All culture arises out of religion. When religious faith decays, culture must decline, though often seeming to flourish for a space of time after the religion which has nourished it has fallen into disbelief... no cultured person should remain indifferent to the erosion of apprehension of the transcendent.'

Russell Kirk, Eliot and His Age

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

WTC Greek Orthodox Church Rebuild Snubbed by NY Zoning

I have really tried to stay out of the whole Ground Zero mosque thing, because I honestly don't care.  America has much deeper problems than this mosque.  I do believe that this is a 'victory' mosque and I also understand that it is an intentional provocation, but I really don't feel provoked. 

What troubles me more than some imam building a mosque in NY is the Port Authority's zoning board's contemptuous hostility toward the rebuilding of an already extant Christian church in the area. 

St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church was crushed by one of the WTC towers when it collapsed.  For the past 9 years, the congregation of St. Nicholas has sought to have their church building rebuilt in the area, but have been repeatedly rebuffed by the Port Authority.

Again, the worst enemy of Christianity is not Islam, but rather secularism and the anti-Christian hostility that such secularism breeds.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

The Problem with Assisted Suicide

Well, for those who believe that assisted suicide is the ultimate expression of individual choice and freedom, it is useful to look at the statistics coming out of the Netherlands where nearly 2% of all deaths are the result of doctor 'assisted' euthanasia.  This should be a fairly disturbing statistic to anyone who is concerned about life, especially considering the Dutch track record with regards to 'involuntary' euthanasia

The Remmelink Report provides the following statistics:

2,300 people died as the result of doctors killing them upon request (active, voluntary euthanasia).(7)

400 people died as a result of doctors providing them with the means to kill themselves (physician-assisted suicide).(8)


1,040 people (an average of 3 per day) died from involuntary euthanasia, meaning that doctors actively killed these patients without the patients' knowledge or consent.(9)


                          14% of these patients were fully competent. (10)


                           72% had never given any indication that they would want their lives terminated. (11)


                           In 8% of the cases, doctors performed involuntary euthanasia despite the fact that they believed alternative
                           options were still possible. (12)


In addition, 8,100 patients died as a result of doctors deliberately giving them overdoses of pain medication, not for the primary purpose of controlling pain, but to hasten the patient's death. (13) In 61% of these cases (4,941 patients), the intentional overdose was given without the patient's consent.(14)

According to the Remmelink Report, Dutch physicians deliberately and intentionally ended the lives of 11,840 people by lethal overdoses or injections--a figure which accounts for 9.1% of the annual overall death rate of 130,000 per year. The majority of all euthanasia deaths in Holland are involuntary deaths.
 The Remmelink Report figures cited here do not include thousands of other cases, also reported in the study, in which life-sustaining treatment was withheld or withdrawn without the patient's consent and with the intention of causing the patient's death. (15) Nor do the figures include cases of involuntary euthanasia performed on disabled newborns, children with life-threatening conditions, or psychiatric patients. (16)


The most frequently cited reasons given for ending the lives of patients without their knowledge or consent were: "low quality of life," "no prospect for improvement," and "the family couldn't take it anymore."(17)


In 45% of cases involving hospitalized patients who were involuntarily euthanized, the patients' families had no knowledge that their loved ones' lives were deliberately terminated by doctors. (18)


These statistics should be chilling, and they do not include the statistics for infanticide and other forms of non-end-of-life euthanasia.  The common justification for this behavior (aside from compassion) is the scarcity of medical resources.  This has to do with the Dutch definition of 'necessity', which allows for a doctor to involuntarily terminate a patient for the 'greater good'.

In 1991, the Dutch Supreme Court expanded the definition of 'necessity' to include non-somatic, mental health-related issues of pain:
the necessity defence is not limited to cases where the patient is in the terminal phase of an illness of somatic (physical) origin.


               The necessity defence can also apply where a patient's suffering is entirely of a non-somatic origin (ie is
                    mental suffering only, rather than suffering due to physical pain). A psychiatric patient's wish to die therefore
                    can be legally considered the result of a competent and voluntary judgement.(158)

                    Further, the suffering of a psychiatric patient can be legally considered 'lacking any prospect for
                    improvement' if the patient has refused a realistic therapeutic alternative.


                    The courts must approach cases where the necessity defence is said to be based on non-somatic suffering 'with
                    exceptional care'. Accordingly, the defence cannot be invoked in these cases unless the patient has been
                    examined by an independent colleague/medical expert.(159)
 
This creeping expansion of euthanasia should be read not as an aberration in an otherwise functional system, but should be understood as an endemic problem in the process of giving individual doctors (or even groups of doctors) the power of life and death.
 
Just something to think about.

The Distributist Review

I strongly suggest that all my readers check out the Distributist Review.  I will be contributing some articles on medieval economy at some point in the future, so check it out.  Great stuff on Catholic Social Teaching.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Anne Rice and the Catholic Church: The Problem of Liberal Catechesis

Anne Rice has left the Catholic Church for a second time; of course, this is not news... in fact, it is a couple of months old, but I wanted to bring it up because there has been a few high-profile defections in recent years that share a pattern that I find indicative of the failure of the Church to effectively catechize both cradle Catholics and converts.  Anne Rice was both a cradle Catholic AND a convert, so her defection is particularly useful for these purposes.

First, she left the Church and became an atheist when she was quite young.  This was an all too common phenomenon of her generation, so should really come as no surprise; however, her return to the Catholic Church was a clear sign that she recognized something was deeply wrong with her life... something was missing.  She is even able to identify things like the Eucharist as being very important, but not important enough to overcome her ideological convictions (or her personal life).  Ms. Rice returned to the Catholic Faith with some heavy baggage, baggage that would test a much stronger person than herself and was probably not assisted by her parish priest.

Ms. Rice's life, until her reconversion, was completely tied into the sexual revolution.  Her books celebrated hedonistic sexuality and homosexuality.  When her own son embraced a homosexual lifestyle, she was affirmed and celebrated this choice.  I was incredibly impressed that she was able to actually bring herself back into the Church, but I knew (from several interviews) that she had not really embraced many of the Church's teachings (particularly regarding issues of sexuality).

This is a problem, because the priest who received her back to the Church was clearly not focused on getting Ms. Rice to understand the nature of Catholic teaching on sexuality.  Ms. Rice was clearly accepted back into the Church without affirming her belief in the authority of the Church's teachings. 

With this in mind, we cannot be surprised or even particularly disappointed in her decision to leave the Church.  She never really entered into full communion with the Church the first place, so her decision to leave again is not really a full break with the Church per se

In order for Ms. Rice to have truly embraced the Church and truly entered into full communion with Christ's Mystical Body on Earth, she would have had to renounce many of her earlier decisions and to rescind her acceptance and celebration of her son's sexuality.  Admitting our own mistakes requires a nearly herculean act of will and is a major stumbling block for many who desire to return to the Church (it certainly was for me).  Not forcing Ms. Rice to confront her own errors did not prepare her to deal effectively with a life in the Faith.  Not forcing Ms. Rice to confront her own errors made her particularly vulnerable to the lures of the secular world and her own past.  This caused her life in the Church to be filled with contradiction and become even more difficult than it might have been.  Anne Rice was set up to fail by her pastor.

