Monthly Archives: May 2015

so that the rest of humanity may seek out the Lord

“My brothers, listen to me. Symeon has described how God first concerned himself with acquiring from among the Gentiles a people for his name. The words of the prophets agree with this, as is written:

After this I shall return
and rebuild the fallen hut of David;
from its ruins I shall rebuild it
and raise it up again,
so that the rest of humanity may seek out the Lord,
even all the Gentiles on whom my name is invoked.
Thus says the Lord who accomplishes these things,
known from of old.

(source: Thursday of the Fifth Week of Easter)

What I like to hear!

I just plain have to quote this and add emphasis:

Marriage is more than the wedding ceremony, the flowers, the dress and the photos, Pope Francis said in his weekly general audience: It is a participation in the Church’s mission.

“Men and women, courageous enough to carry this treasure in the ‘earthen vessels’ of our humanity … are an essential resource for the Church, as well as for the whole world!

Speaking to the crowds gathered in St. Peter’s Square for his weekly catechesis on May 6, the Pope explained that each marriage that demonstrates the beauty of the sacrament enriches the life of the Church. In the same way, it “is impoverished when marriage is disfigured in any way.”

(source: Pope: Marriage Should Follow Path of Love Which Christ Has With the Church)

Hard At Work

The point Goldberg makes here sounds obvious to some (and offensive to others, I suppose)–but it is often hard to keep in perspective, even if one is really fully committed to helping students learn.  One can become a bitter “gotcha!” teacher, a burn-out, or more likely a passive, disengaged, rationalizing teacher.

It is difficult to keep finding the bar, raising it where possible, and pushing students to clear it.  But that’s the job.

Goldberg makes the point, today–but Cicero called it long ago.

What may feel like compassion in the classroom is actually cowardice; the teacher is afraid to hurt the feelings of kids who, at some level, may need to have their feelings hurt if that’s the price of a good education. The notion that we help the under-privileged by leveling away distinctions between good grammar and bad grammar — or thuggishness and non-thuggishness — is quite simply an argument for dismantling civilization.

(source: How Civilizations Die (An Ongoing Series))

[posted during a grading break in finals week.  REALLY good classes this term, FWIW]

That Burning Gaze is a Forgiving God’s Searching Eye

Among the Sacraments, it is that of Reconciliation that best shows the merciful face of God. We must never forget, either as penitents or as confessors: there is no sin that God cannot forgive! None! Only what is hidden from divine mercy cannot be forgiven, like those that hide themselves from the sun cannot be illuminated or warmed.

(source: Pope Francis: The Sacrament of Reconciliation is one which best shows the merciful face of God- maltadiocese)

Like a Roaring Lion

It is not actually all that pleasing to see the tactical nihilism of the Left collapsing back toward the absolute nihilism that has always used ideologues suborned by greed, lust, and the will to power as its catspaw:

Over at Slate, Amanda Marcotte thinks it’s absolutely hilarious that Satanists are challenging abortion restrictions on religious liberty grounds, seeking to expand abortion access. She argues this somehow makes conservative use of religious liberty laws “a little more complicated.” […] I suspect this effort — if it ever gets to court – would stumble on the state’s acknowledged interest in protecting what the Supreme Court has called the “potential life” of even non-viable unborn children. Yet even if the Satanists win, there would be something . . . incredibly appropriate about the pro-abortion Left wrapping its arms around Satan in the quest to preserve abortion on demand.

(source: Of Course the Satanic Temple Embraces Abortion, and Of Course the Left Applauds)

Not pleasing at all, but hardly surprising.  When a faction cheers the willful destruction of the innocent, you can guess what spirit animates their assemblies.

But this is not a winning choice.

And were this world all devils o’er,
and watching to devour us,
we lay it not to heart so sore;
they cannot overpower us.
And let the prince of ill
look grim as e’er he will,
he harms us not a whit;
for why? his doom is writ;
a word shall quickly slay him.

(source: A safe stronghold our God is still)

Getting the details right

Some friends got the wrong end of the stick, I think, connecting two unrelated phenomena to account for a couple’s inability to get a courthouse wedding in Oklahoma.  They seemed to be under the impression that courthouses had stopped doing weddings in response to the awkward legal situation in which Oklahoma’s legal and constitutional commitment to actual marriage is ignored by some of her courts, and denied a hearing in the Supreme Court.

