roman Catholic Church's Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.

Zenit also reports on the issue, though it notes that it is Renato Cardinal Martino, the President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, alone who is encouraging Catholics to discontinue any financial support for Amnesty International.

CathNews reports on Amnesty International's response to Cardinal Martino which accuses him of "misrepresenting" the organization's position.

In search of the simple life (Part 1)

I graduated Summa Cum Laude from College three years ago. I had a job lined up with one of the top ten Fortune 500 companies a semester before graduation. With relatively low experience in my field, my salary was still higher than 71% of the population in the U.S. In terms of how we view human achievement in contemporary society, one could say that I was quite successful at only 22 years of age. I thought so as well.

It was not long until the experiences I lived in Venezuela came back to haunt me. Growing up in a third world country can be quite a challenge for someone with a Christian conscience and who also happens to be “blessed” with more resources than most people. Poverty and destitution are there and you can’t avoid them. You can’t escape them. Living in a small town in Louisiana for the past seven and a half years had made it easy for me to forget the sufferings of many. Having moved to Houston recently has been a tremendous wake-up call for me. Big cities are also a challenge for the conscious Christian.

When I was a young teenager I was acutely aware of the inequalities existing in Venezuela and I could not reconcile with my somewhat privileged status when there were so many who suffered such misery. The most definitive and striking moment in my life when I experienced such unsettledness about disparity of wealth was at the same time one of the happiest days of my life. I have never shared this with anyone ever before until now.

I remember when my dad bought me a piano. I was fifteen years old and I was taking piano lessons. My dad did not have enough money to buy me many things, but he knew I wanted and needed a piano. All I had was a keyboard at the time and if I wanted to ever get proficient at the piano, I had to practice with one every day. We went to downtown Caracas to look at pianos and then he made the sacrifice to buy me a black, beautiful, upright Yamaha piano. It played absolutely beautifully. I loved how the keys felt as I played a Waltz by Chopin. I felt like the happiest fifteen-year-old that the earth had ever seen.

As we were coming out of the store, my parents kept walking ahead of me, and there was a girl probably about twelve years old who had a baby in her arms. She also had two other toddlers with her. She was walking towards one of the dark corners of the shopping center. Downtown Caracas can really have dark places. Destitution is everywhere. You can’t escape it. She was barely clothed just as the other children. Their skin and hair seemed dirty as if they had not showered in ages. She was perhaps twelve, but I was twelve once too. I wondered: “I never looked like that. Where are her parents?” I also wondered if those toddlers were her siblings and if that baby was her sister or brother. I was well aware how young girls in Caracas, especially, were used for prostitution, so I wondered then if that was her own baby. I wept on the inside. She sat on the corner and I wondered what she was doing. My grandma saw me looking at this girl. I probably had my big eyes even bigger at that time due to my shock and amazement, so she grabbed me by the hand and she said: “Don’t look at that little girl, because she is going to the restroom on that corner. She doesn’t have a house of her own where she can go to do that.” My grandma just wanted to save the girl from embarrassment.

I was shocked. I was happy because of a piano: something that is non-essential--a luxury! I thought: "And yet this girl cannot even meet her basic necessities!" I felt very blessed for being able to have my piano, but then I thought "the dignity of this girl! Who took it away from her? Why?" I knew then how it looked when someone was stripped of his/her dignity and how there was no way possible that a human being could take that away from another one. God gave us dignity when we were created in his image. No human person shall ever be stripped of his/her dignity. My eyes were filling up with tears and I was fighting myself to not let them come out. I did not want to disappoint my dad. I wanted to show him that I was extremely happy, but I was no longer happy. We sat on the car and I did not say a word for a while. I wonder if my dad ever thought that I did not care for the wonderful gift he had given me. As we drove through downtown, I kept looking at all these “ranchos” (cardboard houses) that made John Paul II cry so much when he visited Caracas in 1996. I saw the destitution and I wondered how many of these same girls were in those poor dwellings. I knew there were many just like her. But there was nothing I could do about it.

Every time I played my piano ever since, I could not forget about that girl… and all those just like her. I have not played the piano for years now, because college and work made it difficult. I wonder if that is why I forgot about her and immersed myself in frivolity and materialism.

After we have encountered and recognized God in our lives we can no longer keep this love to ourselves. After sharing in the reciprocal and infinite receiving and giving of love that exists within the Trinity, we can no longer keep this love to ourselves. It is such a great love that it explodes and cannot be self-contained. Not all of us can save the entire world from poverty and destitution, but because of our infinite love for the poorest of the poor, we can express this love through solidarity towards them. We can get closer to them by living simple lives and by practicing voluntary poverty.

