Mark P. Shea's Blog, page 1273
July 29, 2011
Nice defense
of Abp. Chaput. Having spent a bit of time in Denver, I have to say that I'm awfully impressed with that archdiocese and his commitment to evangelization. I hope he leads Philly as well and I don't get the hostility to him from some quarters.
Published on July 29, 2011 00:01
That Unrealistic Catholic Tradition
American solution to economy: Don't make stuff. Suck from federal tit. Buy crappy toys from China. Sink billions into maintaining empire via multiple wars. Print more money. Support the twin sins of sodomy and usury, both of which are sterile attempts to unnaturally breed that which cannot breed. Abort kids and try to cannibalize them to keep Cher young forever.
Catholic solution to economy: Have a bunch of kids, then create wealth to feed them via either art (i.e. making something useful, good, and/or beautiful) or nature (growing, harvesting, mining, or otherwise exploiting what God gave us to make).
Catholic solution to economy: Have a bunch of kids, then create wealth to feed them via either art (i.e. making something useful, good, and/or beautiful) or nature (growing, harvesting, mining, or otherwise exploiting what God gave us to make).
Published on July 29, 2011 00:00
July 28, 2011
Remember
He's insane. The sane people who brought us to this pass--who tell you he's insane--are the ones you should listen to. Because six wars and an empire are sane and a 3669% increase in the personal wealth of the people who are overseeing this fiasco: that's sane. And if you question that, you are nuts like he is.
Published on July 28, 2011 16:10
The Invaluable John C. Wright...
argues with some damn fool Curmudgeon and I shout my agreement with him at every turn--which is testimony to his awesomeness since I am the Curmudgeon in question.
Published on July 28, 2011 13:29
What? You Still Don't Have Ticketses?
Be there! Aloha!
What's the "Pajama Game" about, you ask? Well, there's this chorus member named Peter Shea and he has various dance numbers with a bunch of principal characters who fall in love, have some sort of conflict and sing a bunch of songs about something. They also interrupt Peter's twelve lines.
Peter is riveting.
Published on July 28, 2011 13:21
I have some interesting people in my parish
Here is some hilaresy from one of them:
How can you not love an Orthodox Catholic hip-hop album called VALID, NOT LICIT? :)
How can you not love an Orthodox Catholic hip-hop album called VALID, NOT LICIT? :)
Published on July 28, 2011 12:27
Speaking of the Church's teaching...
"A central moral measure of any budget proposal is how it affects "the least of these" (Matthew 25). The needs of those who are hungry and homeless, without work or in poverty should come first."
The weakest and most powerless in our culture are children. Having made war upon them and racked up a pile of 50,000,000 dead so far, our culture is now also carrying the war out of the privacy of the abortuary and into the public square with the odious "child-free" movement.
The child-free movement is a mark of deep evil. Period.
The weakest and most powerless in our culture are children. Having made war upon them and racked up a pile of 50,000,000 dead so far, our culture is now also carrying the war out of the privacy of the abortuary and into the public square with the odious "child-free" movement.
The child-free movement is a mark of deep evil. Period.
Published on July 28, 2011 11:48
Thinking about the Norway Butcher
There's been much bustle this past week as those eager to use the Norway Butcher as a club against Christians have made much of his loony Templar mysticism and sundry invocations of Christianity. The Andrew Sullivans of the world see in him the incarnation of the Christianist, which is a sort of swear word meaning "Christians who say things I dislike".
Conversely, Christians have been scrambling to say, "He was not a real Christian".
I don't think this is particularly profitable. Rather, I think it obvious that he was somebody who regarded himself as standing within the Christian tradition--and somebody who had no idea what that tradition was about. He was, in short, a secular messianist with a demented politicized vision of Christianity. In many ways, he espoused standard issue neocon boilerplate about Israel, the Muslim menace, securing the borders, and all that sort of stuff. Meanwhile, he give little evidence that he, you know, believed in Jesus or had any notion of Christianity as something other than a socio-demographic bloc. Like Timothy McVeigh, his real religion appears to be pride:
And that for two reasons. First, because enemies of the Faith (such as Andrew Sullivan) will quickly seize on such confusions to attack the Church) and (far more gravely) because people who cannot tell the difference between faith and ideology will say deeply wicked things in order to try to distance themselves from people who listened to them more fanatically than they had intended.
Case in point: the phenomenally hypocritical Glenn Beck, who greeted the news of the slaughter by comparing the victims to Hitler Youth (because they were at some summer camp run by a political party), while ignoring his own political summer camp for youth.
All this sort of repulsive gamesmanship in defense of one's political tribe overlooks the central thing for Christians: namely, that the Norwegian butcher represents not Christianity (that is, the Catholic faith), but a politicized secular messianism that is a parasite on the Christian faith. In short, a heresy. It is Christian in that is it not Jewish, Zoroastrian or Buddhist heresy. But as his contemptuous remarks for Benedict demonstrate, it is a "Christian" belief only in the sense that he is a xenophobe who loathes what he perceives as not Purely Norwegian. Christianity is vaguely identified with pre-modern Norway, so he decorates himself in it and opens fire.
