Mark P. Shea's Blog, page 1336
April 19, 2011
From our "Don't Stand So Close to Me" files
Charles Manson breaks a decades long silence to hold forth on Global Warming Global Climate Change Global Climate Disruption.
Published on April 19, 2011 06:33
Look in the Mirror blog...
Published on April 19, 2011 06:25
I can explain everything
Over on Facebook, some readers have suspicions in a post cc'd to Jimmy Akin and me:
victims employees to annoy us. You'll never see "Jimmy" coming, Reader B.
As a matter of fact, I have (at least two) body doubles, one on the West Coast (known to the public as "Jimmy Akin"):

And one in DC:

...disguised as a mild-manner theology student at Catholic University. I keep him there to throw off assassins during my high level secret meetings with Obama in which I scheme with the President to persuade unwitting Catholics that I am not actually a gay Planned Parenthood supporter infiltrating the blogosphere with my secret pro-Administration agenda of not voting for him.
I love it when The Plan comes together.
Reader A: Both you and Mark Shea have beards (and almost the same color). Is this a coincidence? Your profile pics, one right after the other in my news feed, cause me to do a double-take in order to tell you apart! ; )Clearly, Reader B is far too clever to be allowed to live. As for "Jimmy Akin", it's common knowledge that we Dark Lords have a lot of body doubles, food tasters and sundry expendables in our entourage to make it harder for assassins, poisoners, knife throwers and disgruntled former
Reader B: Personally, I believe they're both one in the same person! Jimmy (aka Mark Shea) just leads a double-lie, err, I meant life. Also, I've noticed how they both conveniently recommend each other's books to the public. Hmm...
Thanks to the Photoshop/digital age we live in, I wouldn't even be convinced by a photograph that showed both of them standing together. :p
Mark Shea: Now I have to kill you.
Reader B: You will? Don't you mean Jimmy Akin will? ;)
You'll be in "Portland" several hundred miles away from the boating "accident", which will occur near San Diego...
As a matter of fact, I have (at least two) body doubles, one on the West Coast (known to the public as "Jimmy Akin"):

And one in DC:

...disguised as a mild-manner theology student at Catholic University. I keep him there to throw off assassins during my high level secret meetings with Obama in which I scheme with the President to persuade unwitting Catholics that I am not actually a gay Planned Parenthood supporter infiltrating the blogosphere with my secret pro-Administration agenda of not voting for him.
I love it when The Plan comes together.
Published on April 19, 2011 06:19
The Paraclete
Published on April 19, 2011 06:11
April 18, 2011
As a Matter of Fact, Yes!
The Cuteness *is* the most adorable child on planet Earth.
Daughter-in-law Tasha writes:
In case, you haven't seen her lately, behold Lucy the Cuteness!
[image error]
Daughter-in-law Tasha writes:
Text from Luke Shea: "Lucy just said grace over her snack! She folded her hands, closed her eyes, and muttered 'blessablessabless' before digging in!" That's the sweetest thing I've heard in a month of Sundays XD
In case, you haven't seen her lately, behold Lucy the Cuteness!
[image error]
Published on April 18, 2011 15:27
A reader asks...
You are a very studious Catholic man, who has made me rethink my Catholic world view as a Catholic individual in a positive light. I want to thank you for this!Can't think of a better place to start than with Peter Kreeft's A Refutation of Moral Relativism. Tolle, lege!
My question to you is this. Do you know of any good reading material regarding moral relativism (apologetic perspective) and how to respond to those who hold this world view and attempt to debunk our Catholic faith by suggesting that there is no absolute truth.
Basically the response I get is that there is no absolute truth and differing religions claim to obtain absolute truth. This leads to skepticism among all religions and determining which one "if any" actually can say their world view obtains absolute truth.
I have a family member who has claimed to have turned agnostic and has challenged me on a philosophical level about truth and truth being subjective according to differing point of views.
