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Utente Gold



The Vindication of Humanae Vitae
by Mary Eberstadt

August/September 2008
Copyright (c) 2008 First Things


I

That Humanae Vitae and related Catholic teachings about sexual morality are laughingstocks in all the best places is not exactly news. Even in the benighted precincts of believers, where information from the outside world is known to travel exceedingly slowly, everybody grasps that this is one doctrine the world loves to hate.

During Benedict XVI’s April visit to the United States, hardly a story in the secular press failed to mention the teachings of Humanae Vitae, usually alongside adjectives like “divisive” and “controversial” and “outdated.”

In fact, if there’s anything on earth that unites the Church’s adversaries — all of them except for the Muslims, anyway — the teaching against contraception is probably it.

To many people, both today and when the encyclical was promulgated on July 25, 1968, the notion simply defies understanding. Consenting adults, told not to use birth control? Preposterous. Third World parents deprived access to contraception and abortion? Positively criminal. A ban on condoms when there’s a risk of contracting AIDS? Beneath contempt.

“The execration of the world,” in philosopher G.E.M. Anscombe’s phrase, was what Paul VI incurred with that document — to which the years since 1968 have added plenty of just plain ridicule. Hasn’t everyone heard Monty Python’s send-up song “Every Sperm Is Sacred”? Or heard the jokes? “You no play-a the game, you no make-a the rules.” And “What do you call the rhythm method? Vatican roulette.” And “What do you call a woman who uses the rhythm method? Mommy.”


As everyone also knows, it’s not only the Church’s self-declared adversaries who go in for this sort of sport. So, too, do many American and European Catholics — specifically, the ones often called dissenting or cafeteria Catholics, and who more accurately might be dubbed the “Catholic Otherwise Faithful.”

I may be Catholic, but I’m not a maniac about it, runs their unofficial subtext—meaning: I’m happy to take credit for enlightened Catholic positions on the death penalty/social justice/civil rights, but of course I don’t believe in those archaic teachings about divorce/homosexuality/and above all birth control.

Thus FOX News host Sean Hannity, for example, describes himself to viewers as a “good” and “devout” Catholic — one who happens to believe, as he has also said on the air, that “contraception is good.” He was challenged on his show in 2007 by Father Tom Euteneuer of Human Life International, who observed that such a position emanating from a public figure technically fulfilled the requirements for something called heresy.

And Hannity reacted as many others have when stopped in the cafeteria line. He objected that the issue of contraception was “superfluous” compared to others; he asked what right the priest had to tell him what to do (“judge not lest you be judged,” Hannity instructed); and he expressed shock at the thought that anyone might deprive him of taking Communion just because he was deciding for himself what it means to be Catholic.

And so we have a microcosm of the current fate of Humanae Vitae and all it represents in the American Church — and, for that matter, in what is left of the advanced Western one, too.

With each passing year, it seems safe to assume, fewer priests can be found to explain the teaching, fewer parishioners to obey it, and fewer educated people to avoid rolling their eyes at the idea that anyone in 2008 could possibly be so antiquarian as to hold any opinion about contraceptive sex — any, that is, other than its full-throttle celebration as the chief liberation of our time.

And in just that apparent consensus about the ridiculousness of it all, amid all those ashes scattered over a Christian teaching stretching back two millennia, arises a fascinating and in fact exceedingly amusing modern morality tale — amusing, at least, to those who take their humor dark.

“He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh,” the Psalmist promises, specifically in a passage about enjoying vindication over one’s adversaries. If that is so, then the racket on this fortieth anniversary must be prodigious.

Four decades later, not only have the document’s signature predictions been ratified in empirical force, but they have been ratified as few predictions ever are: in ways its authors could not possibly have foreseen, including by information that did not exist when the document was written, by scholars and others with no interest whatever in its teaching, and indeed even inadvertently, and in more ways than one, by many proud public adversaries of the Church.

Forty years later, there are more than enough ironies, both secular and religious, to make one swear there’s a humorist in heaven.


II
Let’s begin by meditating upon what might be called the first of the secular ironies now evident: Humanae Vitae’s specific predictions about what the world would look like if artificial contraception became widespread.

The encyclical warned of four resulting trends: a general lowering of moral standards throughout society; a rise in infidelity; a lessening of respect for women by men; and the coercive use of reproductive technologies by governments.

In the years since Humanae Vitae’s appearance, numerous distinguished Catholic thinkers have argued, using a variety of evidence, that each of these predictions has been borne out by the social facts.

One thinks, for example, of Monsignor George A. Kelly in his 1978 “Bitter Pill the Catholic Community Swallowed” and of the many contributions of Janet E. Smith, including Humanae Vitae: A Generation Later and the edited volume Why Humanae Vitae Was Right: A Reader.

And therein lies an irony within an irony. Although it is largely Catholic thinkers who have connected the latest empirical evidence to the defense of Humanae Vitae’s predictions, during those same forty years most of the experts actually producing the empirical evidence have been social scientists operating in the secular realm.

As sociologist W. Bradford Wilcox emphasized in a 2005 essay: “The leading scholars who have tackled these topics are not Christians, and most of them are not political or social conservatives. They are, rather, honest social scientists willing to follow the data wherever it may lead.”

Consider, as Wilcox does, the Nobel Prize-winning economist George Akerlof. In a well-known 1996 article in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, Akerlof explained in the language of modern economics why the sexual revolution — contrary to common prediction, especially prediction by those in and out of the Church who wanted the teaching on birth control changed — had led to an increase in both illegitimacy and abortion.

In another work published in the Economic Journal ten years ago, he traced the empirical connections between the decrease in marriage and married fatherhood for men — both clear consequences of the contraceptive revolution —and the simultaneous increase in behaviors to which single men appear more prone: substance abuse, incarceration, and arrests, to name just three.

Along the way, Akerlof found a strong connection between the diminishment of marriage on the one hand and the rise in poverty and social pathology on the other. He explained his findings in nontechnical terms in Slate magazine: “Although doubt will always remain about what causes a change in social custom, the technology-shock theory does fit the facts. The new reproductive technology was adopted quickly, and on a massive scale. Marital and fertility patterns changed with similar drama, at about the same time.”

To these examples of secular social science confirming what Catholic thinkers had predicted, one might add many more demonstrating the negative effects on children and society.

The groundbreaking work that Daniel Patrick Moynihan did in 1965, on the black family, is an example — along with the critical research of psychologist Judith Wallerstein over several decades on the impact of divorce on children; Barbara Dafoe Whitehead’s well-known work on the outcomes of single parenthood for children; Sara McLanahan and Gary Sandefur’s seminal book, Growing Up with a Single Parent; and David Blankenhorn’s Fatherless America, another lengthy summarization of the bad empirical news about family breakup.

Numerous other books followed this path of analyzing the benefits of marriage, including James Q. Wilson’s The Marriage Problem, Linda Waite and Maggie Gallagher’s The Case for Marriage, Kay Hymowitz’s Marriage and Caste in America, and Elizabeth Marquardt’s recent Between Two Worlds: The Inner Lives of Children of Divorce.

To this list could be added many more examples of how the data have grown and grown to support the proposition that the sexual revolution has been resulting in disaster for large swaths of the country — a proposition further honed by whole decades of examination of the relation between public welfare and family dysfunction (particularly in the pages of the decidedly not-Catholic Public Interest magazine).

Still other seminal works have observed that private actions, notably post-revolution sexual habits, were having massive public consequences; Charles Murray’s Losing Ground and Francis Fukuyama’s The Great Disruption come especially to mind.

All this is to say that, beginning just before the appearance of Humanae Vitae, an academic and intellectual rethinking began that can no longer be ignored — one whose accumulation of empirical evidence points to the deleterious effects of the sexual revolution on many adults and children.

And even in the occasional effort to draw a happy face on current trends, there is no glossing over what are still historically high rates of family breakup and unwed motherhood. For example, in “Crime, Drugs, Welfare — and Other Good News,” a recent and somewhat contrarian article in Commentary, Peter Wehner and Yuval Levin applauded the fact that various measures of social disaster and dysfunction seem to be improving from previous lows, including, among others, violent crime and property crime, and teen alcohol and tobacco use.

Even they had to note that “some of the most vital social indicators of all — those regarding the condition and strength of the American family — have so far refused to turn upward.”

In sum, although a few apologists such as Stephanie Coontz still insist otherwise, just about everyone else in possession of the evidence acknowledges that the sexual revolution has weakened family ties, and that family ties (the presence of a biologically related mother and father in the home) have turned out to be important indicators of child well-being—and more, that the broken home is not just a problem for individuals but also for society. Some scholars, moreover, further link these problems to the contraceptive revolution itself.

Consider the work of maverick sociobiologist Lionel Tiger. Hardly a cat’s-paw of the Pope — he describes religion as “a toxic issue” —Tiger has repeatedly emphasized the centrality of the sexual revolution to today’s unique problems.

The Decline of Males, his 1999 book, was particularly controversial among feminists for its argument that female contraceptives had altered the balance between the sexes in disturbing new ways (especially by taking from men any say in whether they could have children).

Equally eyebrow-raising is his linking of contraception to the breakdown of families, female impoverishment, trouble in the relationship between the sexes, and single motherhood. Tiger has further argued — as Humanae Vitae did not explicitly, though other works of Catholic theology have — for a causal link between contraception and abortion, stating outright that “with effective contraception controlled by women, there are still more abortions than ever. . . . Contraception causes abortion.”

Who could deny that the predictions of Humanae Vitae and, by extension, of Catholic moral theology have been ratified with data and arguments that did not even exist in 1968?

But now comes the question that just keeps on giving. Has this dramatic reappraisal of the empirically known universe led to any secular reappraisals, however grudging, that Paul VI may have gotten something right after all? The answer is manifestly that it has not. And this is only the beginning of the dissonance that surrounds us in 2008.


III
Just as empirical evidence has proved that the sexual revolution has had disastrous effects on children and families, so the past forty years have destroyed the mantle called “science” that Humanae Vitae’s detractors once wrapped round themselves. In particular, the doomsday population science so popular and influential during the era in which Humanae Vitae appeared has been repeatedly demolished.

Born from Thomas Robert Malthus’s famous late-eighteenth-century Essay on Population, this was the novel view that humanity itself amounted to a kind of scourge or pollution whose pressure on fellow members would lead to catastrophe. Though rooted in other times and places, Malthusianism of one particular variety was fully in bloom in America by the early 1960s.

In fact, Humanae Vitae appeared two months before the most successful popularization of Malthusian thinking yet, Paul R. Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb — which opened with the words: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.”

If, as George Weigel has suggested, 1968 was absolutely the worst moment for Humanae Vitae to appear, it could not have been a better one for Ehrlich to advance his apocalyptic thesis.

An entomologist who specialized in butterflies, Ehrlich found an American public, including a generation of Catholics, extraordinarily receptive to his direst thoughts about humanity.

This was the wave that The Population Bomb caught on its way to becoming one of the bestsellers of recent times. Of course, many people with no metaphysics whatsoever were drawn to Ehrlich’s doom-mongering.

But for restless Catholics, in particular, the overpopulation scare was attractive — for if overpopulation were the problem, the solution was obvious: Tell the Church to lift the ban on birth control.

It is less than coincidental that the high-mindedness of saving the planet dovetailed perfectly with a more self-interested outcome, the freer pursuit of sexuality via the Pill.

Dissenting Catholics had special reasons to stress the “science of overpopulation,” and so they did. In the name of a higher morality, their argument went, birth control could be defended as the lesser of two evils (a position argued by the dissenter Charles Curran, among others).

Less than half a century later, these preoccupations with overwhelming birth rates appear as pseudo-scientific as phrenology. Actually, that may be unfair to phrenology. For the overpopulation literature has not only been abandoned by thinkers for more improved science; it has actually been so thoroughly proved false that today’s cutting-edge theory worries about precisely the opposite: a “birth dearth” that is “graying” the advanced world.

In fact, so discredited has the overpopulation science become that this year Columbia University historian Matthew Connelly could publish Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population and garner a starred review in Publishers Weekly — all in service of what is probably the single best demolition of the population arguments that some hoped would undermine church teaching.

This is all the more satisfying a ratification because Connelly is so conscientious in establishing his own personal antagonism toward the Catholic Church (at one point asserting without even a footnote that natural family planning “still fails most couples who try it”).

Fatal Misconception is decisive proof that the spectacle of overpopulation, which was used to browbeat the Vatican in the name of science, was a grotesque error all along.

First, Connelly argues, the population-control movement was wrong as a matter of fact: “The two strongest claims population controllers make for their long-term historical contribution” are “that they raised Asia out of poverty and helped keep our planet habitable.” Both of these, he demonstrates, are false.

Even more devastating is Connelly’s demolition of the claim to moral high ground that the overpopulation alarmists made. For population science was not only failing to help people, Connelly argues, but also actively harming some of them — and in a way that summoned some of the baser episodes of recent historical memory:

The great tragedy of population control, the fatal misconception, was to think that one could know other people’s interests better than they knew it themselves. . . . The essence of population control, whether it targeted migrants, the “unfit,” or families that seemed either too big or too small, was to make rules for other people without having to answer to them. It appealed to people with power because, with the spread of emancipatory movements, it began to appear easier and more profitable to control populations than to control territory. That is why opponents were essentially correct in viewing it as another chapter in the unfinished business of imperialism.

The forty years since Humanae Vitae appeared have also vindicated the encyclical’s fear that governments would use the new contraceptive technology coercively.

The outstanding example, of course, is the Chinese government’s long-running “one-child policy,” replete with forced abortions, public trackings of menstrual cycles, family flight, increased female infanticide, sterilization, and other assaults too numerous even to begin cataloguing here—in fact, so numerous that they are now widely, if often grudgingly, acknowledged as wrongs even by international human-rights bureaucracies.

Lesser-known examples include the Indian government’s foray into coercive use of contraception in the “emergency” of 1976 and 1977, and the Indonesian government’s practice in the 1970s and 1980s of the bullying implantation of IUDs and Norplant.

Should governments come to “regard this as necessary,” Humanae Vitae warned, “they may even impose their use on everyone.” As with the unintended affirmation by social science, will anyone within the ranks of the population revisionists now give credit where credit is due?


IV
Perhaps the most mocked of Humanae Vitae’s predictions was its claim that separating sex from procreation would deform relations between the sexes and “open wide the way for marital infidelity and a general lowering of moral standards.”

Today, when advertisements for sex scream from every billboard and webpage, and every teen idol is sooner or later revealed topless or worse online, some might wonder what further proof could possibly be offered.

But to leave matters there would be to miss something important. The critical point is, one might say, not so much the proof as the pudding it’s in. And it would be hard to get more ironic than having these particular predictions of Humanae Vitae vindicated by perhaps the most unlikely — to say nothing of unwilling — witness of all: modern feminism.

Yet that is exactly what has happened since 1968. From Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem to Andrea Dworkin and Germaine Greer on up through Susan Faludi and Naomi Wolf, feminist literature has been a remarkably consistent and uninterrupted cacophony of grievance, recrimination, and sexual discontent. In that forty-year record, we find, as nowhere else, personal testimony of what the sexual revolution has done to womankind.

Consider just what we have been told by the endless books on the topic over the years. If feminists married and had children, they lamented it. If they failed to marry or have children, they lamented that, too. If they worked outside the home and also tended their children, they complained about how hard that was. If they worked outside the home and didn’t tend their children, they excoriated anyone who thought they should.

And running through all this literature is a more or less constant invective about the unreliability and disrespect of men.

The signature metaphors of feminism say everything we need to know about how happy liberation has been making these women: the suburban home as concentration camp, men as rapists, children as intolerable burdens, fetuses as parasites, and so on. These are the sounds of liberation?

Even the vaunted right to abortion, both claimed and exercised at extraordinary rates, did not seem to mitigate the misery of millions of these women after the sexual revolution.

Coming full circle, feminist and Vanity Fair contributor Leslie Bennetts recently published a book urging women to protect themselves financially and otherwise from dependence on men, including from men deserting them later in life. Mothers cannot afford to stay home with their children, she argues, because they cannot trust their men not to leave them. (One of her subjects calls desertion and divorce “the slaughter of the lambs.”)

Like-minded feminist Linda Hirschman penned a ferocious and widely read manifesto in 2005 urging, among other bitter “solutions,” that women protect themselves by adopting—in effect—a voluntary one-child policy. (She argued that a second child often necessitates a move to the suburbs, which puts the office and work-friendly conveniences further away).

Beneath all the pathos, the subtext remains the same: Woman’s chief adversary is Unreliable Man, who does not understand her sexual and romantic needs and who walks off time and again at the first sashay of a younger thing. What are all these but the generic cries of a woman who thinks that men are “disregarding her physical and emotional equilibrium” and “no longer considering her as his partner whom he should surround with care and affection”?

Perhaps the most compelling case made for traditional marriage lately was not on the cover of, say, Catholic World Report, but in the devoutly secular Atlantic.

The 2008 article “Marry Him!” by Lori Gottlieb — a single mother who conceived her only child with donor sperm rather than miss out on motherhood as she has on marriage — is a frank and excruciatingly personal look into some of the sexual revolution’s lonelier venues, including the creation of children by anonymous or absent sperm donors, the utter corrosiveness of taking a consumerist approach to romance, and the miserable effects of advancing age on one’s sexual marketability.

Gottlieb writes as one who played by all the feminist rules, only to realize too late that she’d been had. Beneath the zippy language, the article runs on an engine of mourning. Admitting how much she covets the husbands of her friends, if only for the wistful relief of having someone else help with the childcare, Gottlieb advises: “Those of us who choose not to settle in hopes of finding a soul mate later are almost like teenagers who believe they’re invulnerable to dying in a drunk-driving accident. We lose sight of our mortality. We forget that we, too, will age and become less alluring. And even if some men do find us engaging, and they’re ready to have a family, they’ll likely decide to marry someone younger with whom they can have their own biological children. Which is all the more reason to settle before settling is no longer an option.”

To these and other examples of how feminist-minded writers have become inadvertent witnesses for the prosecution of the sexual revolution, we might add recent public reflection on the Pill’s bastard child, ubiquitous pornography.

“The onslaught of porn,” one social observer wrote, “is responsible for deadening male libido in relation to real women, and leading men to see fewer and fewer women as ‘porn-worthy.’”

Further, “sexual appetite has become like the relationship between agribusiness, processed foods, supersize portions, and obesity. . . . If your appetite is stimulated and fed by poor-quality material, it takes more junk to fill you up. People are not closer because of porn but further apart; people are not more turned on in their daily lives but less so.”

And perhaps most shocking of all, this — which with just a little tweaking could easily have appeared in Humanae Vitae itself: “The power and charge of sex are maintained when there is some sacredness to it, when it is not on tap all the time.”

