Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Pope on Thought for the Day: Part of the New Evangelization


Welcome news today that Pope Benedict is to speak on Thought for the Day.

It comes at a time when coverage of the Church on the BBC has generally improved in recent months. The broadcaster's programming during the papal visit was by and large a tribute to its professionalism and balanced reporting. Radio 4 is also planning on setting aside scheduled programming to make way for a marathon reading of the King James Bible.

It could also be argued that having the Holy Father speak for himself on Radio 4 kind of makes up for all those times when orthodox-thinking Catholics have been overlooked by the broadcaster, usually in its news coverage.

Not everyone will be happy with this decision of course - and not just secularists. Some traditionalists will argue that the Pope is not just another religious talking head - a rabbi, Anglican bishop, imam, or even Catholic priest - but the Vicar of Christ. He should, therefore, not put himself on the same level as it emits a kind of "relativist mood music."

They have a point and I have a lot of sympathy with that, but like "Light of the World", I see this as the Pope getting down from his throne (only momentarily of course) to talk to people through another means and in a language they can understand.

It's part of the New Evangelization and for this reason I think, overall, it's a good idea.

Full details of the broadcast on my Register blog page.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Taking Apart the Science vs Religion Myth

A good atheist friend said to me the other day: “Religious belief does not allow for serious inquiry into the nature of the world.”

A sweeping statement and a common assumption: religion is contrary to science, the two are incompatible, one is against the other. But it’s an enormous myth as any quick search of the web will verify.

Few know it, but Nicolaus Copernicus was a priest. Gregor Mendel, the discoverer of genetics, was a monk. Monsignor Georges Henri Joseph Édouard Lemaître, a Belgian priest, proposed what became known as no less than the Big Bang theory of the origin of the Universe. And perhaps most famously, Einstein believed in God.

Catholic Answers has a more detailed list of great scientific achievements by Catholics, which I reproduce below. You might also be interested in this article I wrote earlier this year on the Benedictine monk and physicist, Stanley Jaki, who argued that were it not for Christianity, the great scientific progress we enjoy today would not exist.

Saint Luke (c.72) - Catholic patron saint of physicians and surgeons (himself being a physician, iconographer and evangelist)

Bede, the Venerable (c.672–735) - Catholic monk who wrote a work On the Nature of Things, and several books on the mathematical / astronomical subject of computus, the most influential entitled On the Reckoning of Time. He made original discoveries concerning the nature of the tides and his works on computus became required elements of the training of clergy, and thus greatly influenced early medieval knowledge of the natural world.

Pope Silvester II (c.950–1003) - A scientist and book collector, he influenced the teaching of math and astronomy in church-run schools, and raised the cathedral school at Rheims to the height of prosperity.

Hermannus Contractus (1013–1054) - Wrote on geometry, mathematics, and the astrolabe. He was also a monk who composed Marian antiphons and was essentially beatified.

Robert Grosseteste (c.1175–1253) - Bishop of Lincoln, he was the central character of the English intellectual movement in the first half of the 13th century and is considered the founder of scientific thought in Oxford. He had a great interest in the natural world and wrote texts on the mathematical sciences of optics, astronomy and geometry. He affirmed that experiments should be used in order to verify a theory, testing its consequences.

Pope John XXI (1215–1277) - He wrote the widely used medical text Thesaurus pauperum before becoming Pope.

Albertus Magnus (c.1193–1280) - Patron saint of scientists in Catholicism who may have been the first to isolate arsenic. He wrote that: "Natural science does not consist in ratifying what others have said, but in seeking the causes of phenomena."

Roger Bacon (c.1214–1294) - He was an English philosopher who emphasized empiricism and has been presented as one of the earliest advocates of the modern scientific method. He joined the Franciscan Order around 1240, where he was influenced by Grosseteste. Bacon was responsible for making the concept of "laws of nature" widespread, and contributed in such areas as mechanics, geography and, most of all, optics.

Theodoric of Freiberg (c.1250–c.1310) - Dominican who is believed to have given the first correct explanation for the rainbow in De iride et radialibus impressionibus or On the Rainbow.

Thomas Bradwardine (c.1290–1349) - He was an English archbishop, often called "the Profound Doctor". He developed studies as one of the Oxford Calculators of Merton College, Oxford University. These studies would lead to important developments in mechanics.

Jean Buridan (1300–1358) - Catholic priest and one of the most influential philosophers of the later Middle Ages. He developed the theory of impetus, which was an important step toward the modern concept of inertia.

Nicole Oresme (c.1323–1382) - Theologian and Bishop of Lisieux, he was one of the early founders and popularizers of modern sciences. One of his many scientific contributions is the discovery of the curvature of light through atmospheric refraction, he also showed that the reasons proposed by the physics of Aristotle against the movement of the Earth were not valid. Oresme strongly opposed astrology and speculated about the possibility of extraterrestrial life.

Nicholas of Cusa (1401–1464) - Cardinal and theologian who made contributions to the field of mathematics by developing the concepts of the infinitesimal and of relative motion. His philosophical speculations also anticipated Copernicus’ heliocentric world-view.

Ignazio Danti
(1536–1586) - Bishop of Alatri who convoked a diocesan synod to deal with abuses. He was also a mathematician who wrote on Euclid, an astronomer, and a designer of mechanical devices.

René Descartes (1596–1650) - Descartes was one of the key thinkers of the Scientific Revolution in the Western World. He is also honoured by having the Cartesian coordinate system used in plane geometry and algebra named after him. He did important work on invariants and geometry.

Giovanni Battista Riccioli
(1598-1671) - Italian astronomer. He was a Jesuit who entered the order in 1614. He was also the first person to measure the rate of acceleration of a freely falling body.

Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680) - German Jesuit scholar who published around 40 works, most notably in the fields of oriental studies, geology and medicine. He made an early study of Egyptian hieroglyphs. One of the first people to observe microbes through a microscope, he was thus ahead of his time in proposing that the plague was caused by an infectious microorganism and in suggesting effective measures to prevent the spread of the disease. Kircher has been compared to Leonardo da Vinci for his inventiveness and the breadth and depth of his work.

Nicolas Steno (1638-1686) - Contributions to paleontology and geology

Roger Joseph (1711-1787) - Physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, and Jesuit. He is famous for his atomic theory, given as a clear, precisely-formulated system utilizing principles of Newtonian mechanics. This work inspired Michael Faraday to develop field theory for electromagnetic interaction, and was even a basis for Albert Einstein's attempts for a unified field theory, according to Einstein's coworker Lancelot Law Whyte. Boscovich also gave many important contributions to astronomy, including the first geometric procedure for determining the equator of a rotating planet from three observations of a surface feature and for computing the orbit of a planet from three observations of its position.

Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718–1799) - Linguist, mathematician, and philosopher. Agnesi is credited with writing the first book discussing both differential and integral calculus. She was an honorary member of the faculty at the University of Bologna.

Augustin Louis Cauchy (1789–1857) - French mathematician. He started the project of formulating and proving the theorems of calculus in a rigorous manner and was thus an early pioneer of analysis. He also gave several important theorems in complex analysis and initiated the study of permutation groups. A profound mathematician, Cauchy exercised by his perspicuous and rigorous methods a great influence over his contemporaries and successors. His writings cover the entire range of mathematics and mathematical physics.