This is a common problem with liberal catechesis, as it does not effectively prepare the catechumen for the challenges of living the Faith in the world.  As a teacher of Catholic students, I see this problem constantly as students' beliefs are challenged and they simply do not have an effective enough grounding in the Faith to resist these challenges. 

We, as Catholics, cannot be surprised that so many young people (and others) leave the Faith when they simply do not understand that the Church is there to help them come to Truth; the Church incites change in people toward God.  The Church does not change to suit the needs of believers; the nature of being a believer is to believe, if one does not believe then one is not a believer... and the Church is a community of believers.

Wow, so I have been really lazy and bad.

Yep, it's me again.  Sorry to have been so ridiculously sporadic with my posting.  It has been a long summer-my main excuse is that I finally got my wisdom teeth removed and have been really unmotivated to do anything lately (ask my wife, I am sure that she is sick of it).

Anyway, I will pick up again now. 

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Is Obama a Muslim?

Here's the thing... I think we would all be better off if Obama WERE a muslim!  While I am no fan of the Muhammedon religion, it's adherents are certainly more moral than the vapid cultural elites of this culture and Europe...

I will go off on this again later.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Is Catholic Radicalism Dying?

The editors of the New Oxford Review took note of Charlotte Allen's claim that post-Vatican II radicalism is finally dying off (particularly in this country).  Allen claims that the flame of Catholic dissent is dying with the deaths of Mary Daly and Edward Schillebeeckx in late 2009.  With the works of these theologians behind us, let's hope that Allen is correct.

Check out the poll on the right.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

More Catholic Persecutions in India

I am wondering when world attention will be focused on the injustices committed by Hindus against Catholics and other Christians.

It is really annoying to me that American presidents tend to ignore Christian persecutions around the globe.  This is not simply a Democrat/Republican thing; it is an American elite thing.

Fascinating Story

Here is the story of a man who was raised Jewish, found Jesus, founded a Protestant church, coverted to the Episcopal Church, and has now been ordained a Catholic priest (with 8 kids!).

Pretty darn impressive, I must say.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Wait... What?!?!

I just came across this Protestant 'interpretation' of Chesterton... I don't know why, but this guy really annoyed me.  I don't know... maybe I am just being petty, but the condescension and arrogance (apparently unintended) is really unappealing...

Here is a brief essay by Chesterton on Babies...

Wait... What?!?!

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Coerced Abortions... Perish the Thought...

Hmmm... so abortion may actually be more desirable for the man than for the pregnant woman?  And women are often forced into getting abortions by their 'partners' (who do not want to be inconvenienced by babies)?

When one takes into account the number of women who get abortions secretly, because they don't want to anger their 'partners' about their pregnancy I am sure that these statistics are likely more disturbing.

Modernism

This is the second in my series of blogs attempting to flesh out what is wrong with the world today.  My first post was concerning ideology, but now I am interested in discussing the most dangerous ideology... Modernism.

I will not be able to flesh out the entirety of the Modernist program in a single blog post, but I do want to identify its fundamental components.

Modernism is the fundamental belief that humans are the measure of all things and that we create the distinctions between Good and Evil.  Modernism is able to assert this because it postulates that all relationships are power relationships and that power is the ultimate arbiter of Truth.  This is the ideology of tyranny and is most represented in contemporary ideologies like Marxism, Nazism, Fascism, and the like.

This is not something original to the Modern world, but exists as early as Classical Greece.  Plato presents Socrates as arguing primarily against this world-view as embodied by the Sophists. The Sophists would teach young men that the pursuit of power was the most valuable pursuit, superior to the pursuit of Truth, because Truth was determined by those with power.

The first Modern ideologue to articulate this point of view effectively was Machiavelli; in both The Prince and The Discourses on Livy, he presents a new model for human behavior and political leadership.  Machiavelli presents a justification for this very pagan approach to politics and ethics; essentially, he argues that anything is justified in the pursuit of power and that this pursuit not only is, but should be, an end in itself.

One seeks power primarily to possess it and spends most of the time one possesses it, protecting it from others.  Now, Machiavelli does suggest some ideas about how one should rule, but even these suggestions are devised primarily with an eye toward maintaining power.

Machiavelli, like most Modernists, believes that vice, properly practiced and focused, can become virtue.  In fact, Machiavelli redefines the entire concept of virtue as the ability to gain and maintain power; therefore, cruelty and greed become virtues.  We can see this developed more thoroughly in later thinkers such as Adam Smith and Thomas Hobbes.

I will delve into more of this later, but I wanted to get this down before I moved on to more complex topics.

Sorry not to have posted in so long...

Nearly a week... well, no one is perfect.

My wife has been posting pretty regularly on her blog and she touched on some things that I have always emphasized when teaching.  Catholics need to regain a respect for the Middle Ages, for Christendom, and not allow themselves to be shamed into condemning it by the dominant Moderno-Protestant-Revolutionary-Ideologies that permeate our society. 

I promise to get back to this issue soon, but just to leave you with something to think about... the English-speaking world is predominantly Protestant and secular... our biases, then, are also Protestant and secular, so make sure to consider this when revisiting their percetions of the Catholic Middle Ages.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Openly Gay Priest Molests Kid

Well... I guess this just goes to show... homosexuality has NOTHING to do with the sex abuse scandal in the Church... well, thank goodness for that!

Sunday, May 23, 2010

OK... Lost is over...

I am sure that I will blog at length about the season finale of Lost soon, but at this point, I just wanted to say that I saw it... I was moved by it... and I feel satisfied... I don't know if this will last, but it is how I feel right now.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Transgendered Bathrooms... Wait!... What??

Well, I give up... transgendered bathrooms are going to become law in MA.  A 'right to gender determination'? 

Essentially, this is an argument that our imagination should dictate reality.  If I decide that I am a woman today, then I can legally claim to be one.

This is simply one further assertion of the will over reality... thank you, Schopenhauer...

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Wow... Ya Think!?!?

So, Raquel Welch has come forward with the controversial statement that the pill caused a massive transformation in sexual morality... I love her, but this is fairly underwhelming...

Wait!... What??

Anyway, in England a Catholic schoolgirl has been listed as truant for refusing to wear a headscarf to a mandatory trip to a mosque... 

Now, I am trying to figure out what part of this is the most unsettling... that a Catholic schoolgirl is being required to go to a mosque... that it is a Catholic school that is requiring her to go to a mosque... or that it is this same Catholic school that is punishing this girl for refusing to wear a headscarf...