I invite you to accompany me in this journey in searching for the simple life in the midst of individualism, materialism, and consumerism on which I will expound in the following posts of this series. I don't have all the answers and I am still "searching" for a simpler life. Perhaps together we can make our search easier and that is the purpose of these posts.

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Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Catholics Against Rudy...all the way?

There's a new online initiative going by the name Catholics Against Rudy. Slated to launch on July 4th, the site will focus on Rudy Giuliani's pro-choice views. Steve Dillard, one of the founders of Catholics Against Rudy, has unequivocally stated, "You cannot, in good conscience as a faithful Catholic, vote for Rudy Giuliani." This statement clearly extends beyond the more balanced statement of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger's memo to Cardinal McCarrick in 2004 as outlined in Ratzinger's nota bene section.

Republican presidential hopeful Sam Brownback, a conservative darling among many pro-life Catholics, has already explicitly stated that he would support whoever earns the Republican nomination for the 2008 Presidential Race, even if that means publicly supporting Giuliani. I have posted on Brownback's pro-life backpedalling here. If Giuliani were to earn the Republican nomination, a very likely scenario, will Catholics Against Rudy continue its campaign beyond the Republican primaries? Will it concede as Brownback has and support Rudy Giuliani for the U.S. Presidency? Will it remain consistent with Dillard's unqualified remark that no Catholic can vote for Giuliani in good conscience regardless of the political circumstances? Will it make good on its campaign and advise Catholics to choose a pro-life third-party candidate? We shall see.

UPDATE: Steve Dillard has kindly provided clarification in light of my post. I reproduce his clarifications in whole below:

(1) My comment that, "You cannot, in good conscience as a faithful Catholic, vote for Rudy Giuliani," is limited to the GOP presidential primary. To the extent I failed to make that clear to you, I apologize. I certainly believe that there would be "proportionate reasons" to vote for Mayor Giuliani in the general election against a pro-abortion democratic candidate (e.g., Clinton).

(2) Yes, if Giuliani "were to earn the Republican nomination," which I agree is "a very likely scenario," Catholics Against Rudy will "continue its campaign beyond the Republican primaries" That having been said, for the reasons noted above, our arguments against his candidacy will have to shift gears a bit. While there clearly are not "proportionate reasons" that would permit a Catholic to vote for Giuliani in the GOP primary, the same cannot be said for the general election, and, as such, our arguments will shift from the theological to the prudential (e.g., that Catholics should not vote for Giuliani because of the long-term harm that would result from having a pro-abortion leader as the head of the only pro-life political party).

(3) For all of the reasons noted above, Catholics Against Rudy "will . . . make good on its campaign and advise Catholics to choose a pro-life third-party candidate," while at the same time respecting those Catholics who, for other prudential reasons (e.g., supreme-court vacancies), elect to choose the lesser of two evils.

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Monday, June 11, 2007

Poll

I am asking this question, because one of the Catholic bookstores here in Houston, Veritas, has a very politically charged book collection on their Social/Political section and they all happen to be Republican-party-oriented. They have Ann Coulter's books front and center and I was, of course, concerned. I know many Catholics, including our friends, who happen to like her, which is why I was concerned. If there would be a similar public person to Ann Coulter on the Democratic side endorsed by Catholics, I would be concerned as well, because Catholic bookstores are not the place to push political agendas.

I proceeded to ask the two men in the register: "Why do you carry Ann Coulter's books in a Catholic bookstore? They replied, "because we like her and we agree with her and she is very pro-life." They proceeded: "in fact, we had her as a guest in a Foundation for Life meeting." I told them that Ann Coulter does not have a place in a Catholic bookstore. She promotes hate and racism. She is irresponsible. She is not a spokesperson for Catholic doctrine. I told them that there were better authors out there, such as David Schindler, dean of the John Paul II Institute, who is deeply in touch with Catholic Social Doctrine. At this point they ignored me and I left the store.

What a disservice to Houston Catholics! I'm saying this because if I would have never met Michael, who warned me about Ann Coulter the first time we entered the bookstore, I would have bought Coulter's book not knowing any better, because it is sold in a Catholic store after all!
That any Catholic can think that Ann Coulter aligns with the rich tradition of Catholic social teaching is beyond me. Here are some of the gems of this "intelligent" woman:

Immigration:

"I'd build a wall. In fact, I'd hire illegal immigrants to build the wall. And throw out the illegals who are here. [...] It's cheap labor."