But this is not new:

[2007] An Oklahoma judge has put an end to the daily wedding docket in Oklahoma County courthouses, effectively ending the practice in the state. The decision, handed down by presiding Judge Vicki Robertson, set Friday as the final day that brides and bridegrooms to be can go before an assigned judge to take their vows, The Oklahoman reported Tuesday. The county was the last in the state to offer a daily wedding docket.

(source: Oklahoma courts end daily wedding docket)

And this has only passed one house of the Oklahoma legislature:

[HB 1125] Marriage licenses; deleting issuance of marriage licenses; providing for marriage certificates and affidavits of common law marriage; effective date.

(source: Bill Information)

I’m not sure I’m in favor of HB 1125, but I do see the effort here to both honor real marriage and extricate Oklahoma from a hard-to-win constitutional crisis.

However, if officials were simply refusing to provide any cooperative service to provide civil weddings in order to avoid being compelled to make “legal” filings of known falsehoods, I would still support their heroic grasp of their basic moral obligations.   Continue reading »

Vital Distinctions

Even a lot of actually married folks need to learn something from this article about what’s right when bringing children into the world.  

It’s not about the “right” of a man or a woman to “have a child” if that’s the fashion accessory of the moment, or the satisfaction of some sentimental wish.  Rather, every child just by existing has an insuperable claim on some man and some woman–on those who participate in the fundamental procreative act.  Turning that act into commerce, turning “having a baby” into the province of prosthetics and services bought and sold, whether surrogacy or IVF or contraception or abortion, abrogates or attenuates that claim:  it makes the adjudication of percentages of responsibility distributed over many people, and adjudication of some mysterious quantum of “consent” and some other mysterious quantum of “welfare of the child,” seem as necessary as it necessarily must be impossible.  It denies children their rights, and deludes all of us concerning the nature of our rights and obligations.

Those who reflect well on the realities of marriage tend to come to the same conclusion as reliably as every civilization that outlived its self-destructive fads has done:

I have always wanted to be a father. I would give just about anything for the chance to have kids. But the first rule of fatherhood is that a good dad will put the needs of his children before his own—and every child needs a mom and a dad. Period. I could never forgive myself for ripping a child away from his mother so I could selfishly live out my dreams.

Same-sex relationships, by design, require children to be removed from one or more of their biological parents and raised absent a father or mother. This hardly seems fair. So much of what we do as a society prioritizes the needs of adults over the needs of children. Social Security and Medicare rob the young to pay the old. The Affordable Care Act requires young and healthy people to buy insurance to subsidize the cost for the old and sick. Our schools seem more concerned with keeping the teachers unions happy than they are educating our children. Haven’t children suffered enough to make adults’ lives more convenient? For once, it would be nice to see our society put the needs of children first. Let’s raise them in homes where they can enjoy having both a mom and a dad. We owe them that.

(source: I’m Gay, And I Oppose Same-Sex Marriage)

Answers to a Survey on the Family–part 2

In early 2015, our Archdiocese like many others was offered a 47-question open-ended survey in order to gather information about what people throughout the world understand about the Church’s teaching, her pastoral practice, current conditions, and the reality of marriage and family life.  The survey was probably a poor translation, and the questions were ill-structured, so I ended up writing about 15,500 words in the one week window for completing it.  I have chosen to share a few of these, here, as well, for your comments.  I will quote the question, and what follows is my answer.  I have edited the answers slightly for brevity, politeness, and clarity.

5. How does the Church respond, in her pastoral activity, to the diffusion of cultural relativism in secularized society and to the consequent rejection, on the part of many, of the model of family formed by a man and woman united in the marriage and open to life?

“I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus who is to judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom: PREACH THE WORD, BE URGENT IN SEASON AND OUT OF SEASON, CONVINCE, REBUKE, AND EXHORT, BE UNFAILING IN PATIENCE AND IN TEACHING. For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own likings, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander into myths. As for you, always be steady, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, fulfil your ministry” —What else IS there? Woe unto me if I preach not the Gospel!