Gregor Mendel (1822–1884) - Augustinian priest and scientist often called the "father of modern genetics" for his study of the inheritance of traits in pea plants. Mendel showed that the inheritance of traits follows particular laws, which were later named after him. The significance of Mendel's work was not recognised until the turn of the 20th century. Its rediscovery prompted the foundation of genetics.

Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) - French chemist best known for his remarkable breakthroughs in microbiology. His experiments confirmed the germ theory of disease, and he created the first vaccine for rabies. He is best known to the general public for showing how to stop milk and wine from going sour - this process came to be called pasteurization. He is regarded as one of the three main founders of bacteriology, together with Ferdinand Cohn and Robert Koch. He also made many discoveries in the field of chemistry, most notably the asymmetry of crystals.

Francesco Faà di Bruno (1825—1888) - Italian mathematician most linked to Turin. He is known for Faà di Bruno's formula and being a spiritual writer beatified in 1988.

Armand David
(1826–1900) - Catholic missionary to China and member of the Lazarists who considered his religious duties to be his principle concern. He was also a botanist with the author abbreviation David and as a zoologist he described several species new to the West.

Pierre Duhem (1861–1916) - He worked on Thermodynamic potentials and wrote histories advocating that the Roman Catholic Church helped advance science.

E. T. Whittaker (1873-1956) - Converted to Catholicism in 1930 and member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences. His 1946 Donnellan Lecture was entitled on Space and Spirit. Theories of the Universe and the Arguments for the Existence of God. He also received the Copley Medal and had written on Mathematical physics before conversion.

Georges Lemaître
(1894-1966) - Catholic priest, honorary prelate, professor of physics and astronomer. Lemaître proposed what became known as the Big Bang theory of the origin of the Universe, although he called it his 'hypothesis of the primeval atom'. He was a pioneer in applying Einstein's theory of general relativity to cosmology: suggesting a pre-cursor of Hubble's law in 1927, and publishing his primeval atom theory the pages of Nature in 1931.

Carlos Chagas Filho (1910-2000) - A neuroscientist from Rio de Janeiro who headed the Pontifical Academy of Sciences for 16 years. He studied the Shroud of Turin and his "the Origin of the Universe", "the Origin of Life", and "the Origin of Man" involved an understanding between Catholicism and Science.

Photo: The late Fr. Stanley Jaki OSB

Friday, November 5, 2010

Camino de Santiago - my memorable short pilgrimage

Pope Benedict XVI travels to Santiago de Compostela tomorrow.

A few years ago, I walked the last leg of the camino, something I'd been wanting to do for some years. I was at the time working on a piece on pilgrimages for a Newsweek article with Christopher Dickey, so it seemed a good opportunity. And it turned out to be a wonderful experience - as nearly all pilgrimages are.

Below is my account of that journey along the Camino de Santiago which appeared in the Register.

Your Feet May Falter But Your Soul Will Soar

The Long Walk to Santiago de Compostela Cathedral

Tuesday, Jul 17, 2007

Galicia, Spain

For some years, I’d been hearing people praise the Camino de Santiago de Compostela, the oldest Christian pilgrimage route in the world. In fact, so popular has "The Way" become that it's now bearing its heaviest foot traffic since medieval times.

So earlier this year I traveled to the region to sample the pilgrimage for myself. Like so many pilgrims who beat the path before me, I found it to be a richly rewarding experience and a great aid to spiritual growth.

There are five main routes to the beautiful and ancient city of Santiago de Compostela, whose Romanesque cathedral — the final destination of the pilgrimage — contains the remains of St. James the Apostle. The Church celebrates his feast on July 25. (Camino de Santiago means the Way of St. James.)

Connections from five other routes allow a few especially ambitious and athletic pilgrims to walk all the way from Paris or Lisbon.

The oldest and most popular route is the Camino Francés (French Way). This starts in the small town of St. Jean Pied de Port, near Lourdes on the French border, and ends in Santiago some 543 miles — and not a few blisters — later. By foot the trip takes most pilgrims three to four weeks to complete.

For most of us, it's not practical to take so much time away from work and other commitments and so many pilgrims start nearer Santiago. Popular launching points include the beautiful cathedral towns of Burgos (a 316-mile walk), Leon (207 miles) and Astorga (169 miles).

Having only a few days to spare, I started in the town of Sarria. At about 80 miles from Santiago, it's the minimum span one must traverse to obtain a Compostela — a signed certificate proving you walked the Camino.

But although relatively short, it’s not wanting for variety. The terrain mixes hills, lakes and forests with Galician towns, hamlets and picturesque little churches. The region is rural and gets plenty of rain in the colder months, making the land very fertile. The people are also culturally rich and, being Celts, they’re proud of their heritage. Occasionally you’ll come across the sound of bagpipes or the sight of tartan kilts.

Yet, as interesting as these aspects of the Camino are, it is the journey itself that captures the heart.

Like Life Itself

It is said that the Camino, like life's “journey”, is different for each traveler. Even two people walking side by side won’t get the exact same things out of it.

Some make the trek to test themselves, others to grow spiritually. For most Catholics, the experience is an opportunity to simply get alone with God. Opportunities abound to pray, take stock of one’s life and renew one’s commitment to following Christ.

Many come away saying they have been changed by the walk. Perhaps that’s because the Camino is really one great metaphor for life. One moment you are strolling with ease along a straight and smooth tarmac road; the next, you find yourself carefully negotiating a meandering and rocky passage. There are literal ups and downs: steep hills to climb and, in the valleys, precarious rivers to cross.

The weather was entirely unpredictable when I walked in the spring - everything from sun to showers, and rainstorms to hail. But whatever the challenges to the journey, I found if you simply put one foot in front of the other — however much your feet are telling you to stop — and simply trust the signs, you will be guided to your destination.

And another thing I noticed was a palpable sense of divine Providence.

Along the Camino, large yellow arrows, usually impossible to miss, guide you along the way - but not always. On at least one occasion I got lost. I prayed and almost immediately a farmer came walking up the path and pointed me in the right direction.

Speak to other pilgrims and you will hear of similar experiences, usually involving a kind Spaniard or fellow pilgrim pointing the way back onto the Camino.

A strong camaraderie and sense of solidarity with other pilgrims are also important parts of the pilgrim experience here.

“The Camino allows everyone to give the best of themselves,” said Canadian pilgrim Peter Andreacchi, on his third month-long Camino walk. “The facades are removed as no one is out to exploit one another. And the emotions all come out. It builds bridges between people and cultures.”

Hard-Earned Mass

People of all ages walk the Camino. Vincent Estridge of Bradford, England, was on his second three-week pilgrimage on the Way of St. James — at the age of 79.

“The Camino is really a revelation, a personal revelation to each of us,” he said. “As long as I’m healthy enough, I’ll keep on doing it.”

And they come back, year after year, despite, or perhaps because of, the physical challenges.

“Something attracts you back to the Camino,” one fellow traveler told me. “After a while you get this irresistible pull.”

Paolo and Gabrielle De Ambrosis, a retired couple from Milan in their 60s, were on their sixth 500-mile Camino in as many years. They said they had made the trip out of gratitude to God for their blessings that first motivated them — and for other reasons, too.