This was not some religious antiquarian. It was Naomi Wolf — Third Wave feminist and author of such works as The Beauty Myth and Promiscuities, which are apparently dedicated to proving that women can tomcat, too.

Yet she is now just one of many out there giving testimony, unconscious though it may be, to some of the funny things that happened after the Pill freed everybody from sexual slavery once and for all.

That there is no auxiliary literature of grievance for men — who, for the most part, just don’t seem to feel they have as much to grieve about in this new world order —is something else that Humanae Vitae and a few other retrograde types saw coming in the wake of the revolution.

As the saying goes, and as many people did not stop to ask at the time, cui bono? Forty years later, the evidence is in.

As Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Denver observed on Humanae Vitae’s thirtieth anniversary in 1998, “Contraception has released males — to a historically unprecedented degree — from responsibility for their sexual aggression.”

Will any feminist who by 2008 disagrees with that statement please stand up?


V
The adversaries of Humanae Vitae also could not have foreseen one important historical development that in retrospect would appear to undermine their demands that the Catholic Church change with the times: the widespread Protestant collapse, particularly the continuing implosion of the Episcopal Church and the other branches of Anglicanism.

It is about as clear as any historical chain can get that this implosion is a direct consequence of the famous Lambeth Conference in 1930, at which the Anglicans abandoned the longstanding Christian position on contraception.

If a church cannot tell its flock “what to do with my body,” as the saying goes, with regard to contraception, then other uses of that body will quickly prove to be similarly off-limits to ecclesiastical authority.

It makes perfect if unfortunate sense, then, that the Anglicans are today imploding over the issue of homosexuality. To quote Anscombe again:

If contraceptive intercourse is permissible, then what objection could there be after all to mutual masturbation, or copulation in vase indebito, sodomy, buggery (I should perhaps remark that I am using a legal term here — not indulging in bad language), when normal copulation is impossible or inadvisable (or in any case, according to taste)?

It can’t be the mere pattern of bodily behavior in which the stimulation is procured that makes all the difference! But if such things are all right, it becomes perfectly impossible to see anything wrong with homosexual intercourse, for example.

I am not saying: if you think contraception all right you will do these other things; not at all. The habit of respectability persists and old prejudices die hard.

But I am saying: you will have no solid reason against these things. You will have no answer to someone who proclaims as many do that they are good too. You cannot point to the known fact that Christianity drew people out of the pagan world, always saying no to these things. Because, if you are defending contraception, you will have rejected Christian tradition.

By giving benediction in 1930 to its married heterosexual members purposely seeking sterile sex, the Anglican Church lost, bit by bit, any authority to tell her other members — married or unmarried, homosexual or heterosexual — not to do the same.

To put the point another way, once heterosexuals start claiming the right to act as homosexuals, it would not be long before homosexuals start claiming the rights of heterosexuals.

Thus in a bizarre but real sense did Lambeth’s attempt to show compassion to married heterosexuals inadvertently give rise to the modern gay-rights movement — and consequently, to the issues that have divided their church ever since.

It is hard to believe that anyone seeking a similar change in Catholic teaching on the subject would want the Catholic Church to follow suit into the moral and theological confusion at the center of today’s Anglican Church — yet such is the purposeful ignorance of so many who oppose Rome on birth control that they refuse to connect these cautionary historical dots.

The years since Humanae Vitae have seen something else that neither traditionalist nor dissenting Catholics could have seen coming, one other development shedding retrospective credit on the Church: a serious reappraisal of Christian sexuality from Protestants outside the liberal orbit.

Thus, for instance, Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, observed in First Things in 1998 that “in an ironic turn, American evangelicals are rethinking birth control even as a majority of the nation’s Roman Catholics indicate a rejection of their Church’s teaching.”

Later, when interviewed in a 2006 article in the New York Times Sunday magazine about current religious thinking on artificial contraception, Mohler elaborated: “I cannot imagine any development in human history, after the Fall, that has had a greater impact on human beings than the Pill. . . . The entire horizon of the sexual act changes. I think there can be no question that the Pill gave incredible license to everything from adultery and affairs to premarital sex and within marriage to a separation of the sex act and procreation.”

Mohler also observed that this legacy of damage was affecting the younger generation of evangelicals. “I detect a huge shift. Students on our campus are intensely concerned. Not a week goes by that I do not get contacted by pastors about the issue. There are active debates going on. It’s one of the things that may serve to divide evangelicalism.”

Part of that division includes Quiverfull, the anti-contraception Protestant movement now thought to number in the tens of thousands that further prohibits (as the Catholic Church does not) natural family planning or any other conscious interference with conception.

Such second thoughts among evangelicals are the premise of a 2002 book titled Open Embrace: A Protestant Couple Re-Thinks Contraception.

As a corollary to this rethinking by Protestants, experience seems to have taught a similar lesson to at least some young Catholics—the generation to grow up under divorce, widespread contraception, fatherless households, and all the other emancipatory fallout.

As Naomi Schaefer Riley noted in the Wall Street Journal about events this year at Notre Dame: “About thirty students walked out of The Vagina Monologues in protest after the first scene. And people familiar with the university are not surprised that it was the kids, not the grownups, who registered the strongest objections. The students are probably the most religious part of the Notre Dame. . . . . Younger Catholics tend to be among the more conservative ones.”

It is hard to imagine that something like the traditionalist Anscombe Society at Princeton University, started in 2004, could have been founded in 1968.

One thing making traditionalists of these young Americans, at least according to some of them, is the fact of their having grown up in a world characterized by abortion on demand. And that brings us to yet another irony worth contemplating on this fortieth anniversary: what widespread rejection of Humanae Vitae has done to the character of American Catholicism.

As with the other ironies, it helps here to have a soft spot for absurdity. In their simultaneous desire to jettison the distasteful parts of Catholicism and keep the more palatable ones, American Catholics have done something novel and truly amusing: They have created a specific catalogue of complaints that resembles nothing so much as a Catholic version of the orphan with chutzpah.

Thus many Catholics complain about the dearth of priests, all the while ignoring their own responsibility for that outcome — the fact that few have children in numbers large enough to send one son to the priesthood while the others marry and carry on the family name.

They mourn the closing of Catholic churches and schools — never mind that whole parishes, claiming the rights of individual conscience, have contracepted themselves out of existence.

They point to the priest sex scandals as proof positive that chastity is too much to ask of people — completely ignoring that it was the randy absence of chastity that created the scandals in the first place.

In fact, the disgrace of contemporary American Catholicism — the many recent scandals involving priests and underage boys — is traceable to the collusion between a large Catholic laity that wanted a different birth-control doctrine, on the one hand, and a new generation of priests cutting themselves a different kind of slack, on the other.

“I won’t tattle on my gay priest if you’ll give me absolution for contraception” seems to have been the unspoken deal in many parishes since Humanae Vitae.

A more obedient laity might have wondered aloud about the fact that a significant number of priests post-Vatican II seemed more or less openly gay.

A more obedient clergy might have noticed that plenty of Catholics using artificial contraception were also taking Communion.

It is hard to believe that either new development — the widespread open rebellion against church sexual teachings by the laity, or the concomitant quiet rebellion against church sexual teachings by a significant number of priests — could have existed without the other.

During Benedict’s recent visit to the United States, one heard a thousand times the insistence that Humanae Vitae somehow sparked a rebellion or was something new under the sun.

As Peter Steinfels once put the over-familiar party line, “The Pope’s 1968 encyclical and the furor it created continue to polarize the American church.”

On this account, everything was somehow fine until Paul VI refused to bend with the times — at which point all hell broke loose.

Of course, all that Paul VI did, as Anscombe among many other unapologetic Catholics then and since have pointed out, was reiterate what just about everyone in the history of Christendom had ever said on the subject.

In asking Catholics to be more like contraceptive-accepting Protestants, critics have been forgetting what Christian theologians across centuries had to say about contraception until practically the day before yesterday.

It was, in a word, No.

Exactly one hundred years ago, for example, the Lambeth Conference of 1908 affirmed its opposition to artificial contraception in words harsher than anything appearing in Humanae Vitae: “demoralizing to character and hostile to national welfare.”

In another historical twist that must have someone laughing somewhere, pronouncements of the founding fathers of Protestantism make the Catholic traditionalists of 1968 look positively diffident.

Martin Luther in a commentary on Genesis declared contraception to be worse than incest or adultery. John Calvin called it an “unforgivable crime.”


This unanimity was not abandoned until the year 1930, when the Anglicans voted to allow married couples to use birth control in extreme cases, and one denomination after another over the years came to follow suit.

Seen in the light of actual Christian tradition, the question is not after all why the Catholic Church refused to collapse on the point. It is rather why just about everyone else in the Judeo-Christian tradition did.

Whatever the answer, the Catholic Church took, and continues to take, the public fall for causing a collapse — when actually it was the only one not collapsing.


VI
From time to time since 1968, some of the Catholics who accepted “the only doctrine that had ever appeared as the teaching of the Church on these things,” in Anscombe’s words, have puzzled over why, exactly, Humanae Vitae has been so poorly received by the rest of the world.

Surely part of it is timing, as George Weigel observed. Others have cited an implacably secular media and the absence of a national pulpit for Catholics as contributing factors. Still others have floated the idea that John Paul II’s theology of the body, an elaborate and highly positive explication of Christian moral teaching, might have taken some of the sting out of Humanae Vitae and better won the obedience of the flock.

At the end of the day, though, it is hard to believe that the fundamental force behind the execration by the world amounts to a phrase here and there in Humanae Vitae — or in Augustine, or in Thomas Aquinas, or in anywhere else in the long history of Christian teaching on the subject.

More likely, the fundamental issue is rather what Archbishop Chaput explained ten years ago: “If Paul VI was right about so many of the consequences deriving from contraception, it is because he was right about contraception itself.”

This is exactly the connection few people in 2008 want to make, because contraceptive sex — as commentators from all over, religious or not, agree — is the fundamental social fact of our time. And the fierce and widespread desire to keep it so is responsible for a great many perverse outcomes.

Despite an empirical record that is unmistakably on Paul VI’s side by now, there is extraordinary resistance to crediting Catholic moral teaching with having been right about anything, no matter how detailed the record.

Considering the human spectacle today, forty years after the document whose widespread rejection reportedly broke Paul VI’s heart, one can’t help but wonder how he might have felt if he had glimpsed only a fraction of the evidence now available — whether any of it might have provoked just the smallest wry smile.

After all, it would take a heart of stone not to find at least some of what’s now out there funny as hell.

There is the ongoing empirical vindication in one arena after another of the most unwanted, ignored, and ubiquitously mocked global teaching of the past fifty years.

There is the fact that the Pill, which was supposed to erase all consequences of sex once and for all, turned out to have huge consequences of its own.

There is the way that so many Catholics, embarrassed by accusations of archaism and driven by their own desires to be as free for sex as everyone around them, went racing for the theological exit signs after Humanae Vitae — all this just as the world with its wicked old ways began stockpiling more evidence for the Church’s doctrine than anyone living in previous centuries could have imagined, and while still other people were actually being brought closer to the Church because she stood exactly as that “sign of contradiction” when so many in the world wanted otherwise.

Yet instead of vindication for the Church, there is demoralization; instead of clarity, mass confusion; instead of more obedience, ever less. Really, the perversity is, well, perverse.

In what other area does humanity operate at this level of extreme, daily, constant contradiction? Where is the Boccaccio for this post-Pill Decameron? It really is all very funny, when you stop to think about it. So why isn’t everybody down here laughing?


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mary Eberstadt is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, author of Home-Alone America, and editor of Why I Turned Right: Leading Baby Boom Conservatives Chronicle Their Political Journeys.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/07/2008 16:54]
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'In 1968, something terrible happened in the Church':
Cardinal Stafford's memoir on how
dissenters to Humanae Vitae tore the Church apart –
the rift left scars that remain to this day



I posted the CNA story about this article in NOTABLES earlier, and I am glad CNA has a translation of tne entire article. No one who is Catholic and respects truth, humility and obedience, can read this and not emerge devastated by this harrowing account of theological dissent and its relentless arrogance.


Cardinal Stafford is the Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary, Roman Curia.


Humanae Vitae:
The Year of the Peirasmòs - 1968

By Cardinal James Francis Stafford
Translated by

from the 7/24/08 issue of




“Lead us not into temptation” is the sixth petition of the Our Father. Peirasmòs, the Greek word used in this passage for ‘temptation,’ means a trial or test. Disciples petition God to be protected against the supreme test of ungodly powers. The trial is related to Jesus’s cup in Gethsemane, the same cup which his disciples would also taste (Mk 10: 35-45). The dark side of the interior of the cup is an abyss. It reveals the awful consequences of God’s judgment upon sinful humanity. In August 1968, the weight of the evangelical Peirasmòs fell on many priests, including myself.

It was the year of the bad war, of complex innocence that sanctified the shedding of blood. English historian Paul Johnson dubs 1968 as the year of “America’s Suicide Attempt.”

It included the Tet offensive in Vietnam with its tsunami-like effects in American life and politics, the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee; the tumult in American cities on Palm Sunday weekend; and the June assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy in Southern California.

It was also the year in which Pope Paul VI issued his encyclical letter on transmitting human life, Humanae Vitae (HV). He met immediate, premeditated, and unprecedented opposition from some American theologians and pastors. By any measure, 1968 was a bitter cup.

On the fortieth anniversary of Humanae Vitae, I have been asked to reflect on one event of that year, the doctrinal dissent among some priests and theologians in an American archdiocese on the occasion of its publication.

It is not an easy or welcome task. But since it may help some followers of Jesus to live what Pope Paul VI called a more “disciplined” life (HV 21), I will explore that event.

The summer of 1968 is a record of God’s hottest hour. The memories are not forgotten; they are painful. They remain vivid like a tornado in the plains of Colorado. They inhabit the whirlwind where God’s wrath dwells.

In 1968, something terrible happened in the Church. Within the ministerial priesthood, ruptures developed everywhere among friends which never healed. And the wounds continue to affect the whole Church. The dissent, together with the leaders’ manipulation of the anger they fomented, became a supreme test. It changed fundamental relationships within the Church. It was a Peirasmòs for many.

Some background material is necessary. Cardinal Lawrence J. Shehan, the sixth Archbishop of Baltimore, was my ecclesiastical superior at the time.

Pope Paul VI had appointed him along with others as additional members to the Papal Commission for the Study of Problems of the Family, Population, and Birth Rates, first established by Blessed Pope John XXIII in 1963 during the II Vatican Council.

There had been discussions and delays and unauthorized interim reports from Rome prior to 1968. The enlarged Commission was asked to make recommendations on these issues to the Pope.

In preparation for its deliberations, the Cardinal sent confidential letters to various persons of the Church of Baltimore seeking their advice. I received such a letter. My response drew upon experience, both personal and pastoral.

Family and education had given me a Christian understanding of sex. The profoundly Catholic imagination of my family, friends and teachers had caused me to be open to this reality; I was filled with wonder before its mystery.

Theological arguments weren’t necessary to convince me of the binding connection between sexual acts and new life. That truth was an accepted part of life at the elementary school connected with St. Joseph’s Passionist Monastery Parish in Baltimore.

In my early teens my father had first introduced me to the full meaning of human sexuality and the need for discipline. His intervention opened a path through the labyrinth of adolescence.

Through my family, schools, and parishes I became friends with many young women. Some of them I dated on a regular basis. I marveled at their beauty. The courage of St. Maria Goretti, canonized in 1950, struck my generation like an intense mountain storm.

Growing into my later teens, I understood better how complex friendship with young women could be. They entered the springtime of my life like the composite rhythm of a poem. To my surprise, the joy of being their friend was enriched by prayer, modesty, and the Sacraments of Penance and the Eucharist.

Later education and formation in seminaries built upon those experiences. In a 1955 letter to a friend, Flannery O’Connor describes the significance of the virtue of purity for many Catholics at that time:

To see Christ as God and man is probably no more difficult today than it has been ... For you it may be a matter of not being able to accept what you call a suspension of the law of the flesh and the physical, but for my part I think that when I know what the laws of the flesh and physical reality really are, then I will know what God is. We know them as we see them, not as God sees them.

For me it is the virgin birth, the Incarnation, the resurrection which are the true laws of the flesh and the physical. Death, decay, destruction are the suspension of these laws. I am always astonished at the emphasis the Church places on the body. It is not the soul she says that will rise but the body, glorified.

I have always thought that purity was the most mysterious of the virtues, but it occurs to me that it would never have entered human consciousness if we were not to look forward to a resurrection of the body, which will be flesh and spirit united in peace, in the way they were in Christ. The resurrection of Christ seems the high point in the law of nature.

O’Connor’s theology, with its remarkably eschatological mark, anticipates the teaching of the II Vatican Council, “The truth is that only in the mystery of the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light.” (Gaudium et Spes, 22.)

In those years, I could not have used her explicit words to explain where I stood on sexuality and its use. Once I discovered them, she became a spiritual sister.

Eight years of priestly ministry from 1958 to 1966 in Washington and Baltimore broadened my experience. It didn’t take long to discover changes in Americans’ attitudes towards the virtue of purity. Both cities were undergoing sharp increases in out-of-wedlock pregnancies. The rate in Baltimore’s inner city was about 18% in 1966 and had been climbing for several years.

In 1965-1966, the Baltimore Metropolitan Health and Welfare Council undertook a study to advise the city government in how to address the issue. At that time, the board members of the Council, including myself, had uncritical faith in experts and social research. Even the II Vatican Council had expressed unfettered confidence in the role of benevolent experts (Gaudium et Spes, 57).

Not one of my professional acquaintances anticipated the crisis of trust which was just around the corner in the relations between men and women. Our vision was incapable of establishing conditions of justice and of purity of heart in which wonder and appreciation can find play. We were already anachronistic and without hope. We ignored the texture of life.

There were signs even then of the disasters facing children, both born and unborn. As a caseworker and priest throughout the 1960s, part of my ministry involved counseling inner-city families and single parents.

My first awareness of a parishioner using hard drugs was in 1961. A sixteen-year old had been jailed in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. At the time of my late afternoon visit to him, he was experiencing drug withdrawal unattended and alone in a tiny cell. His screams filled the corridors and adjoining cells.

Through the iron bars dividing us, I was horror-stricken watching him in his torment. The abyss he was looking into was unimaginably terrifying. In this drugged youth writhing in agony on the floor next to an open toilet I saw the bitter fruits of the estrangement of men and women.

His mother, separated from her husband, lived with her younger children in a sweltering third floor flat on Light Street in old South Baltimore. The father was non-existent for them. The failure of men in their paternal and spousal roles was unfolding before my eyes and ears. Since then, more and more American men have refused to accept responsibility for their sexuality.