Iraq War:

"When we were fighting communism, OK, they had mass murderers and gulags, but they were white men and they were sane. Now we're up against absolutely insane savages."

Islam:

"We should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity."

Creation:

God says, "Earth is yours. Take it. Rape it. It's yours."

War:

"(Sheryl) Crow explained that the 'best way to solve problems is to not have enemies.' War solves that problem too: We won't have any enemies because we're going to kill them. Crow warned of 'huge karmic retributions that will follow.' She seemed not to understand that America going to war is huge karmic retribution. They killed three thousand Americans and now they're going to die."


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Sunday, June 10, 2007

The Many Faces of Pope Benedict XVI


Yesterday, Benedict XVI was also "in awe" of George W. Bush and especially of the sheer force of the hot air that passes for the President's foreign policy.

Saturday, June 09, 2007

President Bush meets Pope Benedict for the first time

According to President Bush, Pope Benedict XVI expressed his concerns about the fate of Christians in Iraq. At the same time, the pontiff claimed that he was watching the immigration legislation in the U.S. very closely. Other topics discussed were world hunger and AIDS.

I am really glad to see the immigration issue be brought up, even though is not the president who is blocking this bill, but the party as a whole. Just absolutely sad. Immigration raids and deportations will probably keep increasing as they have in the past few weeks. Of course, they have not been covered by the news in English, because they are too busy figuring out whether Paris Hilton will end up in jail or not.

Sorry. Just too frustrated on a Saturday night after realizing how the hope of millions of becoming legal residents is being crushed by a group of politicians who do not understand the true concept of family and life at all of its stages. Enough is enough.

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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Video of man jumping into the popemobile

Brownback backpedals

Cross-posted at Vox Nova

I couldn't help but notice that, having spelled out his pro-life worldview and having insisted that the Republican party is "pro-life" by principle, Sam Brownback was a bit unprepared for the professorially attired and frequently interrupting Wolf Blitzer: Would Brownback support a pro-choice Republican nominee for the U.S. presidency (i.e. Rudy Giuliani)? Without explicitly stating that he would support Giuliani and without any hint of qualification, Brownback explicitly stated that he would support whichever candidate earns the Republican nomination. So, let's do a little deduction using one hypothetical, yet plausible premise (P2):

P1: Brownback will support the Republican nominee for the U.S. presidency.
P2: Rudy Giuliani is the Republican nominee for the U.S. presidency.
P3: Rudy Giuliani is a pro-choice politician.

Conclusion: Brownback will support a pro-choice politician for the U.S. presidency.

Why do I point this out? Because I have curiously followed a number of Catholic blogs who have worn their support of Brownback on their template and have, perhaps not entirely unrelated, decried any suggestion of support for pro-choice politicians among Catholics. So here you have a Catholic, pro-life politician who has garnered the support of many Catholics concerned with ending abortion, perhaps not least among whom is Fr. Frank Pavone, president of Priests for Life. And this politician went on record last night for the second time stating that he would support a pro-choice Republican nominee for the presidency.

So what now? Now that Brownback has publicly stated that he would support a pro-choice nominee for the presidency, will we see a massive defection of prospective Catholic voters to other pro-life candidates? I do not know. I, myself, I have never supported Brownback because I have been skeptical of his "pro-life" credentials, concerned over his inability to handle even simple questions without stumbling and I have not found him to be particularly striking as a real leader. A senator? Sure. A president? No. And after touting his pro-life position for the greater part of his political career, he was out-foxed by the Wolf on a national stage.

Don't expect Fr. Pavone to divorce Brownback. You see, Fr. Pavone's admonition that Catholics have a duty to vote pro-life is conditional, not absolute. In elections past, Catholics could always count on at least one pro-life candidate in the presidential race, and more often than not, that candidate was a Republican. In such cases, Fr. Pavone has made it abundantly clear that Catholics have a moral duty to vote pro-life. But in 2008, Catholics may face an unprecedented conundrum: both the Democrat and Republican nominees may be policy-making pro-choicers. So does Fr. Pavone remain steadfast, stalwart and sustained, encouraging Catholics to stand up for the Gospel of Life by taking our voting block over to a third-party candidate, once and for shouting from the rooftops to our undemocratic two-party system that we will not be taken for fools and we will not budge on our principles of life? We could only hope. As Michael Iafrate noted awhile back, Fr. Pavone is not consistently defending life in the political sphere. Fr. Pavone's words:

In this context, the question also arises as to whether one is required to vote for a third candidate who does not have a strong base of support but does have the right position. The answer is, no, you are not required to vote for this candidate. The reason is that your vote is not a canonization of a candidate. It is a transfer of power. You have to look concretely at where the power is really going to be transferred, and use your vote not to make a statement but to help bring about the most acceptable results under the circumstances.