I can understand that a Catholic school can mandate students to do things that they may not want to do... and I agree that a Catholic school should function in loco parentis and that a Catholic school should be given fairly wide-ranging authority over the actions of its students... however, it seems bizarre to utilize this authority to force a Catholic child to dress as a muslim and go to a mosque.  If it were the case that this was a Catholic student attending a muslim school, I would completely support the school requiring their students to adhere to their dress codes and cultural mores (I would ask why a Catholic parent was sending their child to a muslim school, though); however, I have deep problems with this sort of 'ecumenism' that seems to serve no purpose other than to water-down the unique nature of the Catholic Church.

I should also point out that I completely support requiring women to cover their heads when attending Mass... so I am not against head-scarves in general... nor do I consider them to be 'muslim'.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

My First Poll

I know that this poll is not the best example of my writing, but I figured I would give it a shot.  Enjoy.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Homosexuals Molest Children?

Interesting.  Regardless of the popular culture's desire to paint homosexuals as paragons of virtue by which to judge heterosexual men, there does appear to be some very strong links between homosexuality and child molestation.

I know it may seem controversial to argue that sexual disorders may be linked to disordered sexuality, but hey, I am that kind of controversial guy.

This is not to say that all homosexuals are pedophiles, but that pedophilia is certainly more common among homosexuals than among heterosexuals.  This is because homosexuality is disordered, and tends to be a part of a cluster of disorders (including promiscuity, anxiety, depression, impulse control problems, addiction, domestic violence).

Mother Theresa and the Empire State Building

Alright... normally, I am not particularly effected by these types of petty slights to the Faith, or to prominent Catholics; however, this particular case seems particularly petty.

Apparently, the Empire State Building has refused to honor Mother Theresa with a blue and white light display.  Normally, I would just ignore this kind of silly slight, but in this case, it seems completely bigoted and unreasonable.  Mother Theresa has been honored repeatedly by secular organizations (including a Nobel Peace Prize) and is considered one of the most respected people of the 20th century.  It is not clear why the Empire State Building Lighting Partners has chosen to deny this particular display; however, the fact that they were willing to honor Mao Tze Tung and the 60th aniversary of the Chinese Communist Revolution might provide us with some insight into the issue at stake.

Apparently, the ESBLP are much more comfortable with celebrating a brutal revolutionary who was responsible for the deaths of over 77 million people (and, of course, the establishment of state mandated abortion), than with a woman who worked tirelessly for the poor and disenfranchised in the world.

If you are irritated by this, sign the petition over at Catholic League for Civil Rights.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Quite possibly, one of the greatest things I have seen on the internet...


I think that this song pretty effectively makes the point about Benny Hinn and the charlatan theatrics of the 'faith' healers that seem to creep up around Christian believers.

I am sure that the author of this vignette is probably some mistheist or something, buy that does not discount the accuracy of his depiction (or the fact that it is really funny, if also a bit depressing).

Thankfully, the Catholic Church has always been very suspicious of such people.

Whenever you hear someone criticizing the Catholic Church's 'persecution' of heretical cults in the Middle Ages (or before, or since), just think about Benny Hinn...


P.S.

An excerpt from a 2006 letter to his followers:

... we have recently taken delivery on our Gulfstream G4SP plane, which we call Dove One. I have enclosed a beautiful photo-filled brochure to explain more about this incredible ministry tool that will increase the scope of our abilities to preach the Gospel around the globe. Now we must pay the remainder of the down payment, and I am asking the Lord Jesus to speak to 6,000 of my precious partners to sow a seed of $1,000 in the next ninety days. And I am praying, even as I write this letter, that you will be one of them!

Well, at least the government is finally investigating him...

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

How do you define 'homosexual'?

Now, I don't mean to sound pedantic, but a recent study of the sexual abuse problem has found that over 80% of the victims were adolescent males. Yet the study also claims that this is not a sign of homosexual activity...

I have to wonder how one defines 'homosexual' in such a way that it excludes sexual attraction to adolescent males? While I might agree that Bill Donohue misspoke when he referred to the perpetrators as 'gay', one certainly cannot ignore the fact that the perpetrators had homosexual inclinations.

The main thing is that psychologists have classified these behaviors in ways that make it difficult to ascribe motive to sexual deviants. By establishing that homosexuality is an orientation only toward 'healthy' and 'legal' relationships, you effectively remove any possibility of drawing a connection between homosexuality and any other sort of deviant (or illegal) behavior. 

It is baffling for psychologists to be able to claim that male priests who rape and seduce young men are not behaving homosexually.  I understand the ideology of it, but I don't understand the logic of it.

How Can This Dude Continue To Justify His Hostility?

I gotta say, that find Michael Schiavo's behavior (especially toward his deceased wife's parents) continually disturbing... bordering on the pathological.

He opposes Terri's parent's use of her name and likeness for the charity, but not the Family Guy's use of her name and image to mock the whole ordeal.

*Although, I would like to see the parents forgo their salaries during the economic downturn in order to avoid the impression of impropriety.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

I Get the Feeling that this is the First of Many

St. Vincent's in NYC has closed its doors and I doubt that this will be the last Catholic hospital to do so.  There is an increasing sense of hostility toward Catholic morality in the various legislatures around the country.

An update

Well, it seems as though the claim of a connection between autism and vaccines that have been incubated in aborted fetal tissue may have been exaggerated.  Just wanted to make sure to keep regular readers abreast of these things.

This info was initially brought to me by one of my regular readers (Phillip Sandifer).

Ten Conservative Principles

Ten Conservative Principles

by Russell Kirk
Adapted from The Politics of Prudence (ISI Books, 1993).
Being neither a religion nor an ideology, the body of opinion termed conservatism possesses no Holy Writ and no Das Kapital to provide dogmata. So far as it is possible to determine what conservatives believe, the first principles of the conservative persuasion are derived from what leading conservative writers and public men have professed during the past two centuries. After some introductory remarks on this general theme, I will proceed to list ten such conservative principles.

Perhaps it would be well, most of the time, to use this word "conservative" as an adjective chiefly. For there exists no Model Conservative, and conservatism is the negation of ideology: it is a state of mind, a type of character, a way of looking at the civil social order.

The attitude we call conservatism is sustained by a body of sentiments, rather than by a system of ideological dogmata. It is almost true that a conservative may be defined as a person who thinks himself such. The conservative movement or body of opinion can accommodate a considerable diversity of views on a good many subjects, there being no Test Act or Thirty-Nine Articles of the conservative creed.

In essence, the conservative person is simply one who finds the permanent things more pleasing than Chaos and Old Night. (Yet conservatives know, with Burke, that healthy "change is the means of our preservation.") A people's historic continuity of experience, says the conservative, offers a guide to policy far better than the abstract designs of coffee-house philosophers. But of course there is more to the conservative persuasion than this general attitude.