“During this month you can avoid everything: news, soccer, television,” said Paolo. “You remember instead what is important in your life. ... It puts everything in perspective.”

Along the way, the Camino has government-run albergue (inexpensive hostels that sleep 10 or more to a room). Some avoid these in order to get a good night’s rest, but others love them for their fraternal atmosphere. Spending the night in one of these facilities is like living out a scene from The Canterbury Tales with plenty of camaraderie and consumption of the odd ale or two.

But being immersed in the humanity of one’s brother pilgrims is all part of the enriching Camino pilgrimage experience.

I eventually arrived at Santiago cathedral after 3½ days of solid walking. My feet were in pain, but I felt greatly relieved to have made it.

And as Providence would have it, I’d arrived just in time for Mass.

Information

Santiago de Compostela Cathedral

Galicia, Spain

Website: catedraldesantiago.es

For pilgrimage routes, see santiago-compostela.net.

Planning Your Visit

Don’t book your trip until you’ve read a good guidebook. For the Camino Francés, try A Pilgrim’s Guide to the Camino de Santiago by John Brierley (Findhorn Press, 2006). It has all the info you need, including detailed maps and daily spiritual meditations, and it’s light enough to carry with you along the way.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Consistory Announced

At the end of his weekly General Audience this morning, Pope Benedict XVI announced the names of 24 new cardinals who will be raised to the cardinalate at a consistory next month.

The complete list, in the order announced by the Holy Father:

Archbishop Angelo Amato, prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints
Coptic Patriarch Antonios Naguib of Alexandria, Egypt (also General Relator of the current Synod on the Middle East)
Archbishop Robert Sarah, president of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum
Archbishop Francesco Monterisi, Archpriest of St. Paul's Outside the Walls
Archbishop Fortunato Baldelli, prefect of the Apostolic Penitentiary
Archbishop Raymond Burke, prefect of the Apostolic Signatura (his statement can be read here)
Archbishop Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity
Archbishop Paolo Sardi, Pro-Patron of the Knights of Malta
Archbishop Mauro Piacenza, prefect of the Congregation for Clergy
Archbishop Velasio De Paolis, president of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs
of the Holy See
Archbishop Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture
Archbishop Medardo Joseph Mazombwe of Lusaka, Zambia
Archbishop Raúl Eduardo Vela Chiriboga, Emeritus of Quito, Ecuador
Archbishop Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, of Kinshasa, DRC
Archbishop Paolo Romeo of Palermo, Italy
Archbishop Donald Wuerl of Washington DC
Archbishop Raymundo Damasceno Assis, Archbishop of Aparecida, Brazil
Archbishop Kazimierz Nycz of Warsaw, Poland
Archbishop Albert Malcolm Ranjith Patabendige Don of Colombo, Sri Lanka
Archbishop Reinhard Marx of Munich and Freising, Germany

Archbishop José Manuel Estepa Llaurens, Military Ordinary-emeritus of Spain
Bishop Elio Sgreccia, president emeritus of the Pontifical Academy for Life
Msgr. Walter Brandmueller, president emeritus of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences
Msgr. Domenico Bartolucci, Maestro Emeritus of the Sistine Chapel Choir

Four of the twenty four named this morning are over 80 years of age, meaning they will not be able to vote in conclave. Ten are heads of various curial dicasteries, ten of them are Italian.

Currently there are 179 members of the College of Cardinals, 102 of whom are eligible to vote in conclave. The largest single group of electors is Europe with a total of 52 cardinals, followed by North America with 17 and South America with 11.

The 24 archbishops and monsignori will be elevated to the College of Cardinals on November 20th.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Pope's Gift - Symbolic of Reconciliation?


This is a nice story from the BBC today which to me at least symbolizes the reconciliation taking place between the British state and the Church of England (at least the Anglo-Catholic parts of it) with the Catholic Church:

Click image to enlarge.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Vatican Bank – The Scandal that Wasn't

Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, the president of the Vatican Bank, has strongly denied allegations the bank broke anti-money laundering rules and sees the publicity of the inviestigation into him and the bank as an attack on the institution and the Vatican.

"Since I assumed the presidency of the IOR I have committed my whole self, according to the indications received by the Pope and the Secretary of State, to make every transaction more transparent and in line with international norms against money laundering,” he said in an interview in today's Il Giornale. “For this reason, I feel really humiliated.” He added: “God is always present in everything I do. "

Here's the interview (my translation).

What was your reaction to the news of the investigation of IOR and of yourself?


"Bitterness and humiliation. I do not know what else to say. Together with the Director of the Institute, Paul Cipriani, I am committed to tackling the problems which are now being investigated. We are working to enter the so-called White List, i.e. the list of countries that comply with international anti-money laundering and we hope to do so by December. I have an excellent relationship with the Bank of Italy and there is a continuous exchange of information ...».

Can you explain what happened with the Credito Artigiano and that 20 million directed to JP Morgan Frankfurt?


"Meanwhile, let me clarify that regards a remittance from IOR to IOR: we simply transferred the money to invest in German bonds.

Why were the rules against money laundering not respected?


"We are implementing the rules. Regarding the object of the investigation, there was an error in the procedure implemented with Credito Artigiano. But the operation is very clear, there is nothing hidden or to hide: only a transfer of funds from IOR itself.

The State Secretariat has renewed total confidence ...

"I met Cardinal Bertone, I found him to be very concerned about what happened. I have been invited to remain in my place, also because I'm doing exactly what I was asked to do, that is to make each operation of IOR more transparent. This is the clear desire of my superiors and for this reason I consider what is happening ... almost against nature! A procedural error has been used as an excuse to attack the Institute, its president and, more generally, the Vatican."

Why do you think someone wants to attack you or the Holy See?

"I think that the statement of the Secretariat of State and its sense of amazement shines through. .. [it happened] just when we are working as hard as possible to enforce rules against money laundering. Cardinal Bertone has appointed Cardinal Attilio Nicola, president of the supervisory board inside the Vatican, to monitor the implementation of all provisions for the White List. We are available to provide information, it would have been enough to ask us instead of slapping it on the front page.”

Saturday, September 11, 2010

The Queen's Two State Visits to the Vatican

One fact that hasn’t so far emerged from the Pope’s first state visit to Britain is that it follows two state visits to the Vatican by the Queen.

Not every visit the Queen makes is a state one: during the Jubilee Year she met John Paul II at the Vatican as a courtesy after making a state visit to Italy.

But in 1961 she made a state visit to Vatican City where she met John XXIII, and in 1980 she made another one to meet John Paul II.

As diplomacy is all about reciprocity, it was only natural that a state visit eventually be extended to the Pope.

The question which perhaps really should be asked, therefore, is why it has taken so long.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Britain and the Culture of Death

In my latest blog for the Register, I write about the extent to which the culture of death has taken root in Britain.

It may be possible to make the connection between this and anti-religious sentiment/social breakdown in parts of the country, but I wanted to stick to facts rather than speculate although, as the Benedict XVI quotation infers at the end, the two are probably related.

It would be interesting to know how many of my countrymen know about the abortion statistics quoted in the piece. One a day is too many; 600 is horrific.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

The Cure of Ars on the Church in England

Today a colleague sent me the following hopeful story dating back to St. John Vianney, the Cure of Ars, whose Feast Day the Church celebrates today.