Thank You in advance if you have time.
Published on April 18, 2011 13:32
Prayer Request
A reader writes:
My request may have gotten lost in the shuffle over the last week. I understand that! I was wondering if you could post a request for my Dad and family. He has died after a long bout with Alzheimer's. I would appreciate prayers for him and for the family, especially Mom who would have celebrated her 60th anniversary this July (and still plans on it). Thanks,Father, hear our prayer for the eternal repose of this man's soul and for your grace, comfort, and healing for all those who love him, through Christ our Lord. Amen. Mother Mary, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death. Amen.
Published on April 18, 2011 13:12
Prayer Request
A reader writes:
I've never written to you, but I know you often include prayer requests on your blog. I hope you will ask your readers to kindly pray for St. John Vianney parish in Hacienda Heights, CA (Archdiocese of Los Angeles). The church was destroyed over the weekend by what appears to be arson. The parish community is truly devastated. See here for the story.Father, hear our prayer that St. John Vianney parish rise from the ashes through Christ our Phoenix and that and it's people become stronger than ever in forgiveness and charity toward the person who did this despicable thing. Mother Mary, pray for this parish.
Published on April 18, 2011 12:42
I'm having an Amy Welborn Moment
A while back, Amy used to do a regular feature on her blog called "What did you see?" where she asked readers to talk about what happened at their local parish during the Sunday Mass. It was an interesting way to get a feel for what was happening at J Random parishes across the world (though it could ocassionally get hijacked by the Bitter Squad, very much against Amy's wishes, and turned into a sort of "Spies Sitting Around the Bar and Bitching about Enemy Movements" gossip fest.
At the risk of that, it occurred to me, after the Great Voris Pagan Easter Hysteria last week, that it might be a worthwhile thing to test how much of the hysteria is really accurate.
It's like this, I was informed last week (again and again) that Voris is practically the only Real Man in the Catholic Church, fearlessly Telling It Like It is. The occasion of this, we will recall, was that he was Telling It Like It Is about something that, you know, hasn't even happened. The Al Gore crowd sent some fax to the USCCB with some sort of suggestions for working an environmental message into the Triduum proceedings since Earth Day and Good Friday coincide. No word on what the bishops actually did with the fax. But they were definitely guilty of having their fax machines on when the message came in, so that seems to have been good enough for the hysterics. The dark warnings of an upcoming Pagan Easter were issued and the Legions were instructed that "if the priest even so much as breathes a word about Earth Day, throw nothing in the collection plate, finish your Sunday obligation and resign from that parish on Monday".
Those of us who questioned this black and white edict from the Master were told that we were on the side of "clapping fornicators" with "grubby hands" whose sole mission in life was to destroy Truly True Catholic faith happily being preserved by the few, the proud, the "Real Catholic" against the enemy Host commonly called "99% of the Church".
Now, mind you, I'm perfectly aware that there are problems out there. I was, after all, recieved into the Church in the Archdiocese of Seattle during the reign of Abp. Hunthausen.
But here's the thing: I'm having trouble buying the pre-emptive conviction so many of the pitchfork wavers have that, this weekend, the majority of the Church is going to hear homilies on Gaia worship. There may well be a mention of Earth Day, but that's not the same thing except to people trained to respond to Pavlovian acoustic cues rather than thinking. Why? Well because it is perfectly legitimate to note that, for instance, Christ is the first born of all Creation. Why, somebody might even comment legitimately on the crazy eco-theology which sings things like
Rejoice, O earth, in shining splendor,
radiant in the brightness of your King!
Christ has conquered! Glory fills you!