Of course, our conscience may be telling us, “Don’t say it’s impossible to elect the candidate who doesn’t have a strong base of support.” Of course, it is possible to elect almost anyone if the necessary work is done within the necessary time. God doesn’t ask us to base our choices on “the possibility of miracles,” but rather on solid human reason. The point is that if there’s a relatively unknown but excellent candidate, the time to begin building up support for that person’s candidacy is several years before the election, not several months. What you have to ask as Election Day draws near is whether your vote is needed to keep the worse candidate (of the two, less acceptable but more realistic choices) out of office.
So ought we to vote pro-life if one of the two dominant candidates is pro-life? Ought we to vote pro-life if neither of the two dominant candidates are pro-life? No. All of Fr. Pavone's talk about ending abortion definitively in America by consolidating the pro-life vote ends here. He introduces a manufactured category to the matter: "realistic choice." So as a Catholic, I do not need to vote pro-life as long as that vote goes toward a "realistic" candidate? Is "realistic" an emergency moral category whose glass is broken in the event that a Republican nominee for president is pro-choice? "Realistic" releases me from any moral obligation to vote pro-life? I should not feel compelled to find a pro-life third-party candidate for whom I can vote in good conscience? I should not do the more Catholic and the more democratic action of voting for a third-party? I should allow practical politics to trump pro-life principles? Why, then, can I not just vote for a "realistic" pro-choice candidate anytime, even if there is a "realistic" pro-life candidate in the race?

Fr. Pavone exacerbates his double-talk by suggesting that a pro-choice candidate could be an "acceptable" candidate. If both candidates are pro-choice, one may be more "acceptable" than the other. Really, Fr. Pavone? And how so? Is there another behemoth non-negotiable issue that can overshadow a candidate's public desire to protect right to the murder the unborn? Perhaps socialized medicine? Perhaps tax-cuts? Perhaps immigration reform?

The fact is that both Fr. Pavone and Sam Brownback have revealed at a very deep level where their allegiance to the pro-life cause lies. Instead of losing the faith of his party by conscientiously objecting to his party's nomination of a pro-choice candidate for the presidency, Brownback will compromise his pro-life record, will support that candidate, and will publicly encourage us to vote for that candidate. Instead of launching what could be the greatest campaign for life in the history of the American political sphere by abandoning the two-party system and bringing with him scores of Catholic voters, Fr. Pavone wants Catholics to stick within the two "realistic" parties. I suppose Catholics will have to wait for Fr. Pavone to provide us with his take on the runner-up issue to abortion in order for us to discern which of the two party candidates is "less acceptable."

Allow me to be candid: Brownback is a disappointment. As the Elephant Biz brilliantly opines: "So, while he's pro-life when it comes to abortion, Brownback is pro-choice when it comes to pro-choice Republican candidates - he could vote for one but hopes you and believes you can't."

If you want to know who the most pro-life candidate out there is, it's Mike Huckabee for my money. Tonight he outshone his Catholic counterpart on the pro-life talk. If abortion truly is the most important non-negotiable--and I know for many Catholics it is--than Brownback is not your man. Consider Huckabee's pro-person response to the question as to what is the most pressing moral issue today:

"I really believe if you define a moral issue, it is our sanctity of understanding [the value of] every single human life...We value every life of an individual as if it represents the life of us all.

"We shouldn't allow a child to live under a bridge or in the back seat of a car...People are treated as expendable. The unique part of our country is that we elevate and celebrate human life."

Huckabee's momentum is picking up, too. As Joe Klein of Time observed after the second GOP debate: "Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee seems to be winning the battle of the religious conservatives against Kansas Senator Sam Brownback. Huckabee is colorful and funny. In the second debate, he drew whoops from the audience when he said the (Republican) Congress has "spent money like John Edwards in a beauty shop." Brownback appears bland, by comparison, young and not very authoritative, a Senator who seems like a member of the House. Of these six, Huckabee seems most likely to survive."

For more on Huckabee, check out ProLifeBlogs round-up here. Bye-bye, Brownback.