It is not possible to draw up a neat catalogue of conservatives' convictions; nevertheless, I offer you, summarily, ten general principles; it seems safe to say that most conservatives would subscribe to most of these maxims. In various editions of my book The Conservative Mind I have listed certain canons of conservative thought—the list differing somewhat from edition to edition; in my anthology The Portable Conservative Reader I offer variations upon this theme. Now I present to you a summary of conservative assumptions differing somewhat from my canons in those two books of mine. In fine, the diversity of ways in which conservative views may find expression is itself proof that conservatism is no fixed ideology. What particular principles conservatives emphasize during any given time will vary with the circumstances and necessities of that era. The following ten articles of belief reflect the emphases of conservatives in America nowadays.

First, the conservative believes that there exists an enduring moral order. That order is made for man, and man is made for it: human nature is a constant, and moral truths are permanent.

This word order signifies harmony. There are two aspects or types of order: the inner order of the soul, and the outer order of the commonwealth. Twenty-five centuries ago, Plato taught this doctrine, but even the educated nowadays find it difficult to understand. The problem of order has been a principal concern of conservatives ever since conservative became a term of politics.

Our twentieth-century world has experienced the hideous consequences of the collapse of belief in a moral order. Like the atrocities and disasters of Greece in the fifth century before Christ, the ruin of great nations in our century shows us the pit into which fall societies that mistake clever self-interest, or ingenious social controls, for pleasing alternatives to an oldfangled moral order.

It has been said by liberal intellectuals that the conservative believes all social questions, at heart, to be questions of private morality. Properly understood, this statement is quite true. A society in which men and women are governed by belief in an enduring moral order, by a strong sense of right and wrong, by personal convictions about justice and honor, will be a good society—whatever political machinery it may utilize; while a society in which men and women are morally adrift, ignorant of norms, and intent chiefly upon gratification of appetites, will be a bad society—no matter how many people vote and no matter how liberal its formal constitution may be.

Second, the conservative adheres to custom, convention, and continuity. It is old custom that enables people to live together peaceably; the destroyers of custom demolish more than they know or desire. It is through convention—a word much abused in our time—that we contrive to avoid perpetual disputes about rights and duties: law at base is a body of conventions. Continuity is the means of linking generation to generation; it matters as much for society as it does for the individual; without it, life is meaningless. When successful revolutionaries have effaced old customs, derided old conventions, and broken the continuity of social institutions—why, presently they discover the necessity of establishing fresh customs, conventions, and continuity; but that process is painful and slow; and the new social order that eventually emerges may be much inferior to the old order that radicals overthrew in their zeal for the Earthly Paradise.

Conservatives are champions of custom, convention, and continuity because they prefer the devil they know to the devil they don't know. Order and justice and freedom, they believe, are the artificial products of a long social experience, the result of centuries of trial and reflection and sacrifice. Thus the body social is a kind of spiritual corporation, comparable to the church; it may even be called a community of souls. Human society is no machine, to be treated mechanically. The continuity, the life-blood, of a society must not be interrupted. Burke's reminder of the necessity for prudent change is in the mind of the conservative. But necessary change, conservatives argue, ought to he gradual and discriminatory, never unfixing old interests at once.

Third, conservatives believe in what may be called the principle of prescription. Conservatives sense that modern people are dwarfs on the shoulders of giants, able to see farther than their ancestors only because of the great stature of those who have preceded us in time. Therefore conservatives very often emphasize the importance of prescription—that is, of things established by immemorial usage, so that the mind of man runneth not to the contrary. There exist rights of which the chief sanction is their antiquity—including rights to property, often. Similarly, our morals are prescriptive in great part. Conservatives argue that we are unlikely, we moderns, to make any brave new discoveries in morals or politics or taste. It is perilous to weigh every passing issue on the basis of private judgment and private rationality. The individual is foolish, but the species is wise, Burke declared. In politics we do well to abide by precedent and precept and even prejudice, for the great mysterious incorporation of the human race has acquired a prescriptive wisdom far greater than any man's petty private rationality.

Fourth, conservatives are guided by their principle of prudence. Burke agrees with Plato that in the statesman, prudence is chief among virtues. Any public measure ought to be judged by its probable long-run consequences, not merely by temporary advantage or popularity. Liberals and radicals, the conservative says, are imprudent: for they dash at their objectives without giving much heed to the risk of new abuses worse than the evils they hope to sweep away. As John Randolph of Roanoke put it, Providence moves slowly, but the devil always hurries. Human society being complex, remedies cannot be simple if they are to be efficacious. The conservative declares that he acts only after sufficient reflection, having weighed the consequences. Sudden and slashing reforms are as perilous as sudden and slashing surgery.

Fifth, conservatives pay attention to the principle of variety. They feel affection for the proliferating intricacy of long-established social institutions and modes of life, as distinguished from the narrowing uniformity and deadening egalitarianism of radical systems. For the preservation of a healthy diversity in any civilization, there must survive orders and classes, differences in material condition, and many sorts of inequality. The only true forms of equality are equality at the Last Judgment and equality before a just court of law; all other attempts at levelling must lead, at best, to social stagnation. Society requires honest and able leadership; and if natural and institutional differences are destroyed, presently some tyrant or host of squalid oligarchs will create new forms of inequality.

Sixth, conservatives are chastened by their principle of imperfectability. Human nature suffers irremediably from certain grave faults, the conservatives know. Man being imperfect, no perfect social order ever can be created. Because of human restlessness, mankind would grow rebellious under any utopian domination, and would break out once more in violent discontent—or else expire of boredom. To seek for utopia is to end in disaster, the conservative says: we are not made for perfect things. All that we reasonably can expect is a tolerably ordered, just, and free society, in which some evils, maladjustments, and suffering will continue to lurk. By proper attention to prudent reform, we may preserve and improve this tolerable order. But if the old institutional and moral safeguards of a nation are neglected, then the anarchic impulse in humankind breaks loose: "the ceremony of innocence is drowned." The ideologues who promise the perfection of man and society have converted a great part of the twentieth-century world into a terrestrial hell.

Seventh, conservatives are persuaded that freedom and property are closely linked. Separate property from private possession, and Leviathan becomes master of all. Upon the foundation of private property, great civilizations are built. The more widespread is the possession of private property, the more stable and productive is a commonwealth. Economic levelling, conservatives maintain, is not economic progress. Getting and spending are not the chief aims of human existence; but a sound economic basis for the person, the family, and the commonwealth is much to be desired.

Sir Henry Maine, in his Village Communities, puts strongly the case for private property, as distinguished from communal property: "Nobody is at liberty to attack several property and to say at the same time that he values civilization. The history of the two cannot be disentangled." For the institution of several property—that is, private property—has been a powerful instrument for teaching men and women responsibility, for providing motives to integrity, for supporting general culture, for raising mankind above the level of mere drudgery, for affording leisure to think and freedom to act. To be able to retain the fruits of one's labor; to be able to see one's work made permanent; to be able to bequeath one's property to one's posterity; to be able to rise from the natural condition of grinding poverty to the security of enduring accomplishment; to have something that is really one's own—these are advantages difficult to deny. The conservative acknowledges that the possession of property fixes certain duties upon the possessor; he accepts those moral and legal obligations cheerfully.