In a confidential letter responding to his request, I shared in a general fashion these concerns. My counsel to Cardinal Shehan was very real and specific.

I had taken a hard, cold look at what I was experiencing and what the Church and society were doing. I came across an idea which was elliptical: the gift of love should be allowed to be fruitful. These two fixed points are constant. This simple idea lit up everything like lightning in a storm.

I wrote about it more formally to the Cardinal: the unitive and procreative meanings of marriage cannot be separated. Consequently, to deprive a conjugal act deliberately of its fertility is intrinsically wrong. To encourage or approve such an abuse would lead to the eclipse of fatherhood and to disrespect for women.

Since then, Pope John Paul II has given us the complementary and superlative insight into the nuptial meaning of the human body. Decades afterwards, I came across an analogous reading from Meister Eckhart: “Gratitude for the gift is shown only by allowing it to make one fruitful.”

Some time later, the Papal Commission sent its recommendations to the Pope. The majority advised that the Church’s teaching on contraception be changed in light of new circumstances. Cardinal Shehan was part of that majority. Even before the encyclical had been signed and issued, his vote had been made public, although not on his initiative.

As we know, the Pope decided otherwise. [I don't think that as Pope, he could ever have agreed with the majority recommendation.]

This sets the scene for the tragic drama following the actual date of the publication of the encyclical letter on July 29, 1968.

In his memoirs, Cardinal Shehan describes the immediate reaction of some priests in Washington to the encyclical:

After receiving the first news of the publication of the encyclical, the Rev. Charles E. Curran, instructor of moral theology of The Catholic University of America, flew back to Washington from the West where he had been staying.

Late [on the afternoon of July 29], he and nine other professors of theology of the Catholic University met, by evident prearrangement, in Caldwell Hall to receive, again by prearrangement with the Washington Post, the encyclical, part by part, as it came from the press.

The story further indicated that by nine o’clock that night, they had received the whole encyclical, had read it, had analyzed it, criticized it, and had composed their six-hundred word ‘Statement of Dissent.’

Then they began that long series of telephone calls to ‘theologians’ throughout the East, which went on, according to the Post, until 3:30 a.m., seeking authorization to attach their names as endorsers (signers was the term used) of the statement, although those to whom they had telephoned could not have had an opportunity to see either the encyclical or their statement. Meanwhile, they had arranged through one of the local television stations to have the statement broadcast that night.

The Cardinal’s judgment was scornful. In 1982 he wrote: "The first thing that we have to note about the whole performance is this: so far as I have been able to discern, never in the recorded history of the Church has a solemn proclamation of a Pope been received by any group of Catholic people with so much disrespect and contempt."

The personal Peirasmòs, the test, began. In Baltimore in early August 1968, a few days after the encyclical’s issuance, I received an invitation by telephone from a recently ordained assistant pastor to attend a gathering of some Baltimore priests at the rectory of St. William of York parish in southwest Baltimore to discuss the encyclical. The meeting was set for Sunday evening, August 4. I agreed to come. Eventually a large number of priests were gathered in the rectory’s basement. I knew them all.

The dusk was clear, hot, and humid. The quarters were cramped. We were seated on rows of benches and chairs and were led by a diocesan inner-city pastor well known for his work in liturgy and race relations. There were also several Sulpician priests present from St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore to assist him in directing the meeting. I don’t recall their actual number.

My expectations of the meeting proved unrealistic. I had hoped that we had been called together to receive copies of the encyclical and to discuss it. I was mistaken. Neither happened.

After welcoming us and introducing the leadership, the inner-city pastor came to the point. He expected each of us to subscribe to the Washington “Statement of Dissent.”

Mixing passion with humor, he explained the reasons. They ranged from the maintenance of the credibility of the Church among the laity, to the need to allow ‘flexibility’ for married couples in forming their consciences on the use of artificial contraceptives.

Before our arrival, the conveners had decided that the Baltimore priests’ rejection of the papal encyclical would be published the following morning in The Baltimore Sun, one of the daily newspapers.

The Washington statement was read aloud. Then the leader asked each of us to agree to have our names attached to it. No time was allowed for discussion, reflection, or prayer. Each priest was required individually to give a verbal “yes” or “no.”

I could not sign it. My earlier letter to Cardinal Shehan came to mind. I remained convinced of the truth of my judgment and conclusions. Noting that my seat was last in the packed basement, I listened to each priest’s response, hoping for support. It didn’t materialize. Everyone agreed to sign.

There were no abstentions. As the last called upon, I felt isolated. The basement became suffocating. By now it was night. The room was charged with tension. Something epochal was taking place.

It became clear that the leaders’ strategy had been carefully mapped out beforehand. It was moving along without a hitch. Their rhetorical skills were having their anticipated effect. They had planned carefully how to exert what amounted to emotional and intellectual coercion. Violence by overt manipulation was new to the Baltimore presbyterate.

The leader’s reaction to my refusal was predictable and awful. The whole process now became a grueling struggle, a terrible test, a Peirasmòs.

The priest/leader, drawing upon some scatological language from his Marine Corp past in the II World War, responded contemptuously to my decision. He tried to force me to change. He became visibly angry and verbally abusive. The underlying ‘fraternal’ violence became more evident. He questioned and then derided my integrity. He taunted me to risk my ecclesiastical ‘future,’ although his reference was more anatomically specific. The abuse went on.

With surprising coherence, I was eventually able to respond that the Pope’s encyclical deserved the courtesy of a reading. None of us had read it. I continued that, as a matter of fact, I agreed with and accepted the Pope’s teaching as it had been reported in the public media. That response elicited more ridicule. Otherwise there was silence.

Finally, seeing that I would remain firm, the ex-Marine moved on to complete the business and adjourn the meeting. The leaders then prepared a statement for the next morning’s daily paper.

The meeting ended. I sped out of there, free but disoriented. Once outside, the darkness encompassed me. We all had been subjected to a new thing in the Church, something unexpected. A pastor and several seminary professors had abused rhetoric to undermine the truth within the evangelical community. When opposed, they assumed the role of Job’s friends. Their contempt became a nightmare. In the night, it seemed that God’s blind hand was reaching out to touch my face.

The dissent of a few Sulpician seminary professors compounded my disorientation. In their ancient Baltimore Seminary I had first caught on to the connection between freedom, interiority, and obedience.

By every ecclesial measure they should have been aware that the process they supported that evening exceeded the “norms of licit dissent.” But they showed no concern for the gravity of that theological and pastoral moment. They saw nothing unbecoming in the mix of publicity and theology. They expressed no impatience then or later over the coercive nature of the August meeting. Nor did any of the other priests present.

One diocesan priest did request privately later that night that his name be removed before the statement’s publication in the morning paper.

For a long time, I wondered about the meaning of the event. It was a cataclysm which was difficult to survive intact. Things were sorted out slowly.

Later, Henri de Lubac captured some of its significance, “Nothing is more opposed to witness than vulgarization. Nothing is more unlike the apostolate than propaganda.”

Hannah Arendt’s insights have been useful concerning the dangerous poise of 20th century Western culture between unavoidable doom and reckless optimism.

“It should be possible to discover the hidden mechanics by which all traditional elements of our political and spiritual world were dissolved into a conglomeration of where everything seems to have lost specific value, and has become unrecognizable for human comprehension, unusable for human purpose.

To yield to the mere process of disintegration has become an irresistible temptation, not only because it has assumed the spurious grandeur of ‘historical necessity,’ but also because everything outside it has begun to appear lifeless, bloodless, meaningless and unreal.

The subterranean world that has always accompanied Catholic communities, called Gnosticism by our ancestors, had again surfaced and attempted to usurp the truth of the Catholic tradition.

An earlier memory from April 1968 helped to shed further light on what had happened in August 1968 along with de Lubac’s words about violence and Arendt’s insights into the breaking point reached by Western civilization in the 20th century.

During the height of the 1968 Baltimore riots following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., I had made an emergency call to that same inner-city pastor who would lead the later August meeting. It was one of numerous telephone conversations I had with inner-city pastors during the night preceding Palm Sunday. At the request of the city government, I was asking whether the pastors or their people, both beleaguered, might need food, medical assistance, or other help.

My conversation with him that April night was by far the most dramatic. He described the view from the rectory while speaking on the phone. A window framed a dissolving neighborhood; his parish was becoming a raging inferno.

He said, “From here I see nothing but fire burning everywhere. Everything has been set ablaze. The Church and rectory are untouched thus far.” He did not wish to leave or be evacuated. His voice betrayed disillusionment and fear. Later we learned that the parish buildings survived.

‘Sorting out’ these two events of violence continued throughout the following months and years. The trajectories of April and August 1968 unpredictably converged. Memories of the physical violence in the city in April 1968 helped me to name what had happened in August 1968.

Ecclesial dissent can become a kind of spiritual violence in its form and content. A new, unsettling insight emerged. Violence and truth don’t mix. When expressive violence of whatever sort is inflicted upon truth, the resulting irony is lethal.

What do I mean? Look at the results of the two events. After the violent 1968 Palm Sunday weekend, civil dialogue in metropolitan Baltimore broke down and came to a stop. It took a back seat to open anger and recriminations between whites and blacks.

The violence of the priests’ August gathering gave rise to its own ferocious acrimony. Conversations among the clergy, where they existed, became contaminated with fear. Suspicions among priests were chronic. Fears abounded. And they continue.

The Archdiocesan priesthood lost something of the fraternal whole which Baltimore priests had known for generations. 1968 marked the hiatus of the generational communio of the Archdiocesan presbyterate, which had been continually reinforced by the seminary and its Sulpician faculty. Priests’ fraternity had been wounded.

Pastoral dissent had attacked the Eucharistic foundation of the Church. Its nuptial significance had been denied. Some priests saw bishops as nothing more than Roman mannequins.

Something else happened among priests on that violent August night. Friendship in the Church sustained a direct hit. Jesus, by calling those who were with him his ‘friends,’ had made friendship a privileged analogy of the Church. That analogy became obscured after a large number of priests expressed shame over their leaders and repudiated their teaching.

Cardinal Shehan later reported that on Monday morning, August 5, he “was startled to read in the Baltimore Sun that seventy-two priests of the Baltimore area had signed the Statement of Dissent.” What he later called “the years of crisis” began for him during that hot, violent August evening in 1968.

But that night was not a total loss. The test was unexpected and unwelcome. Its unhinging consequences continue. Abusive, coercive dissent has become a reality in the Church and subjects her to violent, debilitating, unproductive, chronic controversies.

But I did discover something new. Others also did. When the moment of Christian witness came, no Christian could be coerced who refused to be.

Despite the novelty of being treated as an object of shame and ridicule, I did not become “ashamed of the Gospel” that night and found “sweet delight in what is right.” It was not a bad lesson. Ecclesial obedience ran the distance.

My discovery that Christ was the first to despise shame was gut- rending in its existential and providential reality. “Let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame.”

Paradoxically, in the hot, August night a new sign shown unexpectedly on the path to future life. It read, “Jesus learned obedience through what he suffered.”

The violence of the initial disobedience was only a prelude to further and more pervasive violence. Priests wept at meetings over the manipulation of their brothers.

Contempt for the truth, whether aggressive or passive, has become common in Church life. Dissenting priests, theologians and laypeople have continued their coercive techniques. From the beginning, the press has used them to further its own serpentine agenda.

All of this led to a later discovery. Discernment is an essential part of episcopal ministry. With the grace of “the governing Spirit” the discerning skills of a bishop should mature.

Episcopal attention should focus on the break/rupture initiated by Jesus and described by St. Paul in his response to Corinthian dissenters.

You desire proof that Christ is speaking in me. He is not weak in dealing with you, but is powerful in you. For he was crucified in weakness, but lives by the power of God. For we are weak in him, but in dealing with you we shall live with him by the power of God. Examine yourselves, to see whether you are holding to your faith. Test yourselves (2 Cor 13: 3-5).

The rupture of the violent death of Jesus has changed our understanding of the nature of God. His Trinitarian life is essentially self-surrender and love.

By Baptism, every disciple of Jesus is imprinted with that Trinitarian watermark. The Incarnate Word came to do the will of him who sent him.

Contemporary obedience of disciples to the Successor of Peter cannot be separated from the poverty of spirit and purity of heart modeled and won by the Word on the Cross.

A brief afterword: In 1978 or thereabouts, during an episcopal visitation to his parish, I was having lunch with the Baltimore pastor, the ex-Marine, who led the August 1968 meeting. I was a guest in his rectory. He was still formidable.

Our conversation was about his parish, the same parish he had been shepherding during the 1968 riots. The atmosphere was amiable. During the simple meal in the kitchen I came to an uneasy decision. Since we had never discussed the August 1968 night, I decided to initiate a conversation about it.

My recall was brief, objective and, insofar as circumstances allowed, unthreatening. I had hoped for some light from him on an event which had become central to the experience of many priests, including myself. While my mind and heart were recalling the events of the night, he remained silent. His silence continued afterwards. Even though he had not forgotten, he made no comment. He didn’t lift his eyes. His heart’s fire was colder now.

Nothing was forthcoming. I left the matter there. No dialogue was possible in 1968; it remained impossible in 1978. There was no common ground. Both of us were looking into an abyss -- from opposite sides.

Anguish and disquiet overwhelmed the distant hope of reconciliation and friendship. We never returned to the subject again. He has since died while serving a large suburban parish. The only remaining option is to strike my breast and pray, “Lord, remember the secret worth of all our human worthlessness.”

Diocesan presbyterates have not recovered from the July/August nights in 1968. Many in consecrated life also failed the evangelical test. Since January 2002, the abyss has opened up elsewhere.

The whole people of God, including children and adolescents, now must look into the abyss and see what dread beasts are at its bottom. Each of us shudders before the wrath of God, each weeps in sorrow for our sins and each begs for the Father’s merciful remembrance of Christ’s obedience.




[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 01/08/2008 20:45]
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from

August 2008


Among the multiple priorities that Benedict XVI has as Pope, he has never ceased to underscore the need for every Christian to have a sense of Christian mission - to announce Christ to all men - and for this reason, to be able to do his part in evangelization, the actual announcement of Christ to others.

Fr. Schall, as usual, does a masterful job of annotating the Doctrinal Note on Evangelization issued by the CDF in November last year. The article is very relevant to the current Synodal assembly on the Word of God, because mission and evangelization are about announcing the Word of God, Christ himself.





The Christian spirit has always been animated
by a passion to lead all humanity
to Christ in the Church.



Today, however, with ever-increasing frequency, questions are being raised about the legitimacy of presenting to others—so that they might in turn accept it—that which is held to be true for oneself. Often this is seen as an infringement on other people’s freedom. Such a vision of human freedom, separated from its integral reference to truth, is one of the expressions ‘of that relativism which, recognizing nothing as definitive, leaves as the ultimate criterion only the self with its desires and under the semblance of freedom, becomes a prison for each one.’
—William Cardinal Levada, “On Some Aspects of Evangelization,” #4. [1]

“The loving providence of God determined that in the last days he would aid the world, set on its course to destruction. He ordered that all nations should be saved in Christ.” [2]
—Pope St. Leo the Great, †A.D. 461, Epiphany Sermon.

“The Christian spirit has always been animated by a passion to lead all humanity to Christ in the Church. The incorporation of new members into the Church is not the expansion of a power-group, but rather entrance into the network of friendship with Christ which connects heaven and earth, different continents and ages.”
—“On Some Aspects of Evangelization,” #9.



Four days after the encyclical Spe Salvi was issued on November 29, 2007, the Feast of St. Andrew, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a relatively short “note” on evangelization.

Significantly, this latter day, December 3, was the Feast of St. Francis Xavier, the patron of the missions. Before he died, Xavier sought to enter China to evangelize it.

Both Paul VI and John Paul II previously had addressed major documents to the topic of evangelization.[3] This present document was approved by the “Sovereign Pontiff in the audience granted to the undersigned Cardinal Prefect on October 6, 2007.”

The note does not mention several earlier decisions of the congregation on specific writers whose works have been examined and criticized because of doctrinal theories that cast doubt on the need for any “missionary” activities toward non-believers or non-Catholics.

These errors generally deny any need for the Church in the work of salvation. They elevate other religions or philosophies by implying that these provide by their rites and doctrines that which the Church promises.

Often, too, they shift salvation from a transcendent destiny for each person to this-world “missionary” work. Salvation becomes some future kingdom or ideological movement within space and time. The salvation of each individual soul as its own drama within the Church is reduced to participation in some collective — usually social justice-based movement down the ages.

What this note does — the reason it is called precisely a “doctrinal” note — is reaffirm that Christian revelation is true and meant for all men, however slowly the historical process of their encountering it may be.

The apostles and their successors are sent to “all nations” to teach and baptize. “By means of the Church, Christ wants to be present in every historical epoch, every place on earth, and every sector of society, in order to reach every person, so that there may be one flock and one shepherd” (#1).

The immediate burden of this document, then, is to explain the central purpose of the Church in the world. This purpose is the affirmation of Christ as true God and true man. He is sent to explain to us that our ultimate destiny — that of every man and woman who ever lived, bar none — needs to be known, affirmed, and practiced as a good. As Dominus Iesus, the previous document of the congregation, stated, salvation cannot be either explained or achieved without some reference to Christ and the Church.

One needs to clearly understand the current world situation to see the importance of this note.

- The Church knows that only about a fifth of the world’s population is Christian, and not all of these are Catholic.
- It does not deny the “truth” found in any historic religion or philosophy.
- It is not “intolerant.”

The obvious dynamism behind the present Pope is surely his intellectual endeavor — seen through his views on philosophy and natural law — to have available to each person the means to direct himself to the truth.

We can accept the truth contained in other religions and philosophies as it relates to Christian revelation. Benedict, I suspect, is one of the most brilliant strategists to achieve its revelational purpose that we have seen on the Chair of Peter.

Moreover, in this day and age, many in Islam — particularly the so-called “terrorists” — are proclaiming that everyone should, by right and law, worship Allah after the manner of the Koran.

Within this worldview, Christianity itself is a heresy. It is not legally or culturally tolerated. Certainly no Christian effort to propagate its faith, no matter how peacefully, is permitted.

Even though the few remaining Christians in some Muslim countries are given a kind of second class citizenship, it is nothing remotely close to what the Pope means by “freedom of religion.”

Probably this universalism within Islam to conquer the world has its roots in the universalism of both the Old and New Testaments. In general, this world-conquest side of Islam is played down as “fanaticism” or as “fascism.”

In fact, it has religious roots. It betrays such zeal that our intellectuals can hardly comprehend its intensity. They try to explain it on every other basis but its own religious one. It is literally true that this strand of Islam wants to “subject” the world to Allah, even by military means. Military means are in fact seen as religious means.