The story, we're told, "concerns a Protestant country that once merited the title “Isle of Saints”...

"On May 14th 1854, the Cure of Ars received a visit from Bishop Ullathorne of Birmingham. “I was speaking of prayer for England,” the Bishop writes, “and was describing in a few words the difficulties and sufferings of our poor Catholics for the faith, when suddenly he interrupted me by opening those eyes – cast into shadow by their depth, when listening or reflecting - and streaming their full light on me in a manner I can never forget, he said, in a voice as firm and full of confidence as though he were making an act of faith: “I believe that the Church in England will recover her ancient splendour”. I am sure he firmly believes this, from whatever source he has derived the impression”.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Cardinal Ouellet - One to Watch

Here is an inspirational story of an Anglican journalist's personal encounter with Cardinal Marc Ouellet, recently appointed prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.

I've heard other similar stories in which the Canadian cardinal has touched those he's met. On the couple of occasions I've interviewed him, I've noticed a distinct inner peace and an ability to combine a sense of authority without any sense of being judgemental - some signs, to me at least, of genuine holiness.

For some years now, I've been saying he's a possible future Pope. He's certainly someone to watch.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Holy Stairs Defaced

Vandals have defaced the entrance to the Scala Sancta in Rome, scrawling insults against the Pope.

Rome has a serious problem with graffiti, often painted on some of the city's most beautiful and sacred buildings. So although this is very depressing, it's not so surprising.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Rabbi Rosen Welcomes Appointment of Bishop Koch

It's too early of course to say how Bishop Kurt Koch, the new president of the Pontifical Commission for Relations with Jews, will deal with the thorny issue of Catholic-Jewish relations.

But a good omen is that one of Judaism's foremost interlocutors with the Church, Rabbi David Rosen, is pleased with the Holy Father's appointment. His statement reads:

The AJC congratulates Bishop Kurt Koch of Switzerland on his appointment by Pope Benedict XVI's as successor to Cardinal Walter Kasper, giving him the leadership responsibility for the Vatican's relations with the Jewish People as well as with non-Catholic Christians.

"Bishop Koch has a fine record of deep friendship with the Swiss Jewish community as well as profound commitment to the singular religious and historical nature of the Church's relationship with Judaism and Jewry " declared Rabbi David Rosen, AJC's International Director of Interreligious Affairs. He added "accordingly we warmly welcome this appointment and look forward to a close working relationship with Bishop Koch.


In truth, what usually upsets the Jews rarely - if ever - comes from the joint commission, but it still helps that they have someone in the Vatican to confide in when relations pass through a rocky patch, as they no doubt will again.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Benedict XVI Publicly Reprimands Cardinal Schoenborn

Pope Benedict today publicly reprimanded Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, the Archbishop of Vienna, for comments he made recently about Cardinal Sodano and matters relating to Church discipline.

The full statement below is without precedent, but so too was the cardinal's criticism of Sodano, made in comments given off the record to a group of journalists.

This shows how seriously the Holy Father is about preserving unity in the Church, although I suspect quite a few would like him to be similarly hard-line on prelates who publicly dissent from Church teaching and not one who openly criticises a fellow cardinal.

Cardinal Sodano has still to respond to accusations of corruption concerning him and the Legion.

VATICAN CITY, 28 JUN 2010 (VIS) - The Holy See Press Office released the following communique early this afternoon:

"(1) The Holy Father today received in audience Cardinal Christoph Schonborn O.P., archbishop of Vienna and president of the Austrian Episcopal Conference. The cardinal had asked to meet the Supreme Pontiff personally in order to report on the current situation of the Church in Austria. In particular, Cardinal Schonborn wished to clarify the exact meaning of his recent declarations concerning some aspects of current ecclesiastical discipline, and certain of his judgements regarding positions adopted by the Secretariat of State - and in particular by the then Secretary of State of Pope John Paul II - concerning the late Cardinal Hans Hermann Groer, archbishop of Vienna from 1986 to 1995.

"(2) Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College of Cardinals, and Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone S.D.B. were subsequently invited to join the meeting.

"In the second part of the audience certain widespread misunderstandings were clarified and resolved, misunderstandings deriving partly from certain statements of Cardinal Christoph Schonborn, who expressed his displeasure at the interpretations given to his words.

"In particular:

"(a) It must be reiterated that, in the Church, when accusations are made against a cardinal, competency falls exclusively to the Pope; other parties may have a consultative function, while always maintaining due respect for persons.

"(b) The word 'chiacchiericcio' (gossip) was erroneously interpreted as disrespectful to the victims of sexual abuse, towards whom Cardinal Angelo Sodano nourishes the same feelings of compassion, and of condemnation of evil, as expressed on various occasions by the Holy Father. That word, pronounced during his Easter address to Pope Benedict XVI, was taken literally from the pontifical homily of Palm Sunday and referred to the "courage that does not let itself be intimidated by the gossip of prevalent opinions".

"(3) The Holy Father, recalling with great affection his own pastoral trip to Austria, via Cardinal Christoph Schonborn sends his greetings and encouragement to the Church in Austria, and to her pastors, entrusting the journey to renewed ecclesial communion to the celestial protection of the Blessed Virgin, so venerated at Mariazell".

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Newt Gingrich's Impressive New Film on John Paul II


Here's a trailer for Newt Gingrich's new film Nine Days that Changed the World - an impressive movie that premiered last week in Rome. I would recommend it to any educator/catechist teaching about John Paul II, and about the Church's teaching on freedom and democracy.

My write up of the film including an interview with Gingrich can be found here. This isn't a politically partisan film - interestingly, its director is a lifelong Democrat.

Gingrich has already made a film on Reagan and his next project is to make one on Margaret Thatcher. All three leaders were, of course, pivotal in the West's defeat of Soviet Communism.

Fake Priest Attempts Robbery of Venerable English College

An amusing story from the news agency ANSA involving the Venerable English College:

"A thief who disguised himself as a priest to rob a Catholic college in Rome became so caught up in his holy pretence that he blessed the police officers who helped foil his bid to steal a batch of antique books.

The fake cleric, a 52-year-old Venezuelan, mingled among students and teachers on Saturday at the city's Venerable English College, a seminary for priests for England and Wales, before heading to its library and nabbing 25,000-euros worth of books. But the college's vice rector became suspicious when the unfamiliar man could not explain what he was doing there.

When questioned furthered he took flight but was stopped before he could make off with his haul of seven tomes.

Officers said that, even when the game was up, the man kept up the part, blessing them by making the sign of the cross before being taken into custody. Police said they were familiar with the man following attempts to steal antique books and works of art elsewhere."

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Benedict XVI Writes Letter to Cardinal Schoenborn

Benedict XVI has sent a letter to Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn about recent comments he made about Cardinal Angelo Sodano, according to an article in Il Foglio newspaper, and blogged about yesterday by the Vaticanista Andrea Tornielli.

Writing on his blog Sacri Palazzi, Tornielli says the Holy Father wrote to the Archbishop of Vienna about his recent off-the-record comments to Austrian journalists, during which he criticized Cardinal Sodano, the former Vatican Secretary of State, for preventing an investigation into accusations against Cardinal Hans Hermann Groër in the 1990s. The cardinal was later found to have sexually abused seminarians.