Eighth, conservatives uphold voluntary community, quite as they oppose involuntary collectivism. Although Americans have been attached strongly to privacy and private rights, they also have been a people conspicuous for a successful spirit of community. In a genuine community, the decisions most directly affecting the lives of citizens are made locally and voluntarily. Some of these functions are carried out by local political bodies, others by private associations: so long as they are kept local, and are marked by the general agreement of those affected, they constitute healthy community. But when these functions pass by default or usurpation to centralized authority, then community is in serious danger. Whatever is beneficent and prudent in modern democracy is made possible through cooperative volition. If, then, in the name of an abstract Democracy, the functions of community are transferred to distant political direction—why, real government by the consent of the governed gives way to a standardizing process hostile to freedom and human dignity.

For a nation is no stronger than the numerous little communities of which it is composed. A central administration, or a corps of select managers and civil servants, however well intentioned and well trained, cannot confer justice and prosperity and tranquility upon a mass of men and women deprived of their old responsibilities. That experiment has been made before; and it has been disastrous. It is the performance of our duties in community that teaches us prudence and efficiency and charity.

Ninth, the conservative perceives the need for prudent restraints upon power and upon human passions. Politically speaking, power is the ability to do as one likes, regardless of the wills of one's fellows. A state in which an individual or a small group are able to dominate the wills of their fellows without check is a despotism, whether it is called monarchical or aristocratic or democratic. When every person claims to be a power unto himself, then society falls into anarchy. Anarchy never lasts long, being intolerable for everyone, and contrary to the ineluctable fact that some persons are more strong and more clever than their neighbors. To anarchy there succeeds tyranny or oligarchy, in which power is monopolized by a very few.

The conservative endeavors to so limit and balance political power that anarchy or tyranny may not arise. In every age, nevertheless, men and women are tempted to overthrow the limitations upon power, for the sake of some fancied temporary advantage. It is characteristic of the radical that he thinks of power as a force for good—so long as the power falls into his hands. In the name of liberty, the French and Russian revolutionaries abolished the old restraints upon power; but power cannot be abolished; it always finds its way into someone's hands. That power which the revolutionaries had thought oppressive in the hands of the old regime became many times as tyrannical in the hands of the radical new masters of the state.

Knowing human nature for a mixture of good and evil, the conservative does not put his trust in mere benevolence. Constitutional restrictions, political checks and balances, adequate enforcement of the laws, the old intricate web of restraints upon will and appetite—these the conservative approves as instruments of freedom and order. A just government maintains a healthy tension between the claims of authority and the claims of liberty.

Tenth, the thinking conservative understands that permanence and change must be recognized and reconciled in a vigorous society. The conservative is not opposed to social improvement, although he doubts whether there is any such force as a mystical Progress, with a Roman P, at work in the world. When a society is progressing in some respects, usually it is declining in other respects. The conservative knows that any healthy society is influenced by two forces, which Samuel Taylor Coleridge called its Permanence and its Progression. The Permanence of a society is formed by those enduring interests and convictions that gives us stability and continuity; without that Permanence, the fountains of the great deep are broken up, society slipping into anarchy. The Progression in a society is that spirit and that body of talents which urge us on to prudent reform and improvement; without that Progression, a people stagnate.

Therefore the intelligent conservative endeavors to reconcile the claims of Permanence and the claims of Progression. He thinks that the liberal and the radical, blind to the just claims of Permanence, would endanger the heritage bequeathed to us, in an endeavor to hurry us into some dubious Terrestrial Paradise.

The conservative, in short, favors reasoned and temperate progress; he is opposed to the cult of Progress, whose votaries believe that everything new necessarily is superior to everything old.

Change is essential to the body social, the conservative reasons, just as it is essential to the human body. A body that has ceased to renew itself has begun to die. But if that body is to be vigorous, the change must occur in a regular manner, harmonizing with the form and nature of that body; otherwise change produces a monstrous growth, a cancer, which devours its host. The conservative takes care that nothing in a society should ever be wholly old, and that nothing should ever be wholly new. This is the means of the conservation of a nation, quite as it is the means of conservation of a living organism. Just how much change a society requires, and what sort of change, depend upon the circumstances of an age and a nation.

Such, then, are ten principles that have loomed large during the two centuries of modern conservative thought. Other principles of equal importance might have been discussed here: the conservative understanding of justice, for one, or the conservative view of education. But such subjects, time running on, I must leave to your private investigation.

The great line of demarcation in modern politics, Eric Voegelin used to point out, is not a division between liberals on one side and totalitarians on the other. No, on one side of that line are all those men and women who fancy that the temporal order is the only order, and that material needs are their only needs, and that they may do as they like with the human patrimony. On the other side of that line are all those people who recognize an enduring moral order in the universe, a constant human nature, and high duties toward the order spiritual and the order temporal.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

What is Ideology?

In the first of my installments concerning the rise of Modernism, or the Moderno-Protestant Revolutionary Ideologies, I will briefly discuss what an ideology actually is (as opposed to a science, philosophy, or religion).

The fundamental distinction between ideology and authentic knowledge, is that an ideology pre-supposes an imaginary world and then measures the real world by how the real world fails to live up to the premises of the imaginary world (Marxism, feminism, various forms of socialism, racism, capitalism, etc.).

The vehicles of authentic knowledge are religion, philosophy, and science; in other words (or word), I am describing science .  This is because these three paths are concerned with the real world, as it is... thus Truth.   Now, many will complain that religion (and perhaps philosophy) should not actually be classified as vehicles of Truth, because different traditions oftentimes conflict with one another; however, science, philosophy, and religion all share a common limitation; they can be wrong, or provide an incomplete picture of the Truth.

This reality does not undermine my fundamental thesis, because all of these vehicles are evaluating and examining the real world. 

A religion tries to explain the phenomena of the real world with reference to supernatural causes.

A science tries to understand the phenomena of the real world through an examination of those phenomena and rationally attempts to explain how those phenomena occur without necessary recourse to supernatural causes.

A philosophy attempts to understand the real world through a rational apprehension of material phenomena with reference to metaphysical, as opposed to supernatural, causes.

The Catholic Faith synthesizes all three of these approaches and completely subverts paradigmatic ideology.

Ideology, on the other hand, fetishizes some aspect of authentic knowledge and makes it central to understanding all phenomena.  Also, an ideology presupposes that there is a fundamental conflict in human society that needs to be resolved (often violently).  An ideology then asserts that there is only one way to resolve this contradiction and proceeds to judge all phenomena with this resolution in mind; therefore, this causes all material phenomena to be judged through the prism of this resolution.  Finally, an ideology posits that the resolution of this contradiction will eliminate the basis of human injustice.