Why does Islam want to complete the conquest of the world as its armies almost conquered in the first century of its founding? It is not, as we think looking at our own modern political philosophy, about power. Rather, it is in order to worship Allah as required in the Koran.

From this perspective, the elimination of other religions and polities is the necessary step to render what is properly due to God.

Probably one of the main crises in the West is the inability to see the seriousness of this threat or the earnestness with which it is proposed and pursued.


Suicide bombers, after all, consider themselves and are considered within Islam to be true martyrs of the faith. To write it off as simply “fanaticism” is a form of cultural and probably military suicide.

A man writing under the name “Spengler” writes of Islam and the papacy in the Asia Times. His remark on the Pope, within the context of evangelization, seems to be right on the mark:

If we are in a fourth world war…it is a religious war. The West is not fighting individual criminals, as the left insists; it is not fighting a Soviet-style state, as the Iraqi disaster makes clear, nor is it fighting a political movement. It is fighting a religion, specifically a religion that arose in enraged reaction to the West.

None of the political leaders of the West, and few of the West’s opinion leaders, comprehends this. We are left with the anomaly that the only effective leader of the West is a man wholly averse to war, a Pope…. Benedict XVI, alone among the leaders of the Christian world, challenges Islam as a religion, as he did in his September 2006 Regensburg address (Asia Times, November 6, 2007). [4]

Spengler further understands that behind the Muslim advance is something rooted in philosophy and theology going back to the classics and Scripture. Not to challenge, on the grounds of their truth, the theses on which it is based is to leave Islam’s basis intact. This is why Islam is still in the world today as a religion.

Western theologians ceased to examine its intellectual foundations. The politicians thought it was sufficient to introduce the “modern” state and democracy to modify the universalism of the religion. Actually, it extended it. Rémi Brague’s new book, The Law of God, shows precisely the importance of returning to this intellectual task and its relation to politics.[5]

In the context of evangelization, however, Spengler thinks the Pope is pretty much alone even in the West, even in his own Church.

All of the really important issues were fought out over generations in the one Western institution with a long enough memory. That is why the Catholic Church remains the world’s indispensable institution. I do not know whether that will be true a generation from now.

The Church has produced a few great leaders, but it is desperately short of sandals on the ground. Where is the monastic order that will fight the spiritual battles of the Church as the Dominicans did in the twelfth century, the Jesuits in the sixteenth, and the Benedictines in the nineteenth? Where are the missionaries who will preach Christianity to Muslims? Perhaps they are being trained now in secret Protestant seminaries in China, but not by the Catholic Church.

One of the reasons why such missionaries are not found is addressed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’s note. The very reason why there should be a missionary effort has been called into question within theology itself.

Likewise, in the West we still have remnants of a universal secularism or humanism that wants to transform the world in its own image.

There is also China, with its world-conquering movements stemming both from its own central kingdom thesis and from its Marxism, which was itself a secular version of Christian universalism, as Benedict pointed out in Spe Salvi.

This doctrinal note, then, is not written as if skepticism and relativism were our only problems. We are indeed confronted with a more and more confident Islam that sees the moral disorders of the world to be an invitation to and justification for its own mission to the nations.

In the context of modern relativism and multi-culturalism, as well as of oriental religions, even the statement of this universal purpose is said to be “arrogant” or “dogmatic,” or a violation of man’s freedom and rights.

Thus, the note has the delicate task of returning to principle to explain why these truths of revelation are in fact themselves exercises in human freedom. Political societies, on their own bases, ought to foster, not restrict or prevent, that freedom’s presentation.

The note does not mention names of particular states that violate the principles of religious freedom. They are not a few. But it does suggest that, in spite of the widely acclaimed constitutional and international affirmations about freedom of religion, many states severely restrict missionary work. Or simply, they do not allow it at all.

Even here, the note contents itself with merely pointing out the irony that “freedom of religion,” which the Catholic tradition considers a basic norm for every civil society, is widely unavailable to those who want and deserve to hear the Catholic understanding of man’s relation to God.

“There is today, however, a growing confusion which leads many to leave the missionary command of the Lord unheard and ineffective,” Cardinal Levada writes.

Often it is maintained that any attempt to convince others on religious matters is a limitation of their freedom. From this perspective, it would only be legitimate to present one’s own ideas and to invite people to act according to their consciences, without aiming at their conversion to Christ and to the Catholic faith.

It is enough, so they say, to help people to become more human or more faithful to their own religion; it is enough to build communities which strive for justice, freedom, peace and solidarity.

Furthermore, some maintain that Christ should not be proclaimed to those who do not know him, nor should joining the Church be promoted, since it would also be possible to be saved without explicit knowledge of Christ and without formal incorporation in the Church. (#3)

This concise paragraph shows first that the Church does understand what is being proposed contrary to the orthodox teaching on the subject of evangelization.

The Church, of course, is not opposed to efforts to become more human or to the efforts of believers of other religions to find the truth. What concerns it — from the basis of its own structure — is that justice, freedom, peace and solidarity, however good, are not the basic things that Christ commissioned his apostles to preach. The Popes have already made that obligation clear from the beginning.

Catholicism has been concerned with philosophy as its own truth (Fides et Ratio). We are to know what justice, freedom, peace and solidarity are primarily from philosophy. They are the preambles of the faith. The Church knows that Aristotle already explained pretty much what justice meant.

What concerns the Church is: 1) that these natural virtues are not long practiced by most men without revelation and 2) that man is made for something more than this world and needs to know what it is. Whenever these two elements of understanding the whole are ignored, man is in trouble.

What Levada is criticizing here is a “theory” of human nature and theology that seeks to assure the salvation of all by not preaching or presenting the Christian faith as true or as necessary for men to know.

The Church is not in any way saying here that we are not to respect the opinions of others. The note is “intended to clarify certain aspects of the relationship between the missionary command of the Lord and respect for the conscience and religious freedom of all people” (#3).

To demonstrate that the Lord’s command and this respect are intelligently compatible is the purpose of this note.

The note states its understanding of man, its “anthropology.” We have an intellect and a will. No part of Catholicism denies this fact; rather, Catholicism bases its understanding of the mission to others upon it, upon understanding what intellect and will are.

It is assumed that all men seek to know the truth, but that they also are to accept it freely. Men both want to know the truth and they ought to know it. It is not a virtue to hide it, though it is not to be presented as a pesky proselytism: “The work of ecumenism does not remove the right or take away the responsibility of proclaiming in fullness the Catholic faith to other Christians who freely wish to receive it” (#12).

“With ever-increasing frequency, questions are being raised about the legitimacy of presenting to others — so that they might in turn accept it — that which is held to be true for oneself” (#4).

Behind this scruple is the idea that there is no common truth. If whatever one holds is true, even contradictions, then there can really be no truth at all. The defense of mission in this sense is the defense of the mind wherever it is found. Philosophy does have a stake in revelation in this sense.

The note, moreover, sees the place of the example and efforts of ordinary people to explain their faith to others. The faithful are right to urge others to consider the teachings of faith in the light of their own experience and the need for a complete understanding of the purpose for which they are created.

“To lead a person’s intelligence and freedom in honesty in the encounter with Christ and his Gospel is not an inappropriate encroachment, but rather a legitimate endeavor and a service capable of making human relationships more fruitful” (#5).

Throughout this document, then, “mission” is presented as something needed by the freedom of all men to know what they are.

The Church does not deny, but rather insists upon, the truths found in other persons and cultures. No one can be “forced” to embrace the faith by improper techniques or political pressure (#8).

The Church is aware, moreover, that the meeting of revelation with human life always reveals something not only about human life itself, but even about the faith.

“Every encounter with another person or culture is capable of revealing potentialities of the Gospel which hitherto may not have been fully explicit and which will enrich the life of Christians and the Church” (#6, a citation from Benedict).

Thus the mission ad gentes is seen to be within the context of that general revelation and philosophic experience of all who seek the truth to which revelation is addressed specifically.[6]

The intellectual part of Benedict’s whole project thus is not merely to add and complete something in those who do not yet know, but also to do so in those who have first received the faith.

“The revelation of the fundamental truths about God, about the human person and the world, is a great good of every human person, while living in darkness without the truths about ultimate questions is an evil and is often at the root of suffering and slavery which can at times be grievous” (#7).

What is at the heart of this note, then, is the idea that human beings can address themselves to each other in the name of truth and freedom without, at the same time, fighting or burdening each other.

“Evangelization also involves a sincere dialogue that seeks to understand the reasons and feelings of others; indeed, the heart of another person can only be approached in freedom, in love and in dialogue, in such a manner that the word that is spoken is not simply offered, but also truly witnessed in the hearts of those to whom it is addressed” (#8).

The note soberly adds that the mission first given to the apostles is the same one that continues to exist and about which this note is a reminder.

Not infrequently, this mission has resulted in martyrdom. The implication is that it still does today, as if to say that the Lord must have accepted this consequence when he sent the disciples forth; they would be treated as he was (#8).

But this result did not prevent him from sending them. The liberal notion of denying that truth is necessary in order that killing would not happen seems to run counter to the urgency with which the mission was originally proposed. It is partly this notion of continuity over time with which the modern mind has much difficulty. The note implies that the urgency to know what revelation teaches to all men remains and is in danger of being lost.

The note is also concerned with the ecclesiological and ecumenical implications of evangelization. Two things seem clear:
1) individual conversions are to be encouraged when a person seeks to enter the Church;
2) the ecumenical movement, both with Protestants and the Eastern Churches, is to continue to work out a common understanding of what the Church does teach and how what it teaches can be commonly expressed.

The ecumenical movement was never intended to produce a kind of parliament of religion, something that certain forces within the United Nations seem to be fond of promoting.

The note explains that “[generally], the term conversion is used in reference to bringing pagans into the Church. However, conversion in the precisely Christian meaning signifies a change in thinking and in acting, as the expression of that new life in Christ proclaimed by faith” (#9). [Benedict XVI almost always uses the word - nd its verb - in this sense.]

This attention to an openness to conversion is a necessary consequence of what the Church holds about human freedom, even when it is used erroneously.

The note expresses an awareness of the current arguments against the freedom to convert and evangelize.

“For a long time the reason for evangelization has not been clear to many among the Catholic faithful. It is even stated that the claim to have received the gift of the fullness of God’s revelation masks an attitude of intolerance and a danger to peace” (#10).

This is a familiar theme today. Democracy, for many thinkers, means dogmatically having no truth or the possibility of any. No truth is the only truth, the only politically safe one. Much of our public life is about the truth or falsity of this view, one that this note seeks to combat.

We are not to be indifferent to the truth in the name of religious freedom, or democratic pluralism, or Muslim aggressiveness. Respecting and understanding what constitutes the view of another does not directly entail our denying or minimizing our own relation to truth.

“This apostolic commitment is an inalienable right and duty, an expression of religious liberty, with its corresponding ethical-social and ethical-political dimensions. It is a right which in some parts of the world, undoubtedly, has not yet been recognized and which in others is not respected in practice” (#10).

Though it does not make a large issue of this fact, the note is aware of the very real restrictions other religions and polities place on an individual’s freedom to hear and freely accept what is revealed in Christ.

By placing the emphasis on each person’s destiny and his right and duty to know it, the note shifts the emphasis from “imposing” to “freely accepting” the truth. This is why there is an explicit emphasis on the relation of faith to individuals within a culture or society.

“Evangelization is not only accomplished through public preaching of the Gospel nor solely through works of public relevance, but also by means of personal witness which is always very effective in spreading the Gospel” (#11).

The last section of the document is careful to reaffirm the ecumenical movement within the context of evangelization: “There is evangelization in countries where non-Catholic Christians live, including those with an ancient Christian tradition and culture” (#12).

One need not be silent before Protestants or Orthodox. We know, on the contrary, that Protestant evangelization progresses rapidly in many Catholic countries, even in the United States.

The note does not mention this, but its logic would assume that these conversion efforts fall within the order of mutual respect and honesty on individual bases.

We do not ask Protestants or Orthodox to cease to seek to convert Catholics, but we do insist that the rules of the game be preserved, along with respect for truth and freedom in every case.

Why, in conclusion, this sudden emphasis on evangelization? After all the political and legal distinctions have been made, this emphasis obviously comes from the fact that within Scripture and revelation there is an urgency that men, all men, in all religions, times and cultures, know the truth for their own good.

If I do not force it, if I do not violate any principles of manners or respect, it seems clear that telling and making the case for the truths that are necessary to explain what man fully is can only be something that a man has a right to know and a freedom to accept.


This urgency, moreover, is found within revelation itself. Men do want to know the truth, which is often closed to them because of their sins as well as their politics.

Moreover, a danger to the world itself exists if we do not know what man really is, what his transcendent destiny means.

The alternative forces of universalism in our time have gained confidence and zeal precisely because our culture no longer understands or admits that we have a transcendent destiny that we are freely offered, but the free rejection of which has worldly consequences, consequences we see daily.

End notes

1 William Cardinal Levada, “Doctrinal Note: On Some Aspects of Evangelization,” L’Osservatore Romano, English, December 19, 2007, #4.
2 St. Leo the Great, Sermon, Second Reading, Feast of the Epiphany, Roman Breviary, I, 560.
3 Paul VI, Evangeli Nuntiandi (1975); John Paul II, Redemptoris Missio (1991). The congregation’s Dominus Jesus (2000) also should be included here.
4 In this long essay Spengler is reviewing Fergus Kerr, O. P.’s Twentieth Century Catholic Theologians.
5 Rémi Brague, The Law of God (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007).
6 See Josef Pieper, “Tradition: Its Sense and Aspirations,” For the Love of Wisdom: Essays on the Nature of Philosophy (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2006), 233-94.
[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 22/01/2009 03:38]
21/11/2008 17:03
 
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Utente Gold
Thanks to John Allen for providing this text online. It is a blunt and impassioned defense of basic Catholic truths and their intellectual underpinnings - for those who would dismiss religion as merely 'airy fairy' posturing - and a genuine alert for the state of Catholicism in the United States and the major threats to it posed by the incoming administration.

It must be noted that the statements about President-elect Obama that have been widely quoted in the media only come at the end of the long discourse as an example of Stafford has been talking about and is obejctively based on what Obama and his runningmate have openly said.



Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II:
'Being true with body and soul”

by James Francis Cardinal Stafford
Major Penitentiary of the Roman Catholic Church


Address before the International Conference
to commemorate the 20th anniversary of
the Pontifical John Paul II Institute on Marriage and the Family
at the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C.

November 13, 2008



For 51 years of priestly ministry I have been attentive to res sacra in temporalibus in American culture, i.e., “to the elements of the sacred in the temporal life of man” or, in a more Heideggerian idiom,“to man as the sacred element in temporal things”.

In 1958 John Courtney Murray, S. J. was my guide. With further guidance from the Church over the years, I have learned that the nucleus of this principle, enunciated by Pope Leo XIII, maintains that the sacred element in secular life, especially our use of language, escapes the undivided control of the supreme power of the State.

The secular life of man is not completely secular, nor totally encompassed within the State as the highest social organism, and subject ultimately only to the political power.

The sacred word within man in secular life transcends the control of the supreme power of the State. A person’s public life is not encompassed within the State as the highest social organism, and not subject ultimately only to the political power.

President Thomas Jefferson’s celebrated 1802 letter to the committee of the Danbury Baptist Association asserting “a wall of separation between Church and State” formally denied the reality of res sacra in temporalibus. [Even if such a 'separation', admirable as it is when interpreted sensibly, is not specified in the American Constitution! But because Jefferson is Jefferson, little attention has been given to pointing out how a phrase from a presidential letter has now come to be cited as virtual 'Gospel truth', ironically, almost more binding than the US Constitution itself!]

He introduced a latent and powerful virus which would eventually be used to diminish and then to wound mortally a theology of discourse in the public arena. It has led to the increasingly secularized states of the American union and their active hostility towards the Catholic Church.

Some of these governments are threatening Roman Catholic adoption agencies because of their refusal to select same-sex couples as potential adoptive parents. They are forcing Catholic hospitals to accept medical procedures which are contrary to the dignity of the human person. They are insisting on hiring practices which will destroy the Catholic identity of health and social services under Catholic Church auspices.

They have not refrained from coercing the individual conscience. Here the federal and state governments are enshrining the primacy of secular laws over against religious principles. These decisions are the legal and moral progeny of Jefferson’s insistence on debarring personal faith from the public forum. And this is only a beginning.

Their seeds can be found in the 1787 Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom sponsored and promoted by Jefferson. His self-proclaimed epicureanism and crypto-utilitarianism furnish the hermeneutical keys for interpreting the opening paragraph of his 1776 Declaration of Independence.

This evening. I will cover the following areas: 1) the narrow, calculative, mathematical mind and its manipulation of the humanum and, more specifically, of human sexuality since 1968; 2) the response of the Church’s magisterium in the encyclical letter of Pope Paul VI, Humanae Vitae, and the teachings of later Popes; 3) other Catholic philosophical and theological responses to what John Rawls calls the “embedding module”, namely the increasingly disenchanted world in which we work and pray.

Furthermore, since this month, November, is the time in which the liturgy of the Church reflects on the final things - heaven, hell, purgatory and death, I will be attempting to strengthen the Catholic faithful, as St. John did in the Book of the Apocalypse, against the ever increasing pretensions of the state making itself absolute.

For the next several weeks the Book of the Apocalypse will be read at daily Mass. The theme of that final book of the Bible is that the Battle of the Logos has always already been won on Calvary.

In the immense conflicts associated with the teaching of Humanae Vitae, the over-arching task of the Church is to make manifest for the faithful the apocalyptic victory of the Lamb in our historical time.

The Church, the bearer of revelation, insists that the mysterious beginning and earthly end of every member of the human race is illumined by the light of the divine Logos. [“Every human being] comes from the source of light that irradiates him”.

Finally, I will be using the word “apocalyptic” in the Christian sense of “expressing the fundamental law of post-Christian world history: the more Christ’s kingdom is manifested as the light of the world......the more it will meet determined opposition.”


1 The apparent triumph of what has been described as
“the manipulable arrangement of the scientific-technological world
and of the social order proper to this world”
over the past several generations.


1968 was the year in which Pope Paul VI issued Humanae Vitae (HV); it was the long-delayed and long-awaited encyclical letter on transmitting human life. It met with immediate and unprecedented opposition. American theologians were its choral directors.

The encyclical arrived in Washington, D. C. in late July 1968. It had to contend with the chaos of assassinations, overseas wars, the conflicts surrounding the Democratic/Republican national conventions, indiscriminate killings, university strikes and riots, growing use of barbiturates, and ubiquitous insurrections within the cities.

It preceded by one year An Aquarian Exposition, the for-profit, rock-music event staged on a Woodstock dairy farm in New York State. Since then, the chaos has become chronic, more insidious because partially hidden.