But the work of proclamation must suffuse the lives of the faithful and shape their interaction in family, parish, and neighborhood. To do that, we must recognize that the faithful have different gracious abilities, obligations, and understandings than are current in the world at large. When we assess the behavior of the faithful by the standards of the world at large, we invariably suffer the “ideological colonization” of which the Holy Father has so forthrightly spoken. Rather, we must teach the faithful to understand themselves as they are in reality, not as they are construed in the faulty categories of Enlightenment rationalism, Modernism, and post-modern thought. Those who teach the faithful must be conversant in the language of essences, able to differentiate formal principles from subsequent social constructions. They must be able to reason in terms of analogy, rather than constantly wavering between univocal propositions and emotivist mystification. They must be able to interpret Scripture with fidelity to the historical sense unfettered by outmoded skeptical and higher critical presuppositions, but in expectation of a robust spiritual sense that escapes the reductionism of merely historical-critical or historical-grammatical exegesis. They must be able to understand “spiritual” as referring to the manifestation of divinely revealed realities, of manifest relationships between God and other people that might remain obscure to unaided natural reason, and to understand that as having the dimensions that the Church has long held Scripture to unfold: the sense relating to the manifestation of the People of God as those called to realize their union with Christ, their Head and Bridegroom; the sense relating to the individual need to be truly conformed to Christ, to live at the level of His calling; and the sense relating to the incipient fulfillment of all that faith proclaims and hope expects in Christ.

Only when the formation of teachers within the Church, and the formation of the faithful, actually conforms to sound exegetical principles and orthodox hermeneutical and catechetical methods will the faithful be able to see the reality of husband+wife and parent+child in their proper light, the light the Church has always proclaimed and that the Magisterium has continually reaffirmed. Only when the faithful can understand themselves as they really are will they be able to reason with the rest of the world on reasonable terms of committed dialogue (admitting that we come to the table with presuppositions, not as empty notepads) and appeal to common ground (expecting that observation of empirical and sociological evidence will eventually reveal both what is real and how it is distorted by subsequent social construction). And only when the faithful can understand themselves as they really are will they be able to commit themselves to truth, goodness, and beauty as united in Christ all the way to martyrdom without running ahead to foolish political extravagances and futile gestures of defiance or conciliation.

Instead, returning to my interpretation of “how does” as “what have I seen … doing,” I would say that in general I see a shoulder-shrugging fatalism about “secularized society” taken as a starting point for analysis, built on a series of mistakes that lead to “ideological colonization”: the confusion of sociological with empirical method, and thus the conflation of a wide variety of social constructions with “science” as though sociological observations of current habits were material and historical facts or features of Creation; a resulting tendency to treat only the invisible matters of faith, and at that only the interior ones, whether of individual motivation or social sentiment, as the proper domain of the spiritual and of authoritative teaching. Compounding this, the Church appears more afraid of being labeled “fundamentalist” by those hostile to all consequential religious teaching than of being considered unfaithful by Christ.

For all of that, there are many signs of hope! American Catholics seem to have been surprised awake by the Obama administration’s bafflingly unprovoked and consistent efforts to re-enact Bismarck’s Kulturkampf, marginalizing Christians generally and Catholics very specifically across the board. The response has been far too merely political, and rationalized using Enlightenment ideology that cannot actually suffice—that is, in fact, a contributor to the very “ideological colonization” which it should be our first priority to resist. There are efforts to teach, there are many of the faithful who are vocally refusing to be confused or bewildered by the uncertain sound of many dithering bishops in Europe, and there are many who are energized to “cast into the deep” in pursuit of greater holiness. There is a general, effectual resistance to the American regime’s support for abortion on demand, and a broad consensus that the slaughter of babies recognizeably moving, resisting pain, and learning language should be illegal—resisted only by certain hard-liners and the sclerotic politics of a decadent nation. If we are willing to teach our own the truth, and to commit ourselves to martyrdom on its behalf, there is every reason to think that God may yet send us days of joy and triumph.