Cardinal Schoenborn also criticised Cardinal Sodano for his dismissing of media reports of the Pope’s handling sexual abuse by clergy as “petty gossip” during a spontaneous message of support to the Pope on Easter Sunday. He said Sodano's comments "deeply wronged" victims of abuse.

The existence of the letter would not be surprising. Last week, a source close to the Pope said the Holy Father was distressed by Cardinal Schoenborn’s remarks about Sodano, and the Archbishop of Vienna’s other controversial comments on homosexual relationships that were widely reported.

There are mixed opinions about whether Cardinal Schoenborn should have spoken off the record with a group of journalists. Some thought it naïve as any one of them could leak their conversation without being traced. Others, however, are grateful for what he said.

But for one cardinal to criticize another so publicly is unprecedented.

Tornielli points out this isn’t the first time the Pope has written to Cardinal Schoenborn. Six months ago he wrote to him about his unannounced and controversial visit to Medjugorje, now currently the subject of an investigation led by Cardinal Camillo Ruini.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Archbishop Dolan Confirmed as Visitor for Irish Seminaries

As predicted here last week, the Vatican today confirmed that Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York will be heading the Apostolic Visitation into Ireland's two pontifical seminaries.

I'm hearing of some unpleasant and seriously flawed practices going on in the Pontifical Irish College in Rome, but am waiting to see if these can be substantiated.

No doubt all these issues will be fully addressed by Archbishop Dolan once he starts the investigation.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Cardinal Sandoval to be Papal Delegate to the Legion?

The news agency APCOM is reporting that Mexican Cardinal Juan Sandoval Iniguez is tipped to be the "papal delegate" to the Legionaries of Christ.

The Archbishop of Guadalajara, 77, had a recent private audience with the Holy Father and is expected to be appointed before the Vatican's summer recess. The news agency notes he is close to retirement and therefore will have the time to undertake such a position, but it says other candidates may be chosen instead.

The delegate's duty would be to oversee what is likely to be a long process of restructuring of the religious congregation, redefining its charism, reviewing its exercise of authority, raising its mission, and investigating its management of finances.

The current leadership will be answerable to their new superior.

The final decisions will be left to Pope Benedict.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

UAE Sends First Envoy to the Holy See


Pope Benedict XVI welcomed today the first ever ambassador to the Holy See sent by the United Arab Emirates, Mrs Hissa Abdulla Ahmed Al-Otaiba.

What makes this news particularly interesting is that it demonstrates the increasing influence Catholics are gaining on the Arab peninsular through the huge intake of foreign labourers, many of whom come from the Indian sub-continent.

As I wrote in 2008 soon after visiting Abu Dhabi and Dubai, the changing patterns of belief in the Gulf are good news for the Church and for the region as a whole. The tragedy is the appalling treatment Christians and other immigrants often experience in the workplace, and the severe lack of churches for so many of the faithful.

The Pope gently addressed the first concern, saying:

"It is towards men and women, understood as unique in their God-given nature, that all politics, culture, technology and development are directed. To reduce the aims of these human endeavours merely to profit or expediency would be to risk missing the centrality of the human person in his or her integrity as the primary good to be safeguarded and valued, for man is the source, the focus and the aim of all economic and social life (cf. Caritas in Veritate, 25). Thus, the Holy See and the Catholic Church take care to highlight the dignity of man in order to maintain a clear and authentic vision of humanity on the international stage and in order to muster new energy in the service of what is best for the development of peoples and nations."

He then commended the UAE for the churches that have been built so far.

I would have liked the Holy Father to have been a little more direct on these issues, but at least some of these concerns were addressed.

Given the current situation over there, and advances in Catholic-Muslim dialogue, a papal visit to the Arab peninsular may well not be that far off.

Archbishop Dolan to Lead Apostolic Visitation?

I'm hearing that Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York will be heading the Apostolic Visitation into Ireland's two Pontifical Colleges in Rome and Maynooth.

Whether that means he'll be heading the whole visitation is not yet known.

Archbishop Dolan is to give a talk in Maynooth on May 27th, so perhaps an announcement will be made then.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Spain's Secularist PM to Visit Pope

Spain’s Prime Minister is to visit Pope Benedict XVI in June, according to the Barcelona Reporter.

It says Deputy Prime Minister Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega confirmed that Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero will visit, but said it only taking place because it conforms to protocol. Spain has presidency of the EU and it is common for European political leaders to visit the Pope.

Spain's government is very secular and has had frequent run-ins with the Church since elected in 2004.

The Holy Father travels to Spain in November, and will visit the cities of Santiago de Compostela and Barcelona.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Video Preview of Benedict XVI's September Visit

Here's a stirring video looking ahead to the Holy Father's visit to Britain in September (H/T Hermeneutic of Continuity blog). Not sure who made it, but quite a lot of footage comes from The Papacy of Reason, a documentary I made with Raphaela Schmid on Benedict XVI back in 2008.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Cardinal Sodano on the Ropes

I tend to agree with Joseph Bottum on this, at least that Cardinal Sodano should come clean, as I wrote here.
From First Things

The Cost of Father Maciel

May 12, 2010
Joseph Bottum

A special preview from the new issue of First Things: In this month’s Public Square, Joseph Bottum evaluates the damage of the scandals of the Legion of Christ.

Cardinal Sodano has to go. The dean of the College of Cardinals, he has been found too often on the edges of scandal. Never quite charged, never quite blamed, he has had his name in too long a series of depositions and court records and news accounts—an ongoing embarrassment to the Church he serves. The Vatican has been responding in a disorganized way to the frenzy of recent press stories about often thirty-year-old abuse cases. What it should do is put its own house in order, moving out the unhelpful remnants of the bureaucracy that allowed those scandals to fester for so long.

The latest revelations concern the financial benefits Cardinal Sodano received from Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, the corrupt conman who founded the Legion of Christ and its associated lay group, Regnum Christi. And those revelations follow hard on the 2008 convictions of Raffaello Follieri for wire fraud and money laundering. (Follieri’s company, you’ll remember, was trading in decommissioned church property, and it relied for its crimes on the prestige of having Cardinal Sodano’s nephew as its vice president.) That news, in turn, followed the cardinal’s reported role in thwarting a 1995 investigation into the subsequently proved accusations against the episcopal molester in Vienna, Hans Hermann Groër.

In one sense, of course, it’s very sad. A long career in the Church is not ending well, and it would be kinder to protect the man and let him slip away unnoticed. But Cardinal Sodano himself seems unwilling to let it be so. Speaking of the stories that were on the front page of nearly every newspaper in the world, he told the pope publicly at Easter this year, “The people of God are with you and do not allow themselves to be impressed by the petty gossip of the moment.”

Petty gossip? There’s room for complaint about the way the scandals have been used to advance every agenda under the sun, but when the subject is abused and sodomized children, petty is not the adjective of choice. Even in a season of mismanaged Vatican responses to the frenzy of the press, Sodano’s line was stunningly tone-deaf, and it served mostly to give the media yet another day of headlines. As things stand, if (God forbid) Pope Benedict were to die, the obsequies would be led by Cardinal Sodano—and the newscasts, hour after hour, would feature rehashes of all that is now associated with his name.