For example, Marxism recognizes that there is material inequality in the world and that this inequality leads to conflict within society; however, Marx then asserts that all conflicts are rooted in material inequality and goes on to explain the nature of the world as a conflict between those who control resources and those who do not.  Finally, Marx tries to explain all human injustice as the result of these inequities and asserts that only by erasing them, can humanity be free of injustice.

Ideologies are attempts to explain worldly phenomena through a grotesquely over-simplified model of the world and of human interactions.

The New Translation of the Novus Ordo and the Problem of Universal Salvation

I am fairly excited about the new translation of the Mass.  I am not any kind of liturgical fetishist, but the errors that made their way into the current translation of the Novus Ordo Mass are fairly irritating.  I am fairly interested to see some of these issues addressed and seeing some of the 'touchy-feely' stuff removed or improved.

I am particularly happy that we will be saying 'I believe' during the Nicene Creed, rather than 'we believe.'  It may be a petty issue, but it really does seem to decentralize the whole premise of the Creed.  Also credo in Latin is I believe, not we believe.

Of course, the biggest problem has to do with the Prayer of Consecration:

“Take this, all of you, and drink from it, for this is the chalice [previously "cup"] of my Blood, the Blood of the new and eternal covenant, which will be poured out for you and for many [previously "for all men"] for the forgiveness of sins.”

Now, the distinction between 'for many' and 'for all men' should be pretty clear.  This is a direct rejection of universal salvation, which is one of the oldest and most serious doctrinal errors.  Christ is very specific that not everyone is going to be saved (in fact, He describes Himself as a 'narrow gate', certainly implying that all of us will not be getting through it). 

Some may say that this is mean-spirited and divisive, but it is simply an assertion of the importance of the Faith.  If everyone is saved, then there is no reason to adhere to a particular teaching or particular tenets.  If this were the case, then there would be no purpose in the Church and Christ would not have bothered to establish it.  Of course, if you don't believe in the Church or Christ, then you won't care one way or the other (in fact, it is likely that you would find universal salvation more appealing); however, one must remember that this is actually the wording in the Catholic Mass.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Lesbian Teacher Fired from Catholic School

This story is fairly common... lesbian teacher takes job at Catholic school... brags about orientation... gets canned... gets lawyer... big media blah-blah.

It was the comment section that really got my attention.  Surprisingly (or not), many of the comments are really anti-Catholic and pretty darn nasty.  Although, I have to admit that some of them were kind of amusing.


My favorite:


"Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree... yeah, makes perfect sense."

At least this one was creative... but the hatred of the Church and the Truth that is present in the hearts of these people should be a clear sign of the intrinsic disorder in their lives.  I wish that such people could see that true source of hatred lies not in the Church, but in their hearts.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

More Stem Cell News


Well, after my look into the connection between embryonic stem cells and autism, I thought that I would provide some interesting updates in other stem cell news.

The big story, which has gotten a fair amount of spin in the media, is the story about the young Israeli who developed a brain tumor due to a treatment involving embryonic stem cells.  In general, this story is covered from the perspective that the doctors who treated the boy had not been responsible in their injection of aborted fetal tissue into the brain of this ill boy; however, there has been no actual evidence that any other effect would have been forthcoming.  Scientists have yet to achieve any meaningful advance with therapies utilizing embryonic stem cells.

Interestingly, the much less popular adult stem cells (and umbilical cord blood stem cells) are generating useful treatments and therapies all the time.  The Vatican* has even begun funding research with adult stem cells.

One needs to wonder why it is that there is so much less interest in adult stem cells (which have been utilized in successful therapies and treatments) than there is in embryonic stem cells (which have not produced much more than tumors).  I think it has to do with money and with patents (adult stem cells have much less profit potential than do embryonic stem cells);  part of this problem has to do with WARF and the patents that they hold on embryonic stem cell lines.  There is also the question of therapies using embryonic stem cells being more profitable than those that utilize adult stem cells, because of the publically financed nature of most adult stem cell research at this point; interestingly, embryonic stem cell research (which is more expensive and less predictable that adult stem cell research) requires government subsidies to work (as most investors realize that embryonic stem cells are much less likely to result in failures).

So these corporations that want both government subsidies and freedom from government intervention in their profits and affairs, expect that they should be able to take tax-payer funding and utilize this research to reap profits from those same tax-payers.

For more information, check out Do No Harm.


*I also have to point out that I am irritated with the obfuscational coverage that this story has generated in the secular media.  Journalists have made a concerted effort to blur the line between adult stem cells and embryonic stem cells in their coverage of the stem cell debate (for example, any story that you come across that claims a treatment has been developed with the use of stem cells, always fails to prominently and clearly state that these therapies have all be performed using adult stem cells). 

In the same vein, the media now boldly pronounces, with disingenuous surprise, that the Vatican has 'changed' its position and now embraces stem cell research.  Just to be clear, the Vatican has NOT changed its position one iota; instead, the Vatican has simply 'put its money where its mouth is' and begun financially supporting the therapy that it has supported since this issue first arose.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Abortion and Autism

It seems that a reasonable link can be inferred between the use of aborted fetal tissues in the preparation of certain vaccines and the massive spike in autism since 1988.  As a father and a Catholic, I have agonized over the question of vaccination, not because of the supposed link to autism, but because of the use of aborted fetal tissue in the cultivation of certain vaccines.  My wife and I try to be both moral and responsible with with regards to our children's vaccinations, and so we always ask for any vaccines that are not made with aborted fetal tissues.  I wish that I was surprised by the fact that so few doctors even know that aborted fetal tissue is used in several of the major vaccines, but I really am not.  Anyway, the USCCB made it clear that we, as parents, have a responsibility to see our children vaccinated, but also have a responsibility to make every effort to avoid using illicitly created vaccines.  We do this, but sometimes we are still forced to use tainted vaccines.

I always thought that the mercury issue was a red herring, but I did wonder why there appeared to be a such a strong coincidence with autism and vaccination.

Well, I have to say that this news about the correlation betweeen autism and abortion is really not surprising.  From the perspective of natural law, it makes sense that there would be such consequences for violating the natural order like this.  This is not to say that God is punishing children who get vaccinated, or even that God is indirectly punishing the scientists that engineered these vaccines, but that there are always severe consequences for violating the natural law... Sadly, I am not surprised that the consequence here is so terrible.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Live Nude Girls as 'art'

You know, I really hate it when stuff like this passes as art.  I find it interesting that models who have no problem being ogled while naked, and being squeezed between in a doorway, would then be offended when people poked and touched them 'inappropriately.' 

We are able to draw such strange lines regarding behavior in our society, because we ignore any sort of natural law.  If one does not desire to be touched inappropriately, one should not participate in inappropriate activities. 