I think in such cases, it is better to speak of a "bad Christian" than say he is "not really a Christian". Outsiders to the Christian world quite naturally react to this the way they react to "This has nothing to do with Islam!" when some nutjob cries "Allahu Ackbar!" and blows up a schoolbus. Of course it has to do with Islam! And of course this monster has to do with perverted Christianity.
The sensible thing to note is not that this guy has nothing to do with Christianity, but that Christianity wants nothing to do with him. After his slaughter, there were no Christians dancing in the streets of Colorado Springs, Wheaton or Rome, celebrating a blow struck against the secular Satan. Significantly, the only people to eagerly celebrate the slaughter were Muslims. No Christians wanted to touch this monster with a barge pole.
In the end, the Faith has nothing to apologize for in this guy, though some Christians who cannot separate their faith from neocon ideology might want to rethink their secular messianism lest it encourage another of these nutjobs.
Conversely, Christians have been scrambling to say, "He was not a real Christian".
I don't think this is particularly profitable. Rather, I think it obvious that he was somebody who regarded himself as standing within the Christian tradition--and somebody who had no idea what that tradition was about. He was, in short, a secular messianist with a demented politicized vision of Christianity. In many ways, he espoused standard issue neocon boilerplate about Israel, the Muslim menace, securing the borders, and all that sort of stuff. Meanwhile, he give little evidence that he, you know, believed in Jesus or had any notion of Christianity as something other than a socio-demographic bloc. Like Timothy McVeigh, his real religion appears to be pride:
I'm not going to pretend I'm a very religious person, as that would be a lie. I've always been very pragmatic and influenced by my secular surroundings and environment. In the past, I remember I used to think: 'Religion is a crutch for weak people. What is the point in believing in a higher power if you have confidence in yourself!? Pathetic.' Perhaps this is true for many cases. Religion is a crutch for many weak people, and many embrace religion for self-serving reasons as a source for drawing mental strength (to feed their weak emotional state [for] example during illness, death, poverty etc.).But that religion of politicized neocon pride did, in fact, clothe itself in various Christian regalia as it set about the cold-blooded murder of a bunch of kids. That's not an indictment of Christ or the Faith, but it is a warning shot--92 warning shots, in fact--that we should really shy away from conflation of the faith any secular messianic political ideology.
And that for two reasons. First, because enemies of the Faith (such as Andrew Sullivan) will quickly seize on such confusions to attack the Church) and (far more gravely) because people who cannot tell the difference between faith and ideology will say deeply wicked things in order to try to distance themselves from people who listened to them more fanatically than they had intended.
Case in point: the phenomenally hypocritical Glenn Beck, who greeted the news of the slaughter by comparing the victims to Hitler Youth (because they were at some summer camp run by a political party), while ignoring his own political summer camp for youth.
All this sort of repulsive gamesmanship in defense of one's political tribe overlooks the central thing for Christians: namely, that the Norwegian butcher represents not Christianity (that is, the Catholic faith), but a politicized secular messianism that is a parasite on the Christian faith. In short, a heresy. It is Christian in that is it not Jewish, Zoroastrian or Buddhist heresy. But as his contemptuous remarks for Benedict demonstrate, it is a "Christian" belief only in the sense that he is a xenophobe who loathes what he perceives as not Purely Norwegian. Christianity is vaguely identified with pre-modern Norway, so he decorates himself in it and opens fire.
I think in such cases, it is better to speak of a "bad Christian" than say he is "not really a Christian". Outsiders to the Christian world quite naturally react to this the way they react to "This has nothing to do with Islam!" when some nutjob cries "Allahu Ackbar!" and blows up a schoolbus. Of course it has to do with Islam! And of course this monster has to do with perverted Christianity.
The sensible thing to note is not that this guy has nothing to do with Christianity, but that Christianity wants nothing to do with him. After his slaughter, there were no Christians dancing in the streets of Colorado Springs, Wheaton or Rome, celebrating a blow struck against the secular Satan. Significantly, the only people to eagerly celebrate the slaughter were Muslims. No Christians wanted to touch this monster with a barge pole.
In the end, the Faith has nothing to apologize for in this guy, though some Christians who cannot separate their faith from neocon ideology might want to rethink their secular messianism lest it encourage another of these nutjobs.
Published on July 28, 2011 11:44
A reader writes:
Wonder if I can trouble you for some prayers? Not anything I can really discuss with anyone, just now -- a big, rather terrifying decision to make, and I feel like my head is not really clear, my heart is confused and my soul is not quite up to snuff.Father, grant clarity of mind and heart, peace, and courage to your servant to discern and do your will. If you want your servant to do the thing being contemplated then make that clear and enable your servant to do it. Mother Mary, Seat of Wisdom, pray for your child. We ask this in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
I have an idea that could potentially do a lot of good for a lot of people, but the personal cost to me, to my sense of safety, privacy, would be absolutely enormous, and the comfort zone would be demolished. Moreover there is a huge temptation to ego in all of this -- and that distorts things, makes me worry about my motives -- is this what God wants, or just my ego? If God does not want me to do it, then I don't want to. And if he does...then I need lots of courage.
I would so appreciate your prayers on behalf of my discernment. Thanks.
Published on July 28, 2011 10:52
"St. Paul Would Have Failed my Hermaneutics Course"
My friend Leroy Huizenga inadvertently offers a short advertisment for my book
Making Senses Out of Scripture
. :)
Published on July 28, 2011 10:34
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