But that’s not the real problem. The deeper point is the lack of consequences—visible consequences—for failures and missteps and wrong associations in the Vatican. The real problem is that heads haven’t rolled, penalties haven’t been exacted, for Fr. Maciel’s deceptions.

For many years, Cardinal Sodano received money and benefits for his projects from the Legion of Christ, and in 1998 he halted investigations into sexual abuse by the Legion’s founder. That apparent quid pro quo ought to have a price.

It ought to have a price precisely because the scandal of Fr. Maciel is so deadly. The child-abuse cases were a corruption in the Church. What Fr. Maciel attempted is a corruption of the Church. He fooled many people, including this magazine’s creator, Richard John Neuhaus, who once defended Maciel in a 2002 column, before agreeing later that Cardinal Ratzinger (investigating Maciel at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith) and John Paul ”know more than I know with respect to evidence.”

The irony is that Fr. Neuhaus didn’t undertake that defense at the behest of Maciel, whom he never knew well. He did so because people he did know well, young American priests of the Legion, begged him to do so, telling him that their founder was suffering an attack they were certain was false and unfair. The first victims are the men, women, and children that Maciel, in his polymorphous perversity, used sexually, but the second set of victims are the good, strong, dynamic priests who had little direct contact with the man and are nonetheless tarred by his actions.

In the long history of the Church, enduring religious establishments have been built by the sinful, but usually the new order’s spirituality is a correction to the sinfulness: a way, a charism, that leads such sinners to Christ. Maciel, however, wrote his sins, and his power to cover up those sins, deep into the spirituality of the Legion of Christ—in how it handles confession, how it treats obedience, and how it understands authority.

The bishops who undertook the apostolic visitation of the Legion have finished their work, presenting their report to the Vatican on April 30. In anticipation, the directors of the Legion issued a statement on March 26, which read, “We ask all those who accused him in the past to forgive us, those whom we did not believe or were incapable of giving a hearing to, since at the time we could not imagine that such behavior took place.” On April 25, Fr. Owen Kearns, publisher of the Legion’s newspaper, the National Catholic Register, added, “To Father Maciel’s victims, I pray you can accept these words: I’m sorry for what our founder did to you. I’m sorry for adding to your burden with my own defense of him and my accusations against you. I’m sorry for being unable to believe you earlier. I’m sorry this apology has taken so long.”

All that is good, and yet, it isn’t enough. First Things has never received money from the Legion (and the closest I personally have been to their finances was a single review, of an Orhan Pamuk novel, I wrote for the National Catholic Register back in 1997). But then one thinks of the likes of Thomas Williams, Tom Hoopes, Thomas Berg, and all the other friends and acquaintances who had associations with the Legion of Christ and Regnum Christi. For that matter, many American Catholic commentators have lectured over the years at the movement’s events. The money they received was never significant, but it all helped contribute to an atmosphere in which the Legion could close ranks after the first public accusations against Maciel.

That atmosphere has to be eliminated, which will require the rewriting and reordering not just of the institutional structure but also of the spiritual design of the Legion of Christ and Regnum Christi.

In April, the National Catholic Reporter published a two-part article about Maciel’s financial dealings. Given the obsession with all things Catholic this spring, a time when the Long Lent of 2002 seemed to have come around again, the article received surprisingly little attention. Perhaps that’s because the author, Jason Berry, didn’t quite have the story he wanted. His account of cash in Rome was thinly sourced, and his reporting on Maciel’s ac-tions in Mexico didn’t find the smoking gun we’ve all long expected to be found—the one that shows the Legion’s connections to the likes of Carlos Slim, whose telephone monopoly and political string-pulling made him the world’s richest man, and to the endemic corruption of Mexican poli-tics.

As I wrote when the articles first appeared, although they were fumbling as jour-nalism, they were fumbling toward what seems to be the truth. A larger part of the reason that the mainstream media didn’t latch on to the story may be that it does not fit the narrative of the mo-ment—for Joseph Ratzinger, first as cardinal and now as pope, comes off in the Maciel scandal as something like the hero. Not until the end did John Paul II see more than a charismatic Latin American figure, raising money and training vibrant, active priests. Cardinal Ratzinger clearly saw deeper, despite the powerful protection Cardinal Sodano cast over Maciel.

The received journalistic narrative skewed a great deal of other reporting this spring. All through March and April, Der Spiegel, the New York Times, and the Irish Times—to name only a few—were working, quite accurately, within the media’s standard picture, which demands that the pope himself must have been involved in covering up crimes in the Church.

A more accurate understanding, as I wrote in a recent Weekly Standard article, would see that the first part of the scandals—the most evil, disgusting part—is basically over. For a variety of reasons, Catholics suffered through a corruption of their priests, cen-tered around 1975, with the clergy’s percentage of sexual predators reaching new and vile levels. The Church now has in place stringent child-protection procedures, and the cases now being discussed, real and imagined, are more than a decade old.

The second part of the scandals, however, involves not the mostly dead criminals but the living institution. The bishops who ruled over those corrupt priests catastrophically failed to act. There were never a lot of these Catholic cases, but there were plenty enough—with every single one a horror, both in the act itself and in the failure of the bishops to react. The Catholic Church did not start the worldwide epidemic of child sexual abuse, and it did not materially advance it. But the bureaucracy of the Church did not do nearly enough to fight that epidemic when it broke out among its own clergy. And for these failures, every Catholic is paying—in nearly $3 billion of donations lost in court judgments, in suspicion of pastors, and in deep shame.

Insofar as anyone comes out well from all this, it is Pope Benedict. However much the narrative demands that he be pulled in, nothing yet published has held up to serious scrutiny. Which ought not, really, to be a surprise. This man was the one who actually saw there was a problem—the one who, in 2005, openly denounced the “filth in the Church and in the priesthood.” A Maltese abuse victim who met the pope this April told an interviewer, “I did not have any faith in priests. Now, after this moving experience, I have hope again. You people in Italy have a saint. Do you realize that? You have a saint!”

Not that the Vatican has managed to tell this story. The responses of the bureaucracy in Rome have swung between unhelpful silences and wrong-headed whines. There may be good reasons not to play the publicity games—driven by media cycles and celebrity culture and dramas of shame and fame—in which the world is caught up these days. The wheels of Catholicism have always ground slowly, operating with a deliberation that will not, and should not, match the world’s hectic pace. Then again, there may be good reasons for the Church to take the world as it finds it, trying to move people toward Christ from where those people actually are.

But, over these recent months of frenzy, the Vatican has unsuccess-fully adopted both these modes. The bureaucracy has attempted public relations and done it badly. And the bureaucracy has attempted interior review, for the edification of its people and the good discipline of its priests, and that, too, has not been done particularly well. The faithful are saddened, responding to the news accounts with a sigh and mumble, and the clergy are disheartened and con-fused.

For either purpose, a figure such as Cardinal Sodano has to be removed from his current position and told to serve the Church in prayer. Everyone inside the Church needs to be taught that there are consequences for scandalous mistakes. And, for the outside world, Ca-tholicism needs a story to tell, a narrative that can convey the simple truth: Despite the sins of its members, the Church remains what it has been—a light in dark places, a force of charity for the weak and the poor, and a hope for humankind on its way to the saving truth that is God.