If 1968 was the year of the year of “America’s Suicide Attempt”, 2008 is the year of America’s exhaustion.

In the intervening 40 years the United States has been thrown upon unlit roads. There have been few, if any, “clearings” (Heidegger’s Lichtung). In 1973, the U. S. Supreme Court's pro-abortion decision was imposed upon the nation.

Its scrupulous meanness has had catastrophic effects upon the identity, unity, and integrity of the American republic. It has undermined respect for human life. We have been horrified and uncomprehending witnesses for over two generations to America’s decline from “a mansion to a dirty house in a gutted world”.

Yet honesty compels me to admit that this decision against human life is in historical continuity with the pragmatism on the part of the Fathers of the 1787 Constitutional Convention for the recognition of Black slavery and, following the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, in continuity with the same meanness toward Native Americans on the part of the politicians, entrepreneurs and settlers. The 1803 event was a meanness enshrined shortly in the doctrine of Manifest Destiny.

[Oh, I like the way Cardinal Stafford uses the word 'meanness' where it truly applies - even if it is not a word generally used to describe policies!]

The 1973 Court’s alteration has even more radically transformed the way we think about others, especially the least among us. Its inexcusable evasions about the dignity of human life, and their prolongation to the present, have condemned those of us who oppose it to disillusionment and bitter isolation. Both Republican and Democratic partisans have abused rhetoric on this issue.

The President-elect is a skillful rhetorician. Civic life has been invaded with an anti-humanism so toxic that it is proving mortal to the body politic.

Nothing has been left untouched by the court’s lethal wand. Social engineering and the price-systems have infected all Americans with a pervasive, technological mind-set. Economics, administration, sexuality, language and, above all, human life are being manipulated by complex strategies of power.

“Politics in turn becomes an arena for contention among rival techniques.” Obama’s campaign raised over $600 million, a record, and McCain’s over $300 million. An uncritical, unspoken “metaphysics of presence” dominates American life, both private and public.

This new way of thinking has led to the creation of a worldwide colossus, America’s military. It is generally acknowledged that nothing in the nation’s economic, social, or political institutions approaches its influence. Freedom itself has been reduced to power. [I disagree, however, that Roe v. Wade and its consequences had anything to do with shaping the US military as a 'power'. It already was since World War II, and it is a practical correlative of being the superpower that has dominated world politics since the end of the Second World War.]

Part II of Humanae Vitae, called “Doctrinal Principles”, ends with a description by Pope Paul VI of the “Serious Consequences of the Use of Artificial Methods of Birth Control”. His apocalyptic vision has been prophetic of the epoch we have entered.

After 40 years of widespread contraceptive practice, the consequences appear now as the Horsemen of the Apocalypse ravaging what St. Paul described as the ten logiken latreian hymon - “the humanly proper worship” (Rom 12: 1) of the baptized.

The demonic four are the following: marital infidelity; disrespect for woman, governmental despotism in the regulation of births, and the human body manipulated and destroyed as a technological artifact.

The four horseman have been responsible for the calamitous meltdown in Western demographics and in real development. Sexual aberration has become a way of life for many. These four shades are insinuating their deathworks upon whole nations and cultures. The Middle East is an obvious example.

Mary Eberstadt in a recent article entitled 'The Vindication of Humanae Vitae', commented on the prophetic vision of Paul VI, “Contraceptive sex.......is the fundamental social fact of our time.”

She continues, “In the years since Humanae Vitae’s appearance, numerous distinguished Catholic thinkers have argued, using a variety of evidence, that each of these predictions [of Pope Paul VI] has been borne out by the social facts.” Human life has been conceded to the arbitrary will of the state.

Governments are dissolving religious and philosophical values and remaking them into the distortions of a dominant, cybernetic model. Franz Kafka’s 1915 novella, Metamorphosis, is not far off the prophetic mark.

The good has been drained of ontological content; it has become “a mere cipher, a monadic carrier of information, a unit of cybernetic science”.

The British government has recently set as a national goal the manufacture of human life by technology. Its reductive anthropology allows the unprecedented to happen: the radical manipulation of the substance of the biological heritage of the human race. It has allocated £40 million of public monies for stem cell research.

Former Prime Minister Tony Blair envisions Britain to be the leader of the world in cloning human embryos for research. Potential benefits, he claims, will be huge. Furthermore, a consortium of leading British bankers and scientists have launched a £100 million fund to finance stem cell research. Plans are being made for a national stem cell research institute, costing £16 million.

In 2005, the British Trade and Industry Secretary Patricia Hewitt announced that the Government would spend more than £1 billion on biotechnology by 2008.

'We want to send a signal to scientists that Britain is open for business in some of the most controversial areas,' she said. It is not simply a coincidence that economics and technology dominate.

Bankers, financial investors, and MBA executives are mentioned consistently with the scientific midwives of this cultural monstrosity, the nub of which is the forgetting of the question of God.

In the United States, President-elect Barack Obama and the Vice-President-elect Joseph Biden, a Catholic, campaigned on a severe anti-life platform.

Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University and a member of the President's Council on Bioethics, analyzed America’s descent since 1968-1973 into deathworks by summarizing Obama’s vision.

George’s analysis appeared in the journal, Public Discourse. “[Obama] has co-sponsored a bill.....that would authorize the large-scale industrial production of human embryos for use in biomedical research in which they would be killed. In fact, the bill Obama co-sponsored would effectively require the killing of human beings in the embryonic stage that were produced by cloning.”

The assumption undergirding the positions of Barack Obama, Joseph Biden, and Tony Blair results from a technological mind-set. Such technologically-driven men eventually may assert that human nature, until recently acknowledged to be a unitary composite of two polarities, body and soul, must not only be changed by technology, but, if necessary, be suppressed. It has proven to be the next logical step after the decision to control and manipulate technologically the origins of human life.

But phusis - nature - has been essential in Western metaphysics for describing the truth of beings. Martin Heidegger writing about the radical reduction of the goals of medicine to what is technologically possible, and its relation to human phusis, asserted that, in the past even until very recent times, “techne can only cooperate with it, can more or less expedite the cure; but as techne it can never replace phusis and itself become the arche of health itself. This could happen only if life as such were to become a ‘technically’ producible artifact. However, at that very moment there would also no longer be such a thing as health, any more than there would be birth and death. Sometimes it seems as if modern humanity is rushing headlong toward this goal of producing itself technologically. If humanity achieves this, it will have exploded itself, i.e., its essence qua subjectivity, into thin air, into a region where the absolutely meaningless is valued as the one and only ‘meaning’ and where preserving this value appears as the human ‘domination’ of the globe. ‘Subjectivity’ is not overcome in this way but merely ‘tranquilized’ in the ‘eternal progress’ of a Chinese - like ‘constancy’. This is the most extreme nonessence in relation to phusis-ousia."

A similar technological mind-set has contributed to the recent economic turmoil. Hedge funds were heavily invested in the technology bubble. The October 21, 2008 issue of The Financial Times read, “Blame it on Harvard: Is the MBA culture responsible for the financial crisis?”

Technology and operations represent a major component of the MBA imagination at work at Harvard. The news story described the 100th anniversary celebration of the pre-eminent Harvard Business School. “You would have to have a heart of stone not to be amused by this piquant accident of timing. Here, at the spiritual home of the Masters of the universe, distinguished graduates could only look on as that same universe threatened to collapse.”


2 The response of the Church’s Magisterium

The issues now facing us are all entwined within the above-developed linguistic and actual deathworks informing Rawl’s “embedding module”.

The response of the Church’s magisterium has been based on the
ancient Catholic imagination recaptured happily by Pope John Paul II in his now famous phrase,”the nuptial meaning of the human body created as male and female.” The response includes “being true with the body and the soul.”

The title of my talk has been taken from Francois Mauriac. He struggled for many years to overcome the unbending austerity and narrow rigidity resulting from the theological pessimism of the Jansenism of his childhood. In 1931 he overcame this heritage.

Thereafter life became a creative drama that engages the fullness of the person by being true with body and soul. Mauriac’s “clearing” was where he discovered the dramatic convergence of form and content. The wholeness of two polarities is manifested within the unity of body and soul in the human person.

David L. Schindler in a recent paper on human sexuality summarized his first principle supporting the differentiated unity of body and soul: “The Soul as it were lends its spiritual meaning to the body as body, even as the body then, simultaneously, contributes to what now becomes in man, a distinct kind of spirit: a spirit whose nature it is to be embodied”.

The Church’s response to the technological/scientific hegemony just described has not involved any condemnation of technology or of science as such. Rather is based on her recognition of the present spiritual climate for what it is: A New Ice Age.

The great American poet and convert to Catholicism, Wallace Stevens, coined the image. “‘America was always North ....... ‘ where God was in hiding.” . We must turn south and even return to our origins, the desert. How? By recovering the structure of truth in its relation to goodness and beauty. Only a linguistic imagination that is analogical - and ultimately liturgical and sacramental - is capable of such rediscovery.

In her devastating critique of the deconstructionism of Jacques Derrida, Catharine Pickstock has recaptured the apostrophic voice of Catholicism’s high desert origins, the responsorials first heard in the Sinaitic and Judean wildernesses.

The poiesis of the Catholic imagination finds itself in the title of Pickstock’s book, After Writing: the Liturgical Consummation of Philosophy.

In his Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Sacramentum Caritatis (27), Pope Benedict XVI echoes what is partially anticipated by Pickstock:


The Eucharist, as the sacrament of charity, has a particular relationship with the love of man and woman united in marriage. A deeper understanding of this relationship is needed at the present time.

Pope John Paul II frequently spoke of the nuptial character of the Eucharist and its special relationship with the sacrament of Matrimony: ‘The Eucharist is the sacrament of our redemption. It is the sacrament of the Bridegroom and of the Bride.’

Moreover, ‘the entire Christian life bears the mark of the spousal love of Christ and the Church. Already Baptism, the entry into the People of God, is a nuptial mystery; it is so to speak the nuptial bath which precedes the wedding feast, the Eucharist.’

The Eucharist inexhaustibly strengthens the indissoluble unity and love of every Christian marriage. By the power of the sacrament, the marriage bond is intrinsically linked to the Eucharistic unity of Christ the Bridegroom and his Bride, the Church (cf. Eph 5:31-32)”.

In Familiaris Consortio, Pope John Paul II called for the celebration of the Sacrament of Marriage within the Eucharistic sacrifice to demonstrate the living connection between the two Sacraments.

He thereby made more visible “the rich analogy between the una caro of the Eucharist and the una caro (one flesh) of the spouses through which their gift to one another becomes a particular form of participation in the Body ’given’ and the blood ‘poured out’ of Christ that becomes for the Christian family the inexhaustible font of its identity (with) its missionary and apostolic dynamism” . Here we sense the flavor of Karl Barth’s analogia fidei in explaining the origins and meaning of linguistics.

What are the philosophical/theological foundations for such assertions? What are the meta-anthropological presuppositions for this vision of linguistics, of reality?

Two elements should be highlighted: the biblical image of God and the biblical image of man. In his first Encyclical Letter, Deus Caritas Est, Pope Benedict XVI proposes that the Bible presents us with new image of God - his Trinitarian self-oblation, the self-surrender characteristic of immanent Trinity - and with a new image of man, of which the most sublime sign is the Eucharist.


“The Eucharist draws us into Jesus’s act of self-oblation. More than just statically receiving the incarnate Logos, we enter into the very dynamic of his self-giving.

The imagery of marriage between God and Israel is now realized in a way previously inconceivable: it had meant standing in God’s presence, but now it becomes union with God through sharing in Jesus’ self-gift, sharing his body and blood” (13).

The Eucharist builds up man and woman from within in the image of the Triune God and man learns the complexity of love: St. Augustine’s insight is helpful here: “Capit ut capitur. One grasps in being grasped.”

Preeminently in marriage, the Eucharist draws with the cords of love each spouse in the depths of their interiority toward a mutual, total, integrally human, and fruitful self-oblation. The total giving of the Word in the Eucharist is the mirroring of the real language of the human body as created as male and female.

In his Wednesday audiences during the early 1980s Pope John Paul II called spouses to a deeper understanding of the theology of the body. When he described the Old Testament prophets’ use of marriage as an analogy of God’s relation to man, the Pope expressed the astonishing insight about the specific “prophetism of the body”.

In interpreting this prophetic language, he indicated, one must “reread” the language of the body for “it is the body itself which ‘speaks’; it speaks by means of its masculinity and femininity, it speaks in the mysterious language of the personal, it speaks ultimately - and this happens frequently - both in the language of fidelity, that is of love, and also in the language of conjugal infidelity, that is of ‘adultery’”.

A correct rereading must be done “in truth”. The human body speaks “a ‘language’ of which it is not the author. “Its author is man, who as male and female, husband and wife, correctly rereads the significance of this ‘language’.

He rereads therefore the spousal significance of the body as integrally inscribed in the structure of the masculinity or femininity of the personal subject.”

In other words, the human body as created by God as masculine/feminine is the Ursprache, the primordial utterance from the beginning. The “nuptial meaning” of the human body originally was the Adamic language.

All of these texts from John Paul II and Benedict XVI refer to the inner dynamic of the relationship between the two spouses. The subject of moral acts is each person, a dual unity of body and soul, a psychosomatic whole. Anything that smacks of a body-soul dualism is firmly rejected. One cannot attempt to free the soul from the body.

When a human being seeks the truth and the good, his body is not an afterthought or an accident or a ‘tomb’ for the soul. The language of the human body, rightly reread, is a language by which “the likeness with God shows that the essence and existence of man are constitutively related to God in the most profound manner. This is a relationship that exists in itself, it is therefore not something that comes afterwards and is not added from the outside.” (Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church [CSDC] 109).

In the words of the International Theological Commission, “Human bodiliness participates in the imago Dei.” They echo the ancient teaching of St. Irenaeus, “”the flesh ....was formed according to the image of God” .

As Archbishop of Denver, in 1996 I addressed a Pastoral Letter to the people of northern Colorado on the historical importance of a culture formed by the medieval Anglo-Saxon Sarum Rite and by the even more ancient Gregorian Sacramentary.

Peoples in such a culture intuitively interpreted reality through the covenantal and bridal relationship of God and creation and of Christ and the Church. Consequently, they would find absolutely inapprehensible the acceptance and promotion of homosexuality activity as a valid moral option. Such activities are a direct assault not only upon the Sacrament of marriage but also upon the Sacrament of the Eucharist.

In light of all of the above realities, I cannot accept the judgement of Fr. Martin Rhonheimer, who, in attempting to prevent the passing on of the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, morally justifies the prophylactic use of condoms in a marriage in which one of the spouses is so infected.

He summarizes his argument, “The immediate (or proximate) object of one’s choice in such a case is to engage in marital intercourse” and not “to ejaculate into a condom”. I agree with the conclusion of Bishop Anthony Fisher (and many, many other moral theologians) that Rhoneimer’s arguments are not only unconvincing but philosophically untenable and contrary to the Catholic theological and canonical tradition.

Bishop Fisher writes about his agreement with the conclusions of [Janet ?] Smith, “Not only is condomized intercourse not a reproductive type of act, it can also be argued that it is not apt for uniting a couple ‘as one flesh’.

In the first place the condom places a barrier to complete physical union: while this looks like ordinary sexual intercourse the couple fail, in fact, to touch in the most intimate way; arguably, they do not become ‘one flesh’.”

Rhonheimer dismisses this meta-anthropological objection as a “psychological and perhaps aesthetic” concern, not a moral one. His body/soul dualistic rupture is enunciated with the repulsion he expresses over integral human copulation, “[I find it] intuitively repulsive to make the consummation of marriage dependent upon factual insemination of the woman’s vagina”.

Should the wholeness of marriage in its consummation be considered repulsive? The human spirit finds its inner completion only as something honestly externalized, since the human spirit in this life is always already embodied.

The body is the externalization of the spirit. The highest expression of human love is embodied in the total self-giving and self-oblation of a couple as “one flesh”.

What renders such repulsion intuitive? A meditation of the “one flesh” found Genesis 2? But God described that unity as “very good” in Genesis 1. A repulsive intuition before the image of man and woman integrally united as ‘one flesh’ is not only at odds with the biblical revelation but also with the Church’s reflection on that revelation.

Pope John Paul II insists on the need for “a correct rereading in truth......of the spousal significance of the body as integrally inscribed in the structure of the masculinity and femininity of the personal subject .”


3 Other Catholic philosophical and theological responses
to the “embedding module” of John Rawls


I cannot speak highly enough of the reflections on these issues and others by those engaged in the Communio project. According to von Balthasar, Communio’s conversations with the American secularized culture is the project of the Church in the United States. It calls for “the greatest possible radiance in the world by virtue of the closest following of Christ”.

Over the decades I have followed and benefitted enormously from reading your quarterly journal. I owe a special indebtedness of gratitude to David L. Schindler, a theologian, and his son, David C. Schindler, a metaphysician and theorist of knowledge.

Their clearings have included signs marked “Where we are going!” and “Where we have come from”. I have already cited their works earlier. In these concluding remarks they appear again because they give light for one’s gaze on the mystery of “Being true with Body and Soul”.

David C. Schindler writes that “drama is the structure of being” . From that splendid insight it is reasonable to conclude that the conjugal act itself is a drama that reveals who each individual is and who each is to become. Its principle revelation is not who the individual always was.

The meaning of the sacramental act - the summit of the sacrament of marriage in facto esse, is revealed only in the activity of the two spouses. The marital act in its wholeness is a fundamental interpretation or unfolding of the sacrament of marriage.

Each spouse is an actor of truth. Truth has its terminus ad quem, not in the mind of the knower, but rather in a tertium quid, a Gestalt, a structure resulting from the encounter between the appearance of the depths on one hand and the transportation of the seer into the depths on the other.

Truth is profoundly relational. It involves the tension of various parts of the whole, the movement from horizontal appearance to the vertical depths. David L. Schindler describes it in this fashion: “The body, always-already informed by soul and spirit and actualized by esse, exhibits an order of love: the body bears within it, already in its creaturely nature as body, the sign of the human being’s constitutive relation to God and to others in God, the sign thus, of a communion of persons and the promise of the gift itself.”

As I mentioned earlier, one of the contested areas of pastoral life today is the predicament of a married couple one of whom has a mortally threatening disease which may be transmitted through the conjugal act. The confusion over this matter is becoming increasingly serious from a pastoral point of view.

Fr. Martin Rhoneimer’s position undermines the anthropological teaching of Pope John Paul II and undercuts a coherent Catholic response to the crisis affecting human sexuality.

In concluding, I have underscored that the present crisis is ontological/epistemological and linguistic. At its foundations it is a crisis of signs, which means a crisis that is analogical, liturgical, sacramental.