The Athanasian Creed

Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold the Catholic Faith. Which Faith except everyone do keep whole and undefiled, without doubt he shall perish everlastingly. And the Catholic Faith is this, that we worship one God in Trinity and Trinity in Unity. Neither confounding the Persons, nor dividing the Substance. For there is one Person of the Father, another of the Son, and another of the Holy Ghost. But the Godhead of the Father, of the Son and of the Holy Ghost is all One, the Glory Equal, the Majesty Co-Eternal. Such as the Father is, such is the Son, and such is the Holy Ghost. The Father Uncreate, the Son Uncreate, and the Holy Ghost Uncreate. The Father Incomprehensible, the Son Incomprehensible, and the Holy Ghost Incomprehensible. The Father Eternal, the Son Eternal, and the Holy Ghost Eternal and yet they are not Three Eternals but One Eternal. As also there are not Three Uncreated, nor Three Incomprehensibles, but One Uncreated, and One Uncomprehensible. So likewise the Father is Almighty, the Son Almighty, and the Holy Ghost Almighty. And yet they are not Three Almighties but One Almighty. So the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Ghost is God. And yet they are not Three Gods, but One God. So likewise the Father is Lord, the Son Lord, and the Holy Ghost Lord. And yet not Three Lords but One Lord. For, like as we are compelled by the Christian verity to acknowledge every Person by Himself to be God and Lord, so are we forbidden by the Catholic Religion to say, there be Three Gods or Three Lords. The Father is made of none, neither created, nor begotten. The Son is of the Father alone; not made, nor created, but begotten. The Holy Ghost is of the Father, and of the Son neither made, nor created, nor begotten, but proceeding. So there is One Father, not Three Fathers; one Son, not Three Sons; One Holy Ghost, not Three Holy Ghosts. And in this Trinity none is afore or after Other, None is greater or less than Another, but the whole Three Persons are Co-eternal together, and Co-equal. So that in all things, as is aforesaid, the Unity in Trinity, and the Trinity in Unity, is to be worshipped. He therefore that will be saved, must thus think of the Trinity. Furthermore, it is necessary to everlasting Salvation, that he also believe rightly the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ. For the right Faith is, that we believe and confess, that our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is God and Man. God, of the substance of the Father, begotten before the worlds; and Man, of the substance of His mother, born into the world. Perfect God and Perfect Man, of a reasonable Soul and human Flesh subsisting. Equal to the Father as touching His Godhead, and inferior to the Father as touching His Manhood. Who, although He be God and Man, yet He is not two, but One Christ. One, not by conversion of the Godhead into Flesh, but by taking of the Manhood into God. One altogether, not by confusion of substance, but by Unity of Person. For as the reasonable soul and flesh is one Man, so God and Man is one Christ. Who suffered for our salvation, descended into Hell, rose again the third day from the dead. He ascended into Heaven, He sitteth on the right hand of the Father, God Almighty, from whence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead. At whose coming all men shall rise again with their bodies, and shall give account for their own works. And they that have done good shall go into life everlasting, and they that have done evil into everlasting fire. This is the Catholic Faith, which except a man believe faithfully and firmly, he cannot be saved. (via The Catholic Encyclopedia)

You Can’t Afford Peace; Just Accept It.

[St. Jude asked,] “Lord, how is it that you will manifest yourself to us, and not to the world?”

Jesus answered him,

If a man loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him. He who does not love me does not keep my words; and the word which you hear is not mine but the Father’s who sent me.

These things I have spoken to you, while I am still with you. But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you. Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid. You heard me say to you, ‘I go away, and I will come to you.’ If you loved me, you would have rejoiced, because I go to the Father; for the Father is greater than I. And now I have told you before it takes place, so that when it does take place, you may believe.

(source: John 14:18-31 RSVCE)

Do not be afraid.  And do not be deluded.

Peace has a price.

We know that we are of God, and the whole world is in the power of the evil one.

And we know that the Son of God has come and has given us understanding, to know him who is true; and we are in him who is true, in his Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God and eternal life.

Little children, keep yourselves from idols.

(source: 1 John 5 RSVCE)

So bow and welcome Christ’s blessing the next time you hear, “Peace be with you.”

You need it, just like I do.

For Peace, You Must Be Better

When we tolerate and promote willful evil, we get more of it.

When we think we can achieve security and prosperity by making life thinner and less precious, we find that wrath and envy thrive, that life is cheap.

When we tolerate and promote a society whose “common good” is the endless warfare of all against all, where each individual must shout in a unique voice and never sacrifice any desire, yet where race and class and sex can never be eclipsed as social and political forces, then how can we be surprised that we get such incoherent results?

Their very incoherence is their coherence.

(Seattle)

Their logic is the logic of nihility.

(Portland)

Their spirit is the spirit of the age.

(San Francisco)

It is the spirit of abortion.

(Baltimore)

It is the spirit of usury.

(Berkeley)

It is the spirit of a nation which doubts its right to exist.

(St. Louis)

It is the spirit of a people with reason for their doubts.

It is the spirit of a people who have lost the will to reason.