Joseph Bottum is editor of First Things.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Pope's In-Flight Briefing with Journalists

Below is the full transcript of Pope Benedict XVI's briefing with journalists on the papal plane to Portugal this morning, courtesy of Vatican Radio:

Q. - What message will you bring to Portugal, a deeply Catholic country in the past and a bearer of faith in the secular world of today. How can the faith be announced in a context which is indifferent, and sometimes hostile, to the Church?

First of all, good morning to all of you. I hope we will all have a good trip, despite the famous ash cloud which we are above right now.

In terms of Portugal, first of all I have feelings of joy and gratitude for everything this country has done and is doing in the world and in history, the deep humanity of this people which I have come to know through a past visit and so many Portuguese friends. I would say it is true that Portugal has been a great force for the Catholic faith, and it has carried that faith to every part of the world. A courageous, intelligent, creative faith, it has known how to create great cultures, we see this in Brazil, in Portugal itself, but also the presence of the Portuguese spirit in Africa and Asia.

On the other hand, this presence of secularism is not entirely new. The dialectic between secularism and faith has a long history in Portugal. By the seventeenth century, there was already a strong current of the Enlightenment. We need only think of names such as Pombal. In these centuries, Portugal lived this dialectic which today naturally has been radicalized and is reflected in all of the signs of the current European spirit. This seems to me a challenge, but also a great possibility. In these centuries, the dialectic between the Enlightenment, secularism and faith always had people who wanted to build bridges and to create a dialogue. Unfortunately, the dominant tendency was to see a contradiction and to see one as excluding the other. Today we can see this is false. We have to find a synthesis and be able to dialogue. In the multi-cultural situation we’re all in, it’s clear that a European culture which aims to be solely rationalist, without any sense of the transcendent dimension, would not be in a position to dialogue with the other great cultures of humanity – all of which have this sense of the transcendent dimension, which is a dimension of the human person. To think that there’s a pure reason, even a historic reason, which exists entirely in itself, is an error, and we are discovering this more and more. It touches only a part of the human person expressed in a given historic situation, and is not reason as such. Reason as such is open to transcendence, and only in the meeting between transcendent reality, faith and history is human life fully realized.

I think the mission of Europe in this situation is to find a path to this dialogue, to integrate faith, rationality, and modernity in a single anthropological vision of the concrete human person and render that vision for the future of humanity.

For that reason, I think the task and mission of Europe in this situation is to find this dialogue, to integrate faith and reason in a single modern anthropological vision of the concrete human person and thus also render it communicable to other human cultures. So I would say that the presence of secularism is a normal thing, but the separation, the opposition between faith and secularism is anomalous. The great challenge of this moment is that the two meet, so they may find their true identity. It is a mission for Europe and a human necessity in our time.

Q: - Thank you, Holy Father. Continuing on the theme of Europe, the economic crisis has recently gotten a lot worse in Europe, especially in Portugal. Some European leaders think the future of the European Union is at risk. What lessons should we learn from this crisis, including at the ethical and moral level? What are the keys for consolidating the unity and cooperation of the European nations in the future?


I would say that this economic crisis, with its undeniable moral component, is a case of applying and making concrete what I said earlier, that is of two separate cultural currents meeting, otherwise we will not find a path to the future. Here, too, I believe there is a false dualism. There is an economic positivism that thinks it is possible to realize itself without an ethical component, a market that regulates itself according to its own economic strength, by a positivistic and pragmatic reasoning of the economy. Ethics is something different, something extraneous. In reality, we can see today that a pure economic pragmatism which ignores the reality of the human person, who is inherently ethical, has no positive ending, but creates irresolvable problems. This is the moment to recognize that ethics is not something exterior, but rather interior to all forms of rationality, including economic reason.

On the other hand, we also have to confess the Catholic-Christian faith often has been overly individualistic. It left the concrete things of the economy to the world, thinking only of individual salvation and its religious aspects, without recognizing that these imply a global responsibility and a responsibility for the world. So here too we must enter into a concrete dialogue. I tried to do as much in my encyclical Caritas in veritate, and the whole tradition of the social teaching of the church moves in this sense, broadening the ethical aspect of the faith from the individual to a responsibility for the world, to a reason that is perforated by ethics. On the other hand the most recent events on the markets, in the last two or three years, have amply shown us that the ethical dimension is an internal one and that it must enter into economic action, because man is an one. A healthy anthropology that takes everything into account. Only in this way will we solve the problem. Only in this way will Europe deliver and succeed in its mission.

Q: Thank you. Now we come to Fatima, which will be the spiritual culmination of this trip. Holy Father, what meaning do the apparitions of Fatima have for us today? When you presented the Third Secret of Fatima in a press conference at the Vatican Press Office in June 2000, many of us and other colleagues asked if the message of the secret could be extended, beyond the assassination attempt against John Paul II to other sufferings of the popes. Could the context of that vision also be extended to the suffering of the church today,for the sins of the sexual abuse of minors?


First of all, I want to express my joy to go to Fatima, to pray before Our Lady of Fatima, and to experience the presence of the faith there, where from the little ones a new force of the faith was born, and which is not limited to the little ones, but has a message for the whole world and all epochs of history, and touches history in its present and illuminates this history. In 2000, during the presentation, I said there is a supernatural impulse which does not come from the individual imagination but from the reality of the Virgin Mary, from the supernatural, that impulse which enters into a subject, and is expressed according to the possibilities of the subject.

The subject is determined by his or her historic, personal, temperamental, situation. Therefore, supernatural impulse is translated according to the subject’s possibilities to see, imagine or express it. But in these expressions, formed by the subject, a content is hidden, that goes beyond, goes deeper. Only in the passage of time is the true depth, that was clothed in this vision, revealed to us, only then is it possible for concrete people.

Here too, beyond this great vision of the suffering Pope, which we can initially circumscribe to John Paul II, other realities are indicated which over time will develop and become clear. Thus it is true that beyond the moment indicated in the vision, one speaks about and sees the necessity of suffering by the Church, which is focused on the person of the Pope, but the Pope stands for the church, and therefore sufferings of the Church are announced. The Lord told us that the Church will always be suffering in various ways, up to the end of the world. The important point is that the message, the answer of Fatima, it not substantially addressed to particular devotions, but is the fundamental response: permanent conversion, penance, prayer, and the three cardinal virtues: faith, hope and charity. Here we see the true, fundamental response the Church must give, which each of us individually must give, in this situation.

In terms of what we today can discover in this message, attacks against the Pope or the Church do not only come from outside; rather the sufferings of the Church come from within, from the sins that exist in the Church. This too has always been known, but today we see it in a really terrifying way: the greatest persecution of the Church does not come from enemies on the outside, but is born from the sin within the church, the Church therefore has a deep need to re-learn penance, to accept purification, to learn on one hand forgiveness but also the need for justice. Forgiveness is not a substitute for justice. In one word we have to re-learn these essentials: conversion, prayer, penance, and the theological virtues. That is how we respond, and we need to be realistic in expecting that evil will always attack, from within and from outside, but the forces of good are also always present, and finally the Lord is stronger than evil and the Virgin Mary is for us the visible maternal guarantee that the will of God is always the last word in history.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Looking Ahead to Pope's Trip to Portugal

John Allen has a good pre-analysis of the Pope's visit to Fatima next week.