It was a constant theme implicit, sometimes explicit, in the discussions at the recent Synod of Bishops in Rome on the biblical word of God. The participants asked how does religious language refer to reality?

The modern response since the Enlightenment has been an “inside-out” approach to epistemological foundations, not an “outside-in”.

The Catholic religious education establishment in the USA after the Second Vatican Council adopted a similarly subjective-experiential methodology based on an “inside-out” epistemology. Widespread religious skepticism was the outcome. Nothing is recognized as definitive and “meaning itself is forever postponed.” A movement toward “a dictatorship of relativism” is the diagnosis which Pope Benedict XVI has given to this phenomenon.

To counter this nihilism, the discovery of the “Gestalt” character of language, of the word, was pioneered by Hans Urs von Balthasar and brilliantly advanced by many, especially by David C. Schindler in his recent book, Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Dramatic Structure of Truth: A Philosophical Investigation.

The following conclusions may be drawn from the foregoing.

First, we must assert the rootedness of language, including the language of the human body, in ontology. A solidly unabashed metaphysics of being, founded on the real distinction between essence and existence, is essential for any recovery of truth and its objective structure.

Postmodernists have rejected the tradition of western metaphysics, the concept of being since Socrates, and the real distinction between essence and existence. Metaphysics of this type is fundamental to any discussion of truth and its nature.

Using Plato’s Phaedrus, Catharine Pickstock has offered a devastating critique of Jacques Derrida’s theory of supplementation by writing. She insists that his account “is tantamount to a metaphysics of presence” .

Secondly, Catholic scholars must explore the nuptial language founded upon the biblical text and upon the Catholic tradition and enriched by the teaching of John Paul II.

Pope Benedict XVI affirmed its substance recently:

The Eucharist, as the sacrament of charity, has a particular relationship with the love of man and woman united in marriage. A deeper understanding of this relationship is needed at the present time.

Pope John Paul II frequently spoke of the nuptial character of the Eucharist and its special relationship with the sacrament of Matrimony: 'The Eucharist is the sacrament of our redemption. It is the sacrament of the Bridegroom and of the Bride.'

Moreover, the entire Christian life bears the mark of the spousal love of Christ and the Church. Already Baptism, the entry into the People of God, is a nuptial mystery; it is so to speak the nuptial bath which precedes the wedding feast, the Eucharist.

Thirdly, an exploration of the relationship between the nuptial meaning of the human body and the Eucharist, as the triform Body of Christ, should be made.

Its development by de Lubac and Pickstock would be advanced if accompanied by an awareness of the critical role of the Gregorian Sacramentary and the Sarum Rite had upon the West and especially upon Anglo-Saxon culture. That culture was informed with the perception of the nuptial character of reality.

The high medieval poem, In a Valley of this Restless Mind, illustrates this. The anonymous English Catholic poet had the same spousal vision of life as that of the modern French Catholic novelist Mauriac when he described the human as “being true with body and soul”. I wish to contrast his cultural vision with that of the dominant political and cultural classes today.

Before doing so, some contextual background of my criticism is important. In early 2003 as our country was preparing to go to war in Iraq, I spoke out against the war and on two occasions condemned the policies of the Bush administration for contributing to the lessening of respect for the dignity of the human person by the use of torture.

In the same spirit today as a pastor of souls, I do not hesitate again to flag some serious abuses against the natural and divine laws. Our own cultural ambience is not dissimilar from the period of the 1920's when European intellectuals were moving ahead with an understanding of something “new”.

Graham Ward’s description of that period highlights elements which characterize the vision of today’s President-elect, the Vice-President-elect, and the legislators elected to assist them in implementing their vision.

Graham wrote, “Briefly modernism’s programme was to ‘make it new’. It courted the unconventional and nonconformist in a conscious effort to overthrow the traditional perspective and stock expectations. Its dynamism was aggressive, disruptive and even apocalyptic. Hostility to the.........War fed its anger against the status quo and its desire for a creativity that would be transcultural, transclass and transfrontier.”

On November 4, 2008 a cultural earthquake hit America. Senator Barack Obama and Senator Joseph Biden were elected President and Vice President of the United States together with a significant majority of their Party in the federal Congress supporting their deadly vision of human life.

Americans were unanimous in their joy over the significance of the election of a Black President. However, if Obama, Biden and the new Congress are determined to implement the anti-life agenda which they spelled out before the election, I foresee the next several years as being among the most divisive in our nation’s history.

If their proposals should be initiated and enacted, it would be impossible for the American bishops to repeat in the future what their predecessors described the United States in 1884 as “this home of freedom.”

While reflecting about the profoundly negative impact of Obama’s vision on the humanum (and also of Biden’s), I recalled how current are the reflections of Mauriac upon his contemporary, an influential European author.

Even though Mauriac disagreed with him on almost every point, he acknowledged his great intelligence and personal attraction. “But under all that grace and charm there was a tautness of will, a clenched jaw, a state of constant alertness to detect and resist any external influence which might threaten his independence. A state of alertness? That is putting it mildly: beneath each word he wrote, he was carrying on sapping operations against the enemy city where a daily fight was going on.”.

Similar characteristics were evident in Senator Obama’s talk before Planned Parenthood supporters on July 17, 2007 - tautness of will, a clenched jaw, etc. - where he asserted, “We are not only going to win this election but also we are going to transform this nation.........The first thing I will do as President is to sign The Freedom of Choice Act........I put Roe at the center of my lesson plan on reproductive freedom when I taught Constitutional Law...........On this issue I will not yield..”

During a town meeting in March 2008 in Johnstown, Pa., he spoke with equal determination on the necessity of universal sex education for preteens and teens, “I don’t want my daughters punished with a baby.”

The President - elect did not qualify in any way the methods his single daughters might employ in the event they needed to avoid being “punished with a baby”, that is, giving birth to his grandchild.

Obama’s vision is modernist and rooted in the Enlightenment. The content and rhetoric of Obama and Biden have elements similar to those described earlier: aggressive, disruptive and apocalyptic.

Catholics weep over Barack Obama’s words. We weep over the violence concealed behind his rhetoric and that of Joseph Biden and what appears to be that of the majority of the incoming Congress. What should we do with our hot, angry tears of betrayal?

First, our tears are agonistic. Secondly, we must acknowledge that the model for our tears is ancient. Over the next few years, Gethsemane will not be a marginal garden to us. A model, I suggest, is medieval. With an anonymous author, our restless minds search in a dark valley during this exhausting year. With him as our guide, we find a bleeding man on a hill sitting under a tree “in huge sorrow”. It is Christ, the Bridegroom of the Church and of mankind.

Thirdly, we listen to the words of Christ as narrated by our mediaeval ancestor. Jesus pointing to his gloved hands says that these gloves were given him when he sought his Bride. They are not white but red, embroidered with blood. He says that his spouse brought them and they will not come off.

Fourthly, we focus our attention on the constantly repeated refrain of the Bridegroom and the reason for his “huge sorrow”, “Quia amore langueo - Because I am sick for love”.

And finally, we find that before this vision of the wounded young man, our frustration and tears become one with his “huge sorrow” and we make his love for the unfaithful Bride whom he seeks and never fails, our own.

I will close with a citation of this spousal model. It serves as a measure of what we need to recapture for the whole Church in 2008:

Upon this hil Y fond a tree,
Undir the tree a man sittynge,
From heed to foot woundid was he,
His herte blood Y sigh bledinge:
A semeli man to ben a king, (handsome enough to be a king)
A graciouse face to loken unto;
I askide whi he had peynynge, (suffering)
He seide, "Quia amore langueo. (Because I am sick for love).

I am Truelove that fals was nevere.
My sistyr, Mannis Soule, Y loved hir thus.
Bicause we wolde in no wise discevere, (because in no way would we part company)
I lefte my kyngdom glorious.
I purveide for hir a paleis precious; (prepared, a palace)
Sche fleyth; Y folowe. Y soughte hir so,
I suffride this peyne piteuous,
Quia amore langueo.

In the autumn of 2008 we must begin anew with that sentiment of our medieval brother. Quia amore langueo. With Jesus we are sick because of love toward those with whom we are so tragically and unavoidably at variance.

The reader has now become one with the narrator who is addressed in line one as “Dear Soul”. As Humanae Vitae with the whole Catholic tradition teaches, we are to “be true with body and soul”.


NB: Due to the lack of time the above discourse was given substantially as it appears here, although in a somewhat abbreviated form, from written notes and typed materials.


[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 21/11/2008 18:07]
12/01/2009 14:16
 
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Utente Gold
Homosexuality and the Churches
by Richard John Neuhaus

May 1990


This may have been written in 1990 but it remains as pertinent and valid as ever. It is an excellent snapshot of this particular aspect of popular culture in our time.


Rapidly changing attitudes toward Christian ministry reflect a cultural incursion into the life of the churches that is getting mixed reviews. In all the churches one hears seminary professors, bishops, and others in positions of oversight complain about candidates for ministry who are obsessed with careerism and self-fulfillment at the expense of discipleship and self-sacrifice. Others, acknowledging the change, say it marks a healthy step toward greater honesty, replacing the pietistic pretenses of the past.

John Cardinal O’Connor of New York recently pondered out loud about the need for a new order of sisters who would be vowed to poverty, chastity, and obedience and would have a special ministry to women with problem pregnancies and old people who (with reason) fear the implications of revived agitations in favor of eugenics.

The New York Times picked up on the story and asked, among others, a Sister Ann Patrick Ware what she thought of the idea. She suggested that, to put it gently, the Cardinal is out of touch with contemporary realities.

“The face of religious life is very different today,” she said. “People are not about to take vows of poverty and chastity.” The account did not explain why she did not include vows of obedience. Sister Ann Patrick, who coordinates a project called the Institute of Women Today, undoubtedly speaks for many in the ministries of the several churches.

The cultural pressure on traditional disciplines of ministry is evident on a number of fronts. The general challenge perhaps finds its most explicit expression in the proposal that the homosexually active should be fully accepted into the ministry of the churches. Here one discovers claims and arguments that extend far beyond the question of homosexuality.

No “mainline” church formally accepts declared homosexuals in ordained ministry, except for the small and getting smaller United Church of Christ. [DIM]8pt[=DIM][This has, of course, changed a lot since 1990, with Episcopals having an openly gay bishop even.] Some observers thought the United Methodist Church might go along with the proposal, but in the last few years the tide seems to have turned against it.

Homosexuality and ministry is a topic much discussed today, especially among Lutherans, Episcopalians, and Roman Catholics. Among Lutherans because the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is a new jurisdiction of uncertain leadership that gay activists have been able to exploit to their advantage. Among Episcopalians because, for whatever reason and fairly or not, it is commonly believed that the Episcopal Church has an unusually high incidence of homosexual clergy.

And, of course, among Roman Catholics, both because of the cultural stereotype that Catholicism is sexually repressive and because of the celibacy requirement for priests and members of religious orders.

Incidents and Incidence

Frequent news stories about scandals and lawsuits connected with priests doing naughty things with altar boys give the Roman Catholic situation high public visibility.

But the issues joined in the Catholic discussion of homosexuality and ministry are not that different from discussions in other churches. Nor, for that matter, is it clear that there is a dramatically higher incidence of homosexual clergy among Catholics.

Robert Nugent is a priest who heads up New Ways Ministry, an unofficial (and officially frowned upon) group that works with homosexual priests and religious. He notes that estimates of the percentage of homosexuals among male clergy “have ranged from the most conservative 10 percent to a more reasonable 20 percent or even 30 percent, although some have advanced estimates as high as 50 percent or more.”

He himself gives credence to the claim that “twenty percent of the clergy are homosexual and half that number are sexually active.”
But these, to be sure, are nothing more than guesses, and they are guesses based on Kinsey’s disputed claim that 13 percent of the male population is “exclusively or predominantly” homosexual.

It thus appears that even those, such as Father Nugent, who have reason to accentuate the prevalence of homosexuality allow that the ratio of homosexuality in the priesthood is not that much higher than in the general population.

Given the doubtfulness of Kinsey’s data, and given the propensity of homosexual activists to count as a homosexual anyone who has ever had a homoerotic fantasy, it would seem that some media accounts of homosexuality and the Catholic priesthood are greatly exaggerated.

To be sure, that is little comfort for those who believe that even one priest breaking his vow of celibacy, with a man or a woman, is cause for grave concern.

The campaign in the church for homosexual rights, as they are called, is by its own definition a frontal attack on church teaching and practice and on cultural patterns that the church is thought to have blessed in the past.

Homosexuality in the Priesthood and the Religious Life (edited by Jeannine Gramic, Crossroad) is a useful guide to the campaign’s developing attitudes, arguments, and strategies. It contains eight essays by proponents of a radically changed approach to homosexuality, and fourteen chapters of testimony by lesbians and male homosexuals in the priesthood and religious orders.

Self-declared radical Rosemary Radford Ruether asserts that “homosexuality is the scare issue in the Christian churches today.” Not surprisingly, she portrays the assault in terms of self-defense.

Homosexuality “is being used as the stalking-horse of all the current social fears concerning the disintegration of moral And social structures. We should see antigay fear and hatred as part of a cultural offensive against liberal egalitarian social principles generally. Homophobia is a vehicle for the conservative ideology that links the defense of the patriarchal family with the maintenance of class, race, and gender hierarchy throughout the society.”

Such a view, she says, is typically tied to “militarism and superpatriotism,” and the whole thing has its roots in “patriarchal heterosexism.”

In this way, Ruether helpfully positions the campaign for homosexual rights at the center of the cultural war in which our society is embroiled.

The battle in the churches is an extension of that cultural war but, given the role of religion in public life, it is also an effort to capture the churches’ moral authority in that larger conflict. This strategic relationship between church and society seems to be well understood by the authors included in Homosexuality.

Understanding the Campaign

This book and similar literature display a number of arguments, perceptions, and attitudes that are important to appreciate if we are to understand a campaign that is likely to be with us for some time.

First is the idea of the self and fulfillment.

Second is the linkage between homosexuality and a comprehensive agenda of social change.

Third, there is an inversion of the virtue of courage.

Fourth is the redefinition of authority.

Fifth is the conflation of civil and spiritual realms.

Sixth is the notion of subculture as church.

Seventh is the question of sexuality and personal identity.

Eighth is the use and misuse of stereotypes.

Ninth is the tension between fate and choice in homosexuality.

Tenth is the perception of the sufferings of others.

And eleventh is the connection between acceptance and forgiveness.

Admittedly, that is a lot of points, and we will only briefly comment on and illustrate each.

On the matter of self and fulfillment, John Boswell, a Yale historian who has written some of the major texts employed by homosexual activists, asserts, “Not only is homosexual eroticism the oldest and most persistent strand in the Christian theology of romantic love, but Christian religious life was the most prominent gay life-style in Western Europe from the early Middle Ages to the Reformation, about two-thirds of the period since Europe became Christian.”

Here and elsewhere Boswell contends that today’s negative attitudes toward homosexuality were not there in the Christian beginnings or in the first millennia. His arguments have met with considerable skepticism and resistance from other scholars, and the putative instances of homosexual relationships that he finds in the earlier period tend to underscore how very exceptional they were as a deviation from the norm.

But the more interesting point he seems to be making is that the monastic tradition, presumably premised upon self-denial, was an exercise in self-deception or conscious deception of others.

Monasticism was in fact, Boswell suggests, a congenial way of life
designed to accommodate the homosexual. The alternative possibility, that most monks would have adopted a life that got in the way of self-expression, and therefore self-fulfillment, is apparently not conceivable to Boswell’s very contemporary mind.

Similarly, other writers in Homosexuality insist that celibacy is appropriate only for homosexuals, assuming that “celibacy” does not preclude homogenital sex. (Andrew Greeley, on the other hand, has written that the tolerance of homosexuality among the clergy means that real celibacy, including abstinence from sex, is now being required only of heterosexual priests.)

The necessary connections between self-expression, self-fulfillment, and whatever counts as salvation are assumed in the homosexualist literature. An imperative external to the self that inhibits imperatives intrinsic to the self poses the threat of self-denial, which is the threat of death.

So much, one might think, for the call to take up His cross and follow Him, except that several writers do compare the opposition they have encountered in their homosexual activism with the sufferings of Christ on the cross. (A priest celebrating a “liturgy for gay liberation” on the steps of the Supreme Court declares, “I offer up my body; I sacrifice my blood. I am consumed by a political system that refuses to liberate my sisters and brothers.”)

A second striking feature in this literature is the linkage between homosexuality and a total agenda for social and political change. Daniel Maguire, a former priest who teaches theology at Marquette University, contends that discussions of sexuality (“pelvic theology,” as he calls it) would not be necessary in a “healthy” church.

Such “micromorality” is a distraction from the “macromorality” that focuses, for instance, on the arms race and capitalism’s oppression of the third-world poor.

Since most people apparently feel a greater sense of immediacy about their sexuality than about, say, the international debt, Maguire’s is a lone dissent among the twenty-two writers in Homosexuality. For others, being homosexual, and especially making a public issue of it, is the entree to a culture of insurrection against the established order.

According to these writers, the established order is in very bad shape indeed. In Ruether’s view of a society captive to heterosexist hierarchy, “it is as much a ‘perversity’ to be sexually attracted to persons of another race, religion, or social class as to be attracted to persons of the same gender.”

According to Ruether, people are not by nature either homosexual or heterosexual. “We are taught to become heterosexual,” and to refuse to accept that teaching is to strike a blow against an authoritarian social order.

In a similar vein, Boswell says that homosexuals are “outsiders,” and as a consequence are like “political dissidents in totalitarian regimes, Jews in Nazi Germany, the left-handed in much of the world.”

Typically, the writers affirm that, by virtue of their marginalization, they are in “solidarity” with other marginalized people. Homosexuality, if public and politicized, bestows the moral status of being a victim.

As one writer puts it, “I was not black, or Chicano, or poor, or of the wrong social group — but I was gay.” This, he says, enables him to “confront the blatant homophobia in my community, church, and society.”

As was more general in the 1960s, “confrontation” is a key component of homosexual activism today. It has been observed that Oscar Wilde’s love that dare not speak its name has become the neurosis that doesn’t know when to shut up.

But that misses the confrontational logic that requires “coming out of the closet” in a manner that forces reaction. If the reaction is negative (“homophobic”), marginalization is achieved, which brings with it both the desired victim status and a vindication of one’s claim that this is an intrinsically hate-full and oppressive society.

Some of the writers in Homosexuality seem to believe that persuasion and “openness” can transform church and society, while others indicate that homophobia is so entrenched in the present order that nothing short of revolutionary apocalypse will do.

But there is general agreement that being “honest” about one’s homosexuality, which means making a public issue of it, secures one a position in solidarity with the oppressed and their agenda of radical change.