Darkness vanishes for ever!
or which notes that "the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God; for the creation was subjected to futility, not of its own will but by the will of him who subjected it in hope; because the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and obtain the glorious liberty of the children of God." (Romans 8:19-21)
In short, there is a perfectly orthodox Christian take on our relationship to Nature and to Christ's redemption of Nature that could easily take the coincidence of Earth Day and the Triduum to make a perfectly orthodox point about the cosmic power of the Resurrection in redeeming, not just our souls, nor even our bodies, but the whole of the created order, resulting in a New Heaven and a New Earth (and implying our obligation to care for the earth over which we have been given dominion). You know: like we learned from that crazy Gaia worshipper, JRR Tolkien, who knew nothing of Truly True Orthodox Catholicism.
So, my proposal is this: I would like to ask my readers to let me know what you hear this Triduum. The hundreds of followers of One of the Few Real Catholics in America deluged me last week with the certitude that this Triduum would oblige thousands of other Real Catholics to bail on their parishes this weekend in search of a Truly True Catholic parish (or perhaps no Catholic parish at all if their diocese is not up to snuff). The basis for bailing is that Michael Voris seems certain that there are ever so many priests and bishops who will "breathe a word" about Earth Day, thereby proving (to those incapable of thinking) that their parish is celebrating "Pagan Easter".
But since, as I have just kindly pointed out, 1) there are any number of ways of mentioning Earth Day in an orthodox way; 2), we have no particular reason for supposing the Gore memo will have any impact at all and 3) even *if* the Gore memo was mentioned and somebody included a little "give a hoot, don't pollute" mention in a homily or voiced an opinion that global warming is something to take seriously, that *still* doesn't constitute "paganism" or "earth worship". In order to be actually pagan, somebody has to propose that a creature is a deity to be worshipped because that's what paganism is: exchanging the truth about God for a lie and worshipping and serving the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed for ever! (Romans 1:25).
So tell me what actually happens in your parish this Triduum. I want to get a sense of how much the Great Voris Pagan Easter Panic in my comboxes last week was rooted in reality, and how much was hysteria. (My sense, in case you haven't figured it out, is "pretty much mostly hysteria"). But since "my sense" plus five bucks will get you a cup of Starbucks, I thought I might collect a bit of data. So I need to hear from as many of you as possible, since the Panickers will be hypersensitive to the slightest hint of Impurity, while normal people who are not inclined to comment will not, particularly if the homily is a perfectly ordinary one.
I fully expect this may make for some dullness in reporting since the real problem, it seems to me, is not that a vast cadre of lesbo-nuns and gay priests are sowing Gaia worship across the land, but rather that a small cadre of Puritan Catholics are upset that the average Catholic is average and are therefore inclined to seize on excuses to create a Puritan Church sect in which they can yak about "loving the Church" while despising virtually all actual Catholics as clapping fornicators with grubby hands who don't have true reverence.
So let me know. I'm interested in how the Prophecy of Pagan Easter squares with the lived reality in the ordinary parish.
At the risk of that, it occurred to me, after the Great Voris Pagan Easter Hysteria last week, that it might be a worthwhile thing to test how much of the hysteria is really accurate.
It's like this, I was informed last week (again and again) that Voris is practically the only Real Man in the Catholic Church, fearlessly Telling It Like It is. The occasion of this, we will recall, was that he was Telling It Like It Is about something that, you know, hasn't even happened. The Al Gore crowd sent some fax to the USCCB with some sort of suggestions for working an environmental message into the Triduum proceedings since Earth Day and Good Friday coincide. No word on what the bishops actually did with the fax. But they were definitely guilty of having their fax machines on when the message came in, so that seems to have been good enough for the hysterics. The dark warnings of an upcoming Pagan Easter were issued and the Legions were instructed that "if the priest even so much as breathes a word about Earth Day, throw nothing in the collection plate, finish your Sunday obligation and resign from that parish on Monday".
Those of us who questioned this black and white edict from the Master were told that we were on the side of "clapping fornicators" with "grubby hands" whose sole mission in life was to destroy Truly True Catholic faith happily being preserved by the few, the proud, the "Real Catholic" against the enemy Host commonly called "99% of the Church".