It is as though the part of the soul that informs an individual's shame is slowed by the degeneracy of our culture, but not stilled entirely.  We are able to ignore our impulse to shame until it is too late to avoid the consequences of shameful behavior.  If one does not want to be treated shamefully, one should not engage in shameful acts, and one should not encourage others to engage in shameful acts.  To encourage a person to look at and touch naked bodies with no expectation of them losing a their sense of propriety is simply unreasonable. 

Instead of kicking out the over-stimulated spectators, they should be kicking out Abramović and her 'art.' 

A beautiful change of life...

Mandy Smith, former 'lover' of Bill Wyman (guitarist for the Rolling Stones), has come out in support of raising the age of consent in England.  She has gone from being a 'wild child' in the '80s (literally, Smith was 14 when she began her sexual relationship with Wyman), to having become a celibate, Roman Catholic mentor of young women and an advocate for protecting young girls from predators.

Her story is truly inspirational.

Interesting choice for Miami

I gotta say that I am fairly impressed that Bishop Thomas Wenski has been named the new bishop of the 'gay friendly' diocese of Miami.

Bishop Wenski has a reputation for being staunchly Pro-Life, and calling dissenting Catholics on their BS.  He seems like a pretty no-nonsense kind of guy.  Just what Miami needs right now.

So, I was locked out of my account for a few days... sorry.

Well, I did it.  I forgot my password for my blog account and it took a little longer to get it back than I though it would.  My bad.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Pornographic Crucifix?



Unfortunately, I can kind of see what they are talking about here.  I doubt that it was intentional in any way, but I still might consider touching it up a bit.  I wish I did not see it... but I do.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Irritated...

I have to say that I am irritated. I am irritated and disappointed with myself, because of my failure to stand up against the BS at the Academy. I am particularly irritated that I took down my former blog and hid away my faith for a few years. I did not deny Christ, but I certainly denied my vocation to evangelize.

All I can say to my former readers who have come back... sorry. All I can say to my new readers... I hope I do not disappoint you.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The Ridiculous Nature of Mistheism

Sometimes I just love the complete asininity of the new mistheists. I use the term mistheist, because we are not really talking about simple atheists; atheists simply do not acknowledge the existence of God, or gods, or supernatural powers, whereas mistheists actively hate God and work to discredit and annoy believers.

I was a mistheist. I used to make asinine comments about God and His believers. I lived to annoy people of faith. Well... I take that back... like most mistheists, I really only lived to annoy Christians. I thought I was so much more clever than these silly and credulous believers, and so I would mock them and try to make them question their faith with all my 'clever' and 'original' arguments (arguments that I had learned from watching television and having no experience with faith or God).

The inherently anti-rational position of the mistheist is a morass of contradictions and self-delusion. The hatred of God emerges not so much from a love of evil, as it does from shame. The mistheist is so ashamed of the things that he has done, things that he knows are inherently wicked and sinful (even if they have been permitted and normalized by the society at large), and that he must lash out at the one thing that he knows he cannot lie to or hide from. The mistheist denies God, because he knows that God exists; the mistheist knows that he will be judged and he fears this judgment. This fear is so overwhelming that it drives the mistheist away from his only opportunity for resolution… for salvation.

Ultimately, the only possible justification for the hatred of God that is expressed by people like Dawkins and Hitchens, is the egoism that can only be born of true nihilism.

The nihilist denies that there is any God, any purpose, and ultimately (even he does not realize it), any reason in the universe. The mistheist has chosen to do this because his ego will not permit him to recognize an authority above himself; the mistheist has chosen to do this, because he fears a final judgment and cannot bring himself to admit his weakness. Ironically, it is precisely this weakness that the mistheist construes as strength… and it is this weakness that keeps him from realizing the Truth.

Monday, April 12, 2010

I wonder how long it will take for this to get overturned...

So, apparently it is illegal to kill an unborn child without the consent of the mother... I guess that fits right in with the culture of 'choice'.

Therapy and the Sex Abuse Scandal

Well, here is an interesting admission. Apparently, someone is finally on record regarding the complicity of the psychological establishment in encouraging sexual predators within the Church.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Gendercide continues

I am not really sure what it will take for people to realize that we should not be mucking about with the unborn. Abortion on demand (or, in this case, mandated by the state) will be leading us to WWIII.

Remember that China and India contain roughly 1/2 of the world's population. Both are suffering ecological catastrophes, both practice selective female infanticide, and will be suffering massive water shortages in the next few decades. Both are nuclear powers. Both will have massive surplusses of unmarriagable males. Make your own conclusions.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Newsweek and the Truth? Really... ?

Well, Newsweek has apparently accepted the fact that the sexual scandals which the Church has fallen victim to, are not unique to Catholics.

Father Z, over at What does the prayer really say?, has already commented on it pretty thoroughly...

BTW, this one was referred to my by my sister-in-law.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Troy and the New Paganism

So, I just finished watching Troy, which I had avoided since it came out, figuring it was likely garbage; however, I finally decided to watch it and found it to be kind of interesting. I was particularly taken with the film's approach to paganism. Obviously, the conceit of the creators was that the Greek gods do not exist and that the people who worship them make ridiculous decisions based on reading the innards of animals, portents, and visions.

Now, I actually tried to see this as some sort of oblique criticism of Christianity, but it really doesn't work. The film seems to be legitimately criticizing paganism (which surprised me). Perhaps it was intended as a broader critique of 'religion', but it really doesn't work on that level either. I found it to be fairly cogent in its presentation of the bleak and hopeless character of paganism (and most non-monotheistic religions). This pleased me to no end, but the film also misses out on a few significant elements of the materialist vision of paganism.

Considering that we exist within in a new paganism (particularly in our entertainment industry), I figured that they must have some semblance of an understanding about what paganism is. But I was surprised by both what they missed and what they hit.

First, let me say what I mean by the New Paganism. I do NOT mean the sort of wicca-wannabe-aesir-loving-new-agers; I do mean idolaters. Pagan gods were simply personifications of human desires; the gods of our society are money, sex, power, etc.

Hollywood certainly understands idolatry (as does the banking industry and most other Modernist innovations and ideologies), even if they don't necessarily have any insight into why it is problematic. The idolatry of Troy was nicely presented and the characters seemed to be fairly conscious of their materialist paradigm.

In general, the film embraced idolatry and materialism, even managing to capture some of Homer's attempts to skewer and criticize the system (however, lacking the gods within the story, this becomes much more difficult). The one place where I feel the film failed is in its understanding of Achilles' reaction to the death of Patroclus.

For some reason, the film decided to fudge Achilles' (and Odysseus') complicity in the death of Patroclus and managed to undercut the pagan significance of Achilles' rage. The significance of Achilles’ rage at Patroculus' death was that Achilles had a brief moment of realization that the pagan ethos was not sufficient. That death in battle was not glorious for its own sake; however, his response to this was to make Hector die in battle, compounding Achilles' culpability and making the resolution of his conflict even more impossible to attain.