The Courage Claim

There is, third, the claim that these writers are being terribly courageous in talking about their homosexuality. The fact that eight of the twenty-two priests and religious in this book fear to write under their own names is intended to accent the threat posed by a homophobic church.

If these writers are to be credited, the Roman Catholic Church in particular is afflicted by a fear and ignorance that impose a conspiracy of silence about sexuality, and especially homosexuality.

Touchingly, if not believably, some writers claim that the conspiracy of silence was so complete that in their twenties and thirties they had not once heard homosexuality discussed, never mind homosexuality among priests or religious. Since it appears none of them were hermits or in secluded orders, one cannot help but wonder where they have been for the last twenty years.

“The present volume,” the editor writes, “is intended to contribute to the further opening of the doors of silence that have blocked a healthy discussion of sexuality and homosexuality in some church circles.”

The reading of the book leaves no doubt that a “healthy” discussion is one that leads to “acceptance,” and acceptance means agreement. The working assumption seems to be that a willingness to discuss homosexuality can lead to only one conclusion.

A study guide on homosexuality that is officially promoted among Lutherans is titled, “Can We Talk About This?” It is premised upon the belief that talking about it is at least half way to agreement that traditional sexual ethics must be thoroughly revised. That others might study and discuss the issue and then arrive at a different conclusion is not admitted as a possibility.

Another definition of courage — the courage of the dissident from the homosexualist position who risks being accused of homophobia — is not allowed.

Among Roman Catholics, 'Courage' is the name of an organization for people of homosexual orientation who support one another in their efforts to live disciplined lives of chastity.

In the dominant view of homosexual activists, however, 'Courage' is anything but courageous. Not to give in to one’s erotic desires, and not to declare publicly that one is doing so, is cowardly self-denial and, of course, an instance of homophobia. This curious inversion of the meaning of courage, once it is accepted, must be powerfully intimidating to those who might otherwise think they are called to resist courageously an impulse to sin.

Further, we might normally think that engaging alternative viewpoints is a mark of courage, but not in this case. We are asked to believe that courage is the silencing of other viewpoints by peremptorily declaring them to be dishonest, unhealthy, and homophobic.

The fear of being accused of homophobia, what might be called homophobiaphobia, runs very strong in enlightened sectors of our culture. During last year’s Gay Pride Week at Princeton University, the student newspaper declared that the suggestion that the merits of homosexuality might be open to critical discussion is itself an example of homophobia.

Two years ago at the annual Erasmus Lecture in New York, 'Dignity', the Catholic homosexual rights group, disrupted the meeting in an attempt to silence Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, who had earlier dared to assert that homosexuality is “an objective disorder” that Christians should face with courage. So it seems that there may be a conspiracy of silence, but it is not necessarily located where the authors of Homosexuality claim to find it.

Then, fourth, there is the question of authority. Here we witness the rather thorough triumph of what Lionel Trilling many years ago described as “sincerity and authenticity” as the final court of appeal in “the adversary culture.”

Ms. Ruether, as might be expected, is quite explicit in advocating the displacement of tradition with her “revisionist” sexual ethic. Other authors, while clinging tightly to their “identity” as priests or religious, believe they would be guilty of complicity were they to work within the oppressive structures of the church.

Assumed throughout is the “nonviability” of the distinction between the natural and the unnatural. The normal, defined in terms of what a person feels is normal, is the normative. Religious leaders must maintain the doctrines of the community, it is suggested, so long as such doctrines do not get in the way of the truth.

One way to get at the truth is through the sensus fidelium, the community’s discernment of the truth. But the sensus fidelium to be consulted is the sense of those with immediate experience of the subject at hand — in this case, homosexuals. With respect to sexual ethics, it would seem that popes and bishops are excluded.

“If the sensus fidelium means anything, it ought to be taken seriously by the bishops in this area in which they apparently have no direct experience,” we are told. The conclusion is irresistible that, in the court of the adversary culture, the sensus fidelium cannot mean anything that might inhibit a person in the expression of his “true self.”

A priest writes, “One of the questions that inevitably arises is: why stay Catholic, and especially why remain a priest?” Despite the homophobia, he says he will leave the church one week after the pope does.

“The Catholic Church is mine as much as it is Pope John Paul’s or Cardinal Ratzinger’s or anyone else’s. My Catholicism is a deep part of my identity, as is my sexuality. I do not plan to give up either.”

In an intriguing inversion, the seat of authority is located in personal identity. One does not belong to a church because one adheres to its authority, in fact one does not belong to a church at all. The church belongs to the supremely authoritative self.

Realms, Rights, and the Self

Also of interest, fifth, is the conflation of spiritual and civil realms. That is to be expected from a movement that has imported into the church our political culture’s language of individualistic “rights.”

Blacks in society, we are told, have a right to have role models in positions of leadership, and it therefore follows that homosexuals in the church have a right to role models in the form of openly gay popes, bishops, and priests.

The idea that individual identity should be subordinated to communal identity is viewed as intolerably oppressive — except, it seems, in the case of the “loving gay and lesbian support community.”

As the distinction between church and culture is collapsed, so also the public/private distinction must be overcome by “coming out of the closet.”

On the one hand, private behavior is nobody’s business, least of all the business of church or state. On the other hand, what a person privately is and does must become everybody’s business. Church leaders who care about justice will see that the gay-rights agenda prevails in the political arena, or at least will not oppose it.

Cardinal O’Connor, a bishop whom the activists seem to love to hate, is guilty of opposing that agenda. This, writes one priest, reveals his inconsistency, if not his hypocrisy. “Cardinal O’Connor has not led a campaign to prevent divorced and remarried men from holding the office of President,” he notes, presumably with reference to Ronald Reagan.

It apparently does not occur to him that the rules and competencies appropriate to the body politic are different from those appropriate to the body of Christ.

With the conflation of church and culture, and with such a severely attenuated notion of what it means to belong to the church, one might conclude that the authors of Homosexuality have no church.

It would seem, however, that at least for some of them their true church is the homosexual adversary culture itself. That culture maintains a number of “nurturing and networking” organizations, such as Dignity, Coalition for Catholic Lesbians, New Way Ministry, and Communication Ministry, Inc. Similarly, Episcopalians have Integrity and Lutherans have Lutherans Concerned.

In the present volume there are repeated and sometimes moving narratives of a sense of “coming home” upon joining the homosexual community, much as Cardinal Newman and other converts have written about “coming home” when they joined the Roman Catholic Church.

One author tells how his priesthood took on “new dimensions” when he entered into “my Holy Communion with the lesbian/gay community.” Participating for the first time in a mass sponsored by Dignity, “I knew that I had found my own people, a family that shared my particular crosses and that promised me a taste of resurrection joys.”

Here and elsewhere, the dynamics and language are those of the sacramental rite of initiation. “Dignity,” says this priest, “has been my most immediate experience of church.”

Another writer, a male religious in San Francisco, has apparently found not only the church but the Kingdom of God: “So I have come to the ‘new Jerusalem’ with its wide open Golden Gate to complete the healing journey I embarked on many years ago.”

Such expressions reflect a reconstituting of the world around the authoritative, and indeed authorial, self.

But on the seventh point, having to do with sexuality and personal identity, homosexual activists appear to be of different minds. Boswell complains that homosexuals are treated unfairly when others think that their homosexuality is the most important thing about them.

“In the case of a ‘normal’ person,” he writes, “heterosexuality is assumed to be one part of his or her personality; in the case of a ‘homosexual’ person, sexuality is thought to be the primary constituent of his or her (abnormal) personality.”

Yet authors in the present volume repeatedly assert about themselves what Boswell complains is unfairly asserted by a homophobic society. “Being lesbian,” writes a nun, “is my inner milieu, from which I relate with the world.” About her “coming out,” she explains, “I needed to reveal that most important part of myself that makes me ‘tick.’”

It is not possible to explain the intensity of commitment that turns this movement into one’s church apart from the primacy of sexuality in a person’s identification of himself. Here we encounter a conundrum that has become familiar in the cultural wars.

A just society, it is said, should treat a person as a person, not as a homosexual. At the same time, justice demands that society should come to terms with, and affirm, that person’s homosexuality. We meet a similar, and similarly contradictory, construal of justice in some feminist literature, as well as in the claim that the society should be both color-blind and have preferential quotas for racial minorities.

While many homosexuals are only asking for tolerance, the gay-rights movement is clearly engaged in a power struggle for the redesign of the social order. [Not just of the social order, but as implied in Benedict XVI's address to the Roman Curia, a subversion of the natural order by denying, in effect, that the human being was created man or woman for a reson.]

As in all power struggles, its antagonists need a public differentiation between “them” and “us,” and in this struggle that makes inevitable the primacy of sexuality in personal identity. Thus it would seem that what Boswell and others attribute to society’s prejudices is in fact the necessary logic of the movement they champion.

Stereotypes and Biology

The definition of allies and enemies unavoidably requires stereotypes. At one level, stereotypes are simply types that conform to a general pattern, but they are commonly much decried as a prejudice that unfairly puts people into preconceived slots.

In gay-rights literature, and not least in Homosexuality, stereotypes play a dual role. They are fully engaged in portraying an often vicious picture of a society and church hatefully bent upon the persecution of homosexuals.

At the same time, one encounters the stereotypes of homosexuals as unusually sensitive, creative, imaginative, playful, and loving. In short, stereotypes of homosexual superiority, or what is thought to be homosexual superiority, are not condemned but celebrated.

In the present book, several male authors, reinforcing a stereotype, relate how in childhood they wanted to play house when the other boys wanted to play ball, and they were as a consequence called sissy, fag, and queer.

This is told to illustrate the bigotry of their peers, but there is also a suggestion that a stereotype of deviant behavior must be flaunted if the movement is to achieve its goals. And this brings us to the question of fate or choice.

Gay activists commonly assert that homosexuality is biologically determined, and therefore nobody should be held responsible for his or her sexual condition.

Typical is the priest who writes that “our journey has to be as sexual, as homosexual, persons. We have no other choice. God calls us to love and to celebrate who we are. He made us the way we are, and it is good.”

Others are not satisfied with this approach, however. They say it implies that homosexuality is a problem or handicap in which one has no say; it is a matter of fate. The implication is that the condition calls for sympathy from others.

Rejecting that view, Rosemary Ruether joins Freud in arguing that we are all “originally” bisexual and polymorphously sexual. Against Freud, she contends that homosexuality is not an instance of arrested infantile or adolescent “perversity,” but a choice for personal satisfaction and fulfillment.

We should, she writes, “appropriate our sexuality not as something biologically necessitated, or as socially coerced, but as a freely chosen way of expressing our authentic humanness in relation to the special others with whom we wish to share our lives.”

The point is that people should not be held responsible for their sexual condition, for “originally” our conditions are the same. The further point is that people should not be held responsible for their sexual choices and behavior (at least not within the context of “a committed relationship”), for they are essential to “authentic humanness.”

In this literature one is also impressed by the pervasive insensitivity and lack of feeling for non-homosexuals who experience discontents and sufferings related to sexuality. It appears that only homosexuals suffer.

There is no mention of wives and husbands who, against powerful temptations and disappointments, strive to remain faithful to their marriage vows.

Little credit is given celibates, of whatever sexual “orientation,” who understand themselves to be offering up the entirety of their being to God.

Indeed the logic of Homosexuality suggests that the difficult path of marital or celibate fidelity is a course of unhealthy denial and repression. Surely many married persons in the throes of temptation to adultery can (and do) claim that acting upon their desire is essential to their “authentic humanness.”

It is far from clear why intensity of desire comes with a moral license only for homosexuals. Advocates such as Ms. Ruether are at least more consistent in apparently extending the license to everyone.

In addition to being insensitive and unfeeling toward non-homosexuals who are coping with sexuality and its discontents, the activist literature is typically cruel and slanderous in its explanation of why most people have negative views of homosexuality.

Anything other than the “correct” view of homosexuality is attributed to “homophobia,” which is consistently described as the result of bigotry, ignorance, and the fear of one’s own sexuality.

If it is an instance of homophobia that parents earnestly hope that their children will not turn out to be homosexual, then almost every parent in the world is homophobic.

Books such as Homosexuality, which incessantly talk about the fears, frustrations, angers, and depressions involved in being homosexual, inadvertently reinforce the reasons why parents hope their children will not be homosexual.

The dramatically higher incidence among homosexuals of suicide, psychological disorder, and sexually related disease (frequently lethal) suggests that homosexuality is anything but gay. Of course the activists blame these pathologies on society’s intolerance, but it is not intolerance that produces another and very basic reason why people hope their children will not be homosexual.

Whatever its alleged merits, homosexuality is sterile. Few things are more fundamental to societal interest and parental desire than the hope for children and grandchildren, for successor generations that will carry on our communal stories.

The society’s “failure” to put homosexuality on a moral par with heterosexuality is not a result of homophobia, as that term is now recklessly used, but of a human refusal to accept the end of history.

Acceptance, Not Forgiveness

Finally, one notes in Homosexuality an almost total absence of notions of sin and forgiveness. Sin is mentioned in passing as a hang-up of homophobes. One writer speaks of the experience of being “forgiven and accepted,” but then makes clear that being “accepted” means that there is nothing to forgive.

Several writers speak about how they and God feel good about their being gay, the implication being that “God” is some kind of cosmic concurrence in whatever makes human beings feel good about themselves.

The Christian tradition’s understanding of the ultimate inversion of “man turned in upon himself” (homo incurvatus se) is celebrated as salvation.

“I am gay and happy. I am not neurotic, morbid, or maladjusted,” writes one priest, protesting, one suspects, too much. “There are absolutely no apologies necessary,” he asserts.

What the tradition has viewed as disorder is in fact superior virtue, another writer declares. Homosexuals have “the ability to see with different eyes” and to “risk decisions which straight men and women, because of their greater stake in the dominant social system, cannot even consider.”

A lesbian nun writes, “I see myself as very much of a prophet among my own sisters.”

Readers might be repelled by the tone of smug self-righteousness [which, I find, pervades all writing by gay activists and their advocates] writing in Homosexuality, but that is to miss the underlying urgency in these assertions of self-approval, an urgency that betrays a terrible desperation.

Some of the autobiographical sketches are touchingly ingenuous, revealing people who were hurt and confused in many ways and who then found the affirmation they were seeking in groups formed by sexual identity.

Others border on the disingenuous, inventing comprehensive schemes of societal oppression which they blame for their unhappiness and which, simultaneously, they defy by flaunting their putative discovery of wholeness in their homosexuality.

Some writers have the modest goal of integrating homosexual orientation into a life of celibate faithfulness. But the more frequently stated goal is as revolutionary as it claims to be — to displace the common wisdom regarding human sexuality in both church and culture.

This goal is evident in John Boswell’s efforts to establish the marginal, the sometimes tolerated, and even the furtive on an equal footing with the Christian tradition.

“Lesbian and gay religious need to reclaim their tradition, publicize it, rejoice in it, and share it with other Christians and gay people,” he writes. “Models of gay Christian religious life embrace nearly every possibility of service to the Lord, from absolute chastity enriched by passionate attachment to another person, to open enjoyment and celebration of eroticism, to permanent unions, with or without physical sexuality. These models should be discussed and utilized as archetypes of Christian love. They are ancient, authentic, and as fundamental to the Christian tradition as heterosexual marriage.”

Homosexuality and the growing literature of which it is representative leave no doubt that the “acceptance” demanded from the churches is not acceptance as forgiven sinners.

Traditionally, that is the only basis on which we are received into the community of the redeemed where we are sustained in the lifelong struggle against our devils, of which unruly Eros is by no means the most fearsome.

What is now being demanded is not personal acceptance but agreement that Christian doctrine and morality are fundamentally in error. What is demanded is the formal blessing of libidinal liberation from communal restraints.

Advocates of the movement disagree about whether sex should be within a “committed relationship,” however defined, but are one in contending that what used to be called licentiousness must now be viewed as the freedom essential to fulfillment.

Homosexuality ends on the note that the revolution encounters growing resistance from church authorities. New programs are being introduced to screen out the sexually “disordered” among applicants for ministry. The implication is that, for all the homophile agitation, the homophobes may succeed in eliminating even the space that previously existed for deviance at the margins.

Alarmed by the radical revisionism of the homosexual movement, it is suggested, the churches may be moved to reappropriate with vigor a traditional sexual ethic. It is a not entirely implausible prospect.

“Homosexuality is the scare issue in the Christian churches today,” writes Rosemary Ruether. Nobody should deny that she and her companions in the cause are doing their best to make it sound scary.

One can hope that the churches will decline to be intimidated by such scare tactics, remembering that antinomian challenges to the Christian ethic are nothing new.

The current assault by homosexual liberationism should be countered firmly and lovingly by a renewed articulation of the rules by which we are to order our personal and communal life.

That done, the churches can get back to their mission, offering God’s forgiving and sustaining grace to all of us disordered and disorderly human beings who are subject to temptations beyond numbering, also in the realm of sexuality.

Free Exercise Less Free

Had it not involved Jimmy Swaggart, a January 17 Supreme Court decision might have provoked a great deal more comment than it has to date.

In a ruling that narrowed the constitutionally guaranteed “free exercise of religion,” the Court said that Swaggart Ministries must pay $183,000 in California sales and use taxes for religious materials sold to Californians from 1974 to 1981.

In most states such clearly religious transactions are tax-exempt, and Swaggart had claimed that they should be in California as well. The Court disagreed.

After the fiscal and sexual scandals connected with Swaggart and other televangelists, many Americans might be glad to see the government putting the screws to him. Christians and Jews acquainted with the long history of church-state relations in America, however, take a different view.

Swaggart’s claim was supported by mainstream religious groups who understand that the rights of the majority depend upon our protecting the rights of the minority, and even the marginal.

One of the few consistently worthy enterprises of the National Council of Churches, the office of religious liberty directed by Dean Kelley, knew what was at stake and entered an amicus brief on behalf of Swaggart Ministries.

Kelley understands that what we think of Jimmy Swaggart is beside the point. If we only care about the rights of those with whom we agree, we do not care about rights at all.

Let God Be God

Historians call religious freedom “the first liberty.” It is the first in the First Amendment, and, many would argue, it is the source of all other liberties.

Religion is the institutional bearer of the truth that keeps government limited. It is the public reminder that God, not government, is God.

The Constitution reads: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

Knowing that the power to tax is the power to control, states have traditionally respected the tax-exempt status of religious property and activities. Likewise, religious institutions (not, as is commonly thought, their clergy) are exempt from federal income tax. Some scholars contend that religious tax exemption is a right and not a privilege bestowed by the government.

The most accessible discussion of that argument is by the aforementioned Kelley, Why The Churches Should Not Pay Taxes (1977).

Other scholars say that religious tax exemption is simply a matter of good public policy, much as educational, cultural, and other voluntary organizations that render public service are tax-exempt.