Now, mind you, I'm perfectly aware that there are problems out there. I was, after all, recieved into the Church in the Archdiocese of Seattle during the reign of Abp. Hunthausen.
But here's the thing: I'm having trouble buying the pre-emptive conviction so many of the pitchfork wavers have that, this weekend, the majority of the Church is going to hear homilies on Gaia worship. There may well be a mention of Earth Day, but that's not the same thing except to people trained to respond to Pavlovian acoustic cues rather than thinking. Why? Well because it is perfectly legitimate to note that, for instance, Christ is the first born of all Creation. Why, somebody might even comment legitimately on the crazy eco-theology which sings things like
Rejoice, O earth, in shining splendor,
radiant in the brightness of your King!
Christ has conquered! Glory fills you!
Darkness vanishes for ever!
or which notes that "the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God; for the creation was subjected to futility, not of its own will but by the will of him who subjected it in hope; because the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and obtain the glorious liberty of the children of God." (Romans 8:19-21)
In short, there is a perfectly orthodox Christian take on our relationship to Nature and to Christ's redemption of Nature that could easily take the coincidence of Earth Day and the Triduum to make a perfectly orthodox point about the cosmic power of the Resurrection in redeeming, not just our souls, nor even our bodies, but the whole of the created order, resulting in a New Heaven and a New Earth (and implying our obligation to care for the earth over which we have been given dominion). You know: like we learned from that crazy Gaia worshipper, JRR Tolkien, who knew nothing of Truly True Orthodox Catholicism.
So, my proposal is this: I would like to ask my readers to let me know what you hear this Triduum. The hundreds of followers of One of the Few Real Catholics in America deluged me last week with the certitude that this Triduum would oblige thousands of other Real Catholics to bail on their parishes this weekend in search of a Truly True Catholic parish (or perhaps no Catholic parish at all if their diocese is not up to snuff). The basis for bailing is that Michael Voris seems certain that there are ever so many priests and bishops who will "breathe a word" about Earth Day, thereby proving (to those incapable of thinking) that their parish is celebrating "Pagan Easter".
But since, as I have just kindly pointed out, 1) there are any number of ways of mentioning Earth Day in an orthodox way; 2), we have no particular reason for supposing the Gore memo will have any impact at all and 3) even *if* the Gore memo was mentioned and somebody included a little "give a hoot, don't pollute" mention in a homily or voiced an opinion that global warming is something to take seriously, that *still* doesn't constitute "paganism" or "earth worship". In order to be actually pagan, somebody has to propose that a creature is a deity to be worshipped because that's what paganism is: exchanging the truth about God for a lie and worshipping and serving the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed for ever! (Romans 1:25).
So tell me what actually happens in your parish this Triduum. I want to get a sense of how much the Great Voris Pagan Easter Panic in my comboxes last week was rooted in reality, and how much was hysteria. (My sense, in case you haven't figured it out, is "pretty much mostly hysteria"). But since "my sense" plus five bucks will get you a cup of Starbucks, I thought I might collect a bit of data. So I need to hear from as many of you as possible, since the Panickers will be hypersensitive to the slightest hint of Impurity, while normal people who are not inclined to comment will not, particularly if the homily is a perfectly ordinary one.
I fully expect this may make for some dullness in reporting since the real problem, it seems to me, is not that a vast cadre of lesbo-nuns and gay priests are sowing Gaia worship across the land, but rather that a small cadre of Puritan Catholics are upset that the average Catholic is average and are therefore inclined to seize on excuses to create a Puritan Church sect in which they can yak about "loving the Church" while despising virtually all actual Catholics as clapping fornicators with grubby hands who don't have true reverence.
So let me know. I'm interested in how the Prophecy of Pagan Easter squares with the lived reality in the ordinary parish.
Published on April 18, 2011 10:56
Half Empty or Half Full?
Published on April 18, 2011 00:10
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