Now, we need to view this from a moral (and ultimately Catholic) morality; Homer clearly understands that there is something seriously lacking in the so-called 'heroic' code. Plato picks up on this and loves Homer for realizing the limitations of the heroic code, but condemns him for being unable to offer any sort of meaningful alternative.

Plato himself can only proceed to a certain point in trying to resolve the problem of Achilles, because he has no conception of original sin. Plato would argue that Achilles did not fully realize that what he was doing was 'wrong'; however, I would argue that Achilles DOES seem to understand that there is something wrong about the heroic culture, but has no real alternative. Plato can only offer a myth to explain what he sees as the basis of a moral universe, but lacks the revelation of Christ.

Even though Plato would come to influence much of what Catholics would come to say about morality, Plato's own morality falls short because of his isolation from the revelation of Truth on the Cross.

So, without a sense of what Achilles actually did not understand, it is difficult for the creators of the film to adequately justify Achilles' rage.
Even though I kind of respect the creators' decision to forgo present the gods as real, in doing so, they fail to take into account the metaphysical complexities that Homer was attempting to personify by using the gods.

The reason that the film feels so empty (especially at the end) is that it rejects the metaphysical implications of Achilles' rage and so fails to truly express Achilles' grief. This is a grief that can only be truly expressed by one who has not had the benefit of the revelation of Faith, but has realized the lie of his own metaphysical and ethical suppositions.

Because our new paganism has no metaphysics, it is even more hopeless and nihilistic than traditional paganism. Traditional paganism allowed for the imagination of metaphysical alternatives (and so for meaningful despair, I suppose... maybe just active despair), whereas the new paganism does not allow for any genuine metaphysical consolation and so generates a truly nihilistic despair, and acedia, that not only crushes our moral instincts, but causes us to despair even that those instincts exist.

This could probably be more coherent, but I am trying to get my ideas hashed out on a Saturday morning as I get ready to bring my kids to soccer practice. I am sure that others could offer meaningful criticism that I might incorporate into a more polished revision.

I will continue to think on these topics as well.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Census Bureau Encourages Homosexuals to Falsify Documents

I found this article to be a little bit unsettling... Why do you think that the Federal Government would encourage people to lie on these documents? I wonder what the government has in store for us?

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Passion Mimes... why...

Passion Mimes... that is all I can muster the sanity to utter...

Monday, April 5, 2010

Amazingly depressing stuff...

Most of the news in the Catholic world has been about the increasingly expanding sexual abuse scandals throughout the Church.

This crisis is undermining the credibility of the Church on a wide variety of issues and is providing plenty of ammunition from its many detractors.

The crisis is of such a type that it is nearly impossible for the Church to defend itself from the more vicious attacks and misinformation that is currently flooding the world media. Certainly, the Church hierarchy has a responsibility to own up to its failures; however ,the Church also has a responsibility to correct lies, exaggerations, and libel.

Unfortunately, any attempt to do so appears primarily as sour grapes, and there is no way to effectively overcome this obstacle. It is incredibly frustrating to have the Church under attack by enemies with ulterior motives who, nevertheless, have legitimate criticism of horrendous acts. these acts are SO horrendous that nearly any exaggeration seems unassailable in response. Genuine evils were committed by Catholic priests and bishops, and this undermines the ability of Church hierarchy to respond to this smear campaign.

This scandal is also creating great danger for the Church, as its enemies are using it as an opportunity to attack it in many ways. Lawsuits, public denunciations, and even violence are being justified against the Church and its hierarchy.

This is a scary time for Catholics world-wide.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Archbishop Rowan Williams... Look To the Plank In Your Own Eye!

Boy, it really gets me steamed when the heads of other religions feel it necessary to weigh in on the Church's scandals... especially Rowan Williams (who is currently overseeing the dissolution of his own Protestant sect).

Unlike many traditional Catholics, I welcome the scrutiny that the Church has come under as a result of the homosexual infiltration of the priesthood and the subsequent sexual scandals. I do not believe that Truth can be wrong and it is certainly True that there have been truly horrendous lapses in judgment that allowed sexually unstable individuals into positions of authority and responsibility. I only wish that the media were using this as an opportunity for constructive criticism as opposed to a justification for smearing the Pope and the Church as a whole.

With all this in mind, however, I find it fairly ridiculous that Rowan Williams ('head' of the Anglican Communion) would deign to criticize the Catholic Church for it's handling of homosexuals (and other sexual deviants) in the priesthood, when the Anglican Communion is currently tearing itself apart over the legitimization of homosexual clergy and the promotion of homosexual marriage.

Where the Catholic Church was shamed by it's homosexual problems (reacting iwith botched cover-ups), the Anglican Communion is actively INVITING the exact same problems into their own Church! They are actual CELEBRATING the inclusion of sexually unstable individual into positions of authority in their hierarchy!

So I say to Archbishop Williams, look to the plank in your own eye, before condemning the mote in the eyes of others.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Well, I take it back

I just experienced a grace-filled Easter Vigil Mass with my children (who were both over-tired and well-behaved... hence, the grace-filled)... It really reminded of why I love the Church and why I ended up converting to begin with.

I actually received my confirmation at Easter Vigil Mass in 2002 and so, I guess, it will always remain close to me.

We also watched The Passion of the Christ last night, which I have not seen in nearly 7 years. The film is still amazing and inspiring (even though Mel Gibson has gone off the deep end recently... pray for his reconversion).

Overall, this has been a glorious Lent and looks to be a glorious Easter season.

What a depressing time to come back to blogging

Man... it seems like the only stuff out there right now is concerning the various abuse scandals throughout the Church.

When I left the blogosphere, this certainly was going on, but it seemed as though it had gone away for a few years. Now it seems to have returned even stronger. There is a concerted effort to derail the Church hierarchy and to undermine the credibility of our leaders. Mother Church has been under consistent attack by the media, the secular governments, the educational institutions, leaders of other faiths, intellectuals, and pundits.

Therefore, I will probably not devote a whole bunch of time to these issue; instead, I will focus on the broader problems that led to and contribute to the current state of affairs in America and in the world.

I'm Baaaack...

Well, I have been off-line for about 3 years now and I am sure that very few, if any, of you will remember my old blog concernedcatholic. At the time, I was a graduate student at a fairly liberal university and was threatened with exposure as a Catholic... ;)

I looked at my options and eventually ended up closing my blog and moving on to other things.

In that time, many things have happened. I have had more kids (4 now) and have left the Academy to pursue a job teaching at a Catholic high school. I own a home and am no longer dependent on the whims of crazy academics for livelihood.

Also, I have been repeatedly urged to return to my cultural commentary by family, friends, and my faith.

Things have changed in this country since I last blogged... we have a new president... we are in a recession... we have nationalized healthcare... it is, indeed, a very different place... but we are still at war, still under threat from secularists and modernists, and still losing the culture wars.

With all that in mind, I begin my new foray into blogosphere.