In any event, Swaggart Ministries v. California raises disturbing questions about the expansion of government control of religion and, at least implicitly, of all the institutions of society.

Writing for the Court, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor says that the 6 percent California tax is not “onerous.” It is, she suggests, only a “marginal” burden on the free exercise of religion.

But one wonders why the free exercise of religion should be burdened at all. In addition, most churches and synagogues operate on a thin financial margin to begin with, and 6 percent could be the margin of survival.

The Court’s logic seems to be that it is permissible to infringe upon the exercise of a constitutionally guaranteed right, so long as such infringement does not prevent the exercise of that right altogether.

We would not accept that logic with respect to, for instance, the freedom of speech, and we should not accept it with respect to the freedom of religion. O’Connor emphasizes that earlier Court rulings forbidding state licensing and taxing of religious activity were based on the fact that state interference was a “prior restraint” on a constitutionally protected freedom.

But the opinion fails to explain why restraint — even a “non-onerous” restraint — of a freedom already being exercised is less objectionable.

No Establishment vs. Free Exercise?

It is noteworthy that in Swaggart Ministries O’Connor is writing on behalf of a unanimous court. It may also seem puzzling, since this Court has been sharply divided on state-church questions.

In Texas Monthly, for example, a fragile plurality of the Court ruled that tax exemption for a religious book business constituted a violation of the “no establishment” clause.

Why did Scalia, Kennedy, and Rehnquist, who dissented from that decision, go along with Swaggart Ministries? The answer may be that Texas was argued on “no establishment” grounds, while Swaggart appealed to the “free exercise” clause of the First Amendment.

Once again we see the curious way in which the two religion clauses, intended to be mutually supportive, are played against each other. Rehnquist & Co. seem to take a more flexible view of “no establishment” than do their “strict separationist” brethren. But they also seem to be relaxed about “free exercise,” inclined to give the benefit of the doubt to the state when its policies run into conflict with a religious claim.

In consequence, if not in the intention of the justices, Swaggart is a thoroughly statist decision. Unlike the unfortunate Bob Jones University case of several years ago, the opinion in this case does not even trouble itself to argue that the State of California has some compelling state interest in overriding a serious free-exercise claim.

The present ruling reflects the Court’s growing deference to the decisions of state and local government, a deference that many Americans welcome.

The Court, understandably enough, is especially reluctant to enter into the thicket of complex tax structures. It must also be said that Swaggart Ministries does not directly challenge well-established precedents protecting, for example, the tax exemption of religious properties.

Nonetheless, even narrow rulings invite interpretations that can be used to justify much broader applications. There is no doubt, for instance, that this ruling will encourage tax-hungry states and localities to explore additional ways to exact monies from religious institutions.

Subsuming Religion

The danger is not that religious institutions will be driven out of business by burdensome taxation and regulation. A danger is that their work will be hampered and curtailed. But the danger is that the Court is obscuring the singular role of religion in our public life.

O’Connor’s opinion makes much of the fact that the California tax is applied equally to all transactions, and therefore cannot be accused of discriminating against religion. And it must be admitted that there are also friends of religious freedom who favor the idea that government should adopt a “neutrality rule” with respect to religion.

They argue that it should be a matter of indifference to the government whether a particular activity, private or public, is or is not “religious.”

While the neutrality argument has certain attractions in relaxing the artificial strictures of “strict separationism,” however, its logic inescapably shortchanges the claims of “free exercise.” If the neutrality rule is to govern everything, the religion clauses of the First Amendment are made superfluous. Then religion can readily be swallowed up by the other freedoms stipulated —e .g., speech, press, and assembly.

But even those who are not rigorous proponents of “original understanding” in constitutional law may want to think more than twice before embracing the conclusion that the Founders had no good reason for putting religious freedom at front-stage center in the First Amendment. We believe the Founders knew what they were doing, and their reasons for doing it are as pertinent today as they were two hundred years ago.

The role of Justice O’Connor on state-church questions bears careful watching. On this and other issues, she is widely perceived to be the “swing vote” on the Court. Those who keep a close eye on First Amendment issues have expressed uneasiness about what appears to be her cavalier attitude toward religious rights. She has to date demonstrated a tendency to be dismissive of religious claims. Her attitude seems to be that the government must get on with its business and, if some rights get trimmed along the way, that’s an acceptable price to pay.

Historically, the Court has usually recognized the special status of religion in the First Amendment. The “separation of church and state” (a phrase not actually in the Constitution) has meant, above all, that the government should keep its hands off, and that includes the entanglements and hindrances that attend taxation. Between religion and the state, a buffer was fixed. Swaggart Ministries has not removed that buffer, but it now seems much less secure.

Democratic Uncertainties

Leszek Kolakowski delivered the fifteenth annual Thomas Jefferson Lecture sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Kolakowski is author of the renowned three-volume Main Currents of Marxism and is one of the most distinguished political philosophers of our time.

In his lecture, titled “Uncertainties of a Democratic Age,” he had this to say about religion.

[Another] anti-democratic factor is religious intolerance and theocratic aspirations. To be sure, the theocratic tendency, which naturally does away with the separation of the state from religion and establishes an ideological despotism, is most clearly and most dangerously active in Islamic countries, where there are reasons to expect that it will grow.

Islamic countries, however, make up a large segment of mankind; while none of them is fully democratic in the Western sense, they differ significantly in the degree of intolerance.

We also notice an increase in theocratic aspirations among some Israeli Jews. Analogous tendencies in Christianity do not seem strong or dangerous for the time being, but their seeds are quite alive and occasionally display their vitality.

Of course Kolakowski is right, and about Islam in particular. One of the most important questions on the “religion and public life” agenda in the years ahead is whether Islam can make its peace with, or even contribute to, social orders of democratic pluralism.

Against Banality

Some English friends of Western civilization have set up a prize for students who can properly declaim by heart the Prayer Book of Thomas Cranmer.

Prince Charles presented the prize to the winner, and took the occasion to deliver himself of some judicious observations about language and prayer.

He said this: “Ours is the age of miraculous writing machines but not of miraculous writing. Our banalities are no improvement on the past; merely an insult to it and a source of confusion in the present. In the case of our cherished religious writings, we should leave well alone, especially when it is better than well: when it is great.”

The Prince went on to question the premises of the argument for liturgical revision: “What we have to ask ourselves, it seems to me, is whether, by making the words less poetic, you really do make them more democratic. Isn’t there something rather patronizing about the whole assumption?

“Possibly there are more people today who read less well than people in the past, although I doubt it. Most people then couldn’t read at all. But supposing it were true, whoever decided that for people who aren’t very good at reading the best thing to read are those things written by people who aren’t very good at writing? Poetry is for everybody, even if it’s only a few phrases. But banality is for nobody.”

People were wrong, the Prince opined, to complain that the traditional language was “a bit over our heads.”

“The word of God,” he explained, “is supposed to be a bit over our heads. Elevated is what God is.”

He summed up his case this way: “If English is spoken in heaven . . . God undoubtedly employs Cranmer as his speech-writer. The angels of the lesser ministries probably use the language of the New English Bible and the Alternative Service Book for internal memos.”


Sources: Homosexuality and the Churches: Sr. Ware, NYT, Nov. 4, 1989; Greeley on celibacy, National Catholic Reporter, Nov. 10, 1989. Kolakowski on religion and democracy, Winter 1990. Prince Charles on liturgical language, The Spectator, 23/30 Dec. 1989. Post headline, Nov. 25, 1989.
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January 21, 2009


Fr. Schall is ever the faithful Exegete of Benedict XVI, even when he delivers a sermon, as in this case, where his primary refrences are the CDF Instruction DIGNITAS PERSONAE and the Holy Father's SPE SALVI





Editor's note: The following sermon was given by Fr. Schall at the Right to Life Mass at Dalghren Chapel, Georgetown University, January 20, 2009.

Thy hands made and fashioned me; give me understanding that I may learn thy commandments.
-- Psalm, 119, 73.


The first sentence of Dignitas Personae, the recent (September 8, 2008) document of the Congregation for Doctrine of the Faith, reads: "The dignity of the person must be recognized in every human being from conception to natural death."

I might add: this dignity must likewise be recognized in every human being from conception to unnatural death by whatever physical or human agency.

Our dignity begins with what we are; something we do not give ourselves but receive from whatever it is that causes us to be. No one gives himself what he already is in his coming to be. What we are given is completed, on our part, by what we choose to do with what we already are.

On God's part, as the Creed tells us, our lives are completed by the judgment of "the living and the dead." Here it is finally set down whether or not each person chooses to live his life in the dignity originally intended for him. Without this latter judgment, no human life is complete for the purpose for which he was created. This purpose was that he should, on living well, receive eternal life at his completion in death in this world.

In an early Peanuts (1952), Charlie Brown is sitting on a stool impatiently listening to Lucy telling him, "And then I dreamed I was climbing a stairway...." In the next scene, she continues: "But I suddenly began to fall...." To this boring information, Charlie complains: "I can't stand people who tell me their dreams."

But Lucy is undeterred: "And then before I knew it, I was in this garden...." Charlie frowns: "Why do they always have to go into details?" Finally, Lucy asks: "Do you suppose all that means anything, Charlie Brown?" A disgusted Charlie turns away, with these last incisive metaphysical words: "Absolutely! It means you were asleep."

From this little scene, I want to take several themes: that of being asleep, that of things that have meaning, and even of dreams that are at best totally unordered in reality, but, as Aristotle said, they are often filled with familiar things.

Let us ask ourselves this evening: "Are we awake to what it means to possess human dignity?" I will sketch two narratives, that, I think, compliment each other.

One is a top-down account, and the other is a bottom-up approach. I will conclude these narratives by placing them within the context of what Benedict XVI said in Spe Salvi concerning the phrase of the Creed that reads: "He will come to judge the living and the dead." Judgment is a theme that we already find in another form in Plato.

The first narrative begins with the citation from Psalm 119. It says, "Thy hands made and fashioned me, give me understanding that I may learn thy commandments." We did not make or fashion ourselves to be ourselves. What it is to be a human being, to be this particular self, is not itself an object of the human practical intellect, which, with our hands, is the source of our capacity to make things.

The doctor's craft, as Aristotle says, is limited by what it is to be healthy, something the doctor does not himself constitute but only serves. As doctor, he only aids the body to restore what it is missing. What it is to be healthy and happy, to be complete, does not, as such, fall under the medical craft. but the knowledge and carrying out of our purpose is the most important thing about us.

We are, moreover, given intelligence to know the commandments, to know what we are. Leon Kass gave a lecture the other day on "Why even atheists find the ten commandments useful." Try to imagine life in a world in which but no one obeys any of the commandments.

What are we then? On the basis of the proposition that human dignity passes from conception to natural death, we recall that even natural death is both a penalty and a blessing to us. Natural death makes possible new generations. It also indicates that, with the fall, we are "born to die," even though death was not intended from the beginning.

We are not created for this world, though we are created in this world where we are to increase, multiply, and have dominion. From the beginning, however, we were created for a life that is more than human. Deathless life in this world is a curse, not a blessing, as many novelists and scientists have realized and the present pope has emphasized.

What is the scheme and scope of our being in this world as persons with dignity? Historians of population estimate that perhaps a hundred billion human persons have lived on this planet. Some seven billion of us are still alive for a while. Without the dead having gone before us, we would not or could not exist. We know of the vastness of the physical universe and the relative tininess of our planet and of ourselves within it.

But we are not to forget that the remarkable complexity of any of us equals and probably surpasses that of the rest of the universe itself. Chesterton said that we are not to allow mere size to diminish spirit, what it is that makes us unique, our rational nature and soul.

The cosmos, its levels of being, its size, its differing natures—including particularly our own—can itself be confused with its very origin. All pantheists postulate this identity between the world and God. But we suspect that this origin is greater than and apart from what it has caused to be.

What I want to suggest here is that each of the some hundred billion human beings who have in fact existed have done so not as forms or abstractions but as living beings who die. They exist for a purpose. Indeed, their purpose is rather the cause of the universe, not the other way around.

In the beginning there was only God, a Trinitarian God, complete in Himself who did not need any universe, natural, rational, or angelic, to be what He is. The Trinitarian life of God is a complete life. It requires nothing but itself. If anything besides God exists, it does so not because God needed it. God plus the universe does not constitute more God.

Why then is there something rather than nothing, something other than God? This is where we come in. If we know why each human being who ever lived exists, we understand his dignity. We will understand the great Socratic principle that "It is never right to do wrong." God did not first create a universe, then, on looking the empty property over one fine sidereal day, busied Himself with what best to do with it.

Rather, in the beginning, God decided to associate other free and rational beings, who were not gods, with His inner life. It is for this reason that each rational being exists. The cosmos itself exists so a finite life that is not God might be possible.

There is an inner worldly purpose that does not run against the ultimate purpose. Each person exists that he might receive eternal life with god. This purpose is the basis of our dignity. It is also its driving force, the longing that we find inciting us ever on to achieve what in fact is this happiness.

Indeed, it is within this world that we are given the freedom and space to decide what we choose to be. The relative autonomy of the temporal order, the order we know of the polities in this world, is there in order that something beyond it might occur.

In this sense, the completion of the dignity of each person is carried out in all times and places where there are human beings, whatever their worldly condition.

Let me now go to the bottom-up consideration. We are all realists enough to know that human life, over the course of its history on earth, is also a vale of tears. The history of our kind, and of our times, is filled with natural and human disasters, with disorders that we cannot help but know.

Still, we can ask: "What is the best circumstance in which an actual human person, with this transcendent dignity, should be conceived and born in the world?"

The answer, no doubt, is that each person should be conceived, born, and raised in a family consisting of a man and a woman joined together for life. The document, Dignitas Personae, that I cited above, puts it succinctly:

The human embryo has, therefore, from the very beginning, the dignity proper to a person. Respect for that dignity is owed to every human being because each one carries in an indelible way his own dignity and value.

The origin of human life has its authentic context in marriage and in the family, where it is generated through an act which expresses the reciprocal love between a man and a woman. procreation which is truly responsible vis-à-vis the child to be born 'must be the fruit of marriage' (#5-6).

We all know, of course, that this sort of happy birth into a functioning family of man and woman and their children does not always or often happen.

Still, it is worth noting clearly what ought to be. The dignity of the child, of course, remains no matter how it is begotten. Sin is in the sinner, not in its results.

One of the great problems in all families and polities is what to do when this natural basis does not in fact function. Often, we know legislation itself promotes this malfunctioning of the family in various ways based on counter assumptions about what the dignity of the person is.

The whole scope of reason and what Christians call charity, in fact, is called into play in order to repair or deal with disorders put into the world in violation of this given dignity. But, as I say, it is worthwhile to know what in is best even if we do not bring it about.

In the context, I want to return to something that I said in the beginning. All human beings once conceived, however close to birth they come before dying because of natural or human interference, are created with the same dignity.

This purpose implies that God's purpose in creating each of us for eternal life is not as such obviated by the violations and harms imposed to our kind by our own actions in preventing or killing human lives in early stages.

Put in other terms, human beings responsible for the killing or maltreatment of other human beings thrust acts into the world that disorder their own souls and terminate or derange the lives of others.

We know that the forgiveness of sins — even the worst ones — is possible. But we also know that the world, with human beings destined for eternal life in it, is created in a justice that includes our acts in respect to ourselves and others.

Plato in his great reflection in the Republic reminded us that in no existing political order are all the good things properly rewarded, nor are all the evil things properly punished.

Benedict XVI takes up this theme in Spe Salvi. He is very precise. He addresses the much neglected question of the temporal and eternal punishment due to our sins. In short, God does take His initial intention in creation seriously.

He has given us the means and desire to achieve our transcendent end, but only if we freely choose it once offered to us. Our choices are worked out in our relation to others of our kind whose good we are to know and foster. The first principle is "Do no harm," as the famous [Hippocratic] oath stateS.

In the light of reason and of the graphic insistence of the Church on the dignity of the person from the moment of conception to natural death, it seems evident that the killing of such human beings, that not providing them with the love and home in which they can properly flourish, is a grave violation of the love God intended for each person He has created.

Today, many of us are perplexed almost to the limit that these disorders of soul against our kind continue and indeed are fostered in an ever more sophisticated manner in our politics and culture.

Looking at these and other great crimes against our kind, Benedict wanted to know if the world could be complete if what was evil among us were not properly punished. He has the same thought that Plato did, namely, that without the immortality of the soul, most of these crimes would in fact go unpunished and the world would not be just.

Then Benedict adds, following two famous Marxist philosophers whom he cites, that the only way the world could be just was if there was a resurrection of the body in which the persons who actually committed the crimes would be judged.

This resurrection of the body, as the Creed indicated, makes possible a judgment of each life in order that that life be complete in its truth. The truth is whether it, having been initially called to eternal life, actually, in its own deeds, chooses what is good. With the help or rejection of grace, was it worthy of that eternal life to which it is called from its beginning?

In other words, as we gather at this Mass, there is something momentous in the realization that human life is transcendent from the moment of its conception. We are responsible for it even to the judgment of our own deeds and the consequences that follow what they are.

Let us not be asleep or merely dream about the important things. The commandment is spelled out for us and we are judged by it

To conclude, we read in Hebrews: "Not a creature exists that is hidden from him, but all things lie bare and exposed before the eyes of him with whom we have to reckon" (4:13). We remain sober before the ever growing violations of human dignity of which we here in this place and in this time cannot but be aware.

The careful words of Benedict in Spe Salvi, that the world is also made in justice, stand as both a warning and a consolation to each of us. The pope continues: "Evildoers, in the end, do not sit at the table at the eternal banquet beside their victims without distinction, as though nothing had happened."

Benedict then, as he often does, cites Plato who "expressed the truth with an unambiguous clarity, saying that in the end souls will stand naked before the judge. It no longer matters what they once were in history, but only what they are in truth."

"Thy hands made and fashioned me; give me understanding that I may learn thy commandments."

"The dignity of the person must be recognized in every human being from conception to natural death."

"Not a creature exists that is hidden from him, but all things lie bare and exposed before the eyes of him with whom we have to reckon."


[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 22/01/2009 03:37]
23/02/2009 13:30
 
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Utente Gold
Sandro Magister today has a long post, in which he presents the views of both Cardinal Angelo Scola, patriarch of Venice, and Cardinal Camillo Ruini, immediate past president of the Italian bishops' conference, on the role of Catholic lay faithful in the public arena.

This is the link to the English translation that Mr. Magister provides:
chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/215325?eng=y

I will return to the post later, because I think the use of the terms term 'secularism' and 'secular' in the English translations is a bit confusing, as evident from the English title of the article:
"Secularism in danger. Two cardinals are running to its defense" - which rocked me back on my heels until I looked at what the articles actually said.






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