Portugal is becoming steadily more secular and recently passed a same-sex marriage bill, subject to a presidential veto, so this visit was always going to address the problems of secularism in Europe. But recent events in the European economy will give it added weight and relevance.

Like John Paul II, Benedict XVI has consistently argued that Europe must rediscover its Christian roots and that the continent cannot be bound by financial ties alone.

The Pope is scheduled to leave for Fatima on Tuesday but the volcanic cloud, currently passing over Portugal, Spain and Italy, may cause problems.

Friday, May 7, 2010

"Couples Who Use Natural Family Planning Almost Never Divorce"

Dr. Janet Smith always has a knack of putting across the Church's teaching on important life and reproductive issues in ways you'll never hear the mainstream media, or even some Church circles.

A professor at Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, here's what she says in response to a poor piece by AFP news agency on the Church's teaching on contraception.

Noting that more than one out of three babies in the United States are born to a single mother, one out of four pregnancies are aborted and that more than one out of two marriages end in divorce, she says:

“If people were living by the Church's teaching on sexuality, those things wouldn't be happening, and those things are a path to misery."

“People born out of wedlock have a very hard life, as do their children. People who get divorced have a very hard life as do their children, and their friends and their family,” Smith asserted, adding that on the other hand, “people who don't get divorced and stay married and raise their children, generally have very good lives.”

“Couples who use natural family planning almost never divorce,” she pointed out. “The divorce rate at tops, we think is around 4%.”

In light of these facts,“who looks foolish?” she asked. “The Church for not changing a teaching that almost guarantees happiness or a culture that is pushing an agenda that almost guarantees misery?”

Also, “it is really, patently absurd for women to be putting chemicals in their body to correct a condition that is not a defect.

“Fertility is a perfectly healthy condition,” Smith emphasized.

For more on why contraception is against the natural moral law, this is a helpful article. (Interestingly, many believe the Anglican church began to decline after its decision in the 1930s to allow contraception.)

As always, the Church's teaching offers an unmatched anthropological vision, one of basic reason and common sense.

General Election: Good News for Pro-Lifers, Papal Visit

Last night's General Election results in Britain appear to be good news for pro-lifers and could auger well for Benedict XVI's visit in September.

Several virulent anti-life MPs lost their seats, some to be replaced by Conservative newcomers who have voiced their intention to support pro-life policies.

One particularly welcome result was the defeat of Lib Dem MP Dr Evan Harris in Oxford West and Abingdon, nicknamed "Doctor Death" for his militant secularism and anti-life views.

However, a Lib-Con government may be a problem.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Lord Alton, Britain's Pro-Life Record, and the General Election

Lord Alton of Liverpool, the great pro-life champion in the British parliament, is currently visiting Rome.

Last Friday night he gave a very interesting address to the Venerable English College.

As expected, he made some powerful points - here are just a few which stuck in my mind:

1) The UK government continues to use taxpayer's money to fund abortions worldwide, including giving millions of pounds to the UNFPA and others - not only to pay for abortions in developed countries, but also to uphold China's one-child policy. (He showed case studies of Chinese parents forced to have their children aborted using the pressure of torture and other means).

2) 600 abortions take place everyday in the UK, 40 million unborn babies are killed worldwide every year.

3) In the UK, unborn babies with disabilities can be aborted right up to birth.

4) Gordon Brown used a three line whip (in other words, all Labour MPs were forced to vote) to pass the Human Fertilization and Embryology Bill which included allowing scientists to conduct research on animal-hybrid embryos - despite notable scientists saying they didn't know what the benefits of such experiments would be. (Interestingly even Lord Steele, who was instrumental in legalizing abortion in the UK in the 1960s, opposed the Bill, and has opposed legalized euthanasia). Britain is the only country in the world to have legislated in favour of such research.

5) Around 3000 euthanasia deaths take place every year in Holland, 1000 of which are involuntary - i.e. occur without the consent of the patient. He said that showed how, once legalized, euthanasia can easily be used to kill elderly patients against their will.

6) Something the pagans noticed which was different about the first Christians was that "they didn't kill their offspring."

What I particularly like about Lord Alton is that he is pro-life not just on the three key issues of abortion, embryology and euthanasia, but also passionately speaks out on other social justice issues, whether they be concern for the poorest of the poor in Calcutta or defenceless civilians caught up in the conflict in Darfur. Quoting the late Archbishop Worlock, he stressed that as Christians we should be concerned about protecting life "From the Womb to the Tomb".

I asked him afterwards who he thought was the most pro-life candidate in the general election. He said that the position of Cameron, Clegg and Brown is not as important as that of the constituency candidate, so when voting it's better to find out each prospective MP's position (he didn't like the TV debates for this reason - the electorate aren't voting for a president but for their local MP).

But when pressed, he said that although none of the party leaders score well on pro-life issues, Cameron is best because he insists each issue is a matter of individual conscience while the others take a more rigid party line.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Goebbels, the Church and Pedophilia

Likening Dawkins and others to the Nazis is a bit of a cheap shot but there is a precedent in history.

According to Massimo Introvigne of Corriere della Sera, the Nazis did in fact try to discredit the Catholic Church by involving it in a scandal of pedophile priests. In 1937, he writes, propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels organized such a campaign after Pope Pius XI severely criticised the Nazi regime.

The parallels are disturbing. Just as cases of pedophilia are suddenly coming to light after decades since they occurred, so Goebbels instructed the Gestapo "to “reopen” the cases from 1936 and also older cases, constantly recalling them to public opinion," according to Introvigne.

Goebbels also ordered the Gestapo to find witnesses willing to accuse a certain number of priests, threatening them with immediate arrest if they didn’t collaborate, even if they were children.

It's an interesting article worth reading, and you won't of course see it reported in many other places.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Dawkins Video Parody

This has already done the rounds, but if you haven't seen it yet, it's a funny parody of the ridiculous Dawkins-Hitchens stunt to arrest the Pope in Britain.

I hear the film company is trying to take these down so apologies if the link doesn't work.

Beware the LibDems

Bishop Malcolm McMahon of Nottingham is warning that a victory by the Liberal Democrats in the May 6 general election could threaten the existence of Catholic schools. The party has pledged to make it illegal for religious schools to select students on the basis of their faith.

“Catholics should give it very serious consideration before they vote Liberal Democrat,” said Bishop McMahon. “Our position is that every person should have the right to bring up their children according to their consciences.”

That's not all. A LibDem win would threaten religious freedom and the right to life in general. The most militant secularists in the last parliament weren't Labour MPs but LibDem ones.

Yet Britain has, until recently, historically been an example to the world when it comes to religious freedom. Having just got back from Malta, I was interested to learn that in contrast to their other rulers, the British not only allowed Catholicism to continue but actually helped it prosper. The same approach to religion could be seen in just about every other colony.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Weigel Takes Hans Kueng to Task

George Weigel has excoriated Hans Kueng in this welcome article published today by First Things.

It comes in response to Kueng's open letter to bishops, published in the Irish Times and aimed at fomenting dissent and disapproval of Benedict XVI. That he would see himself in a position to take such an initiative in relation to bishops says rather a lot about Kueng.

Weigel begins his piece by recalling how Kueng, when a professor in the 1960s, bought himself a Mercedes convertible, assumed to have a been the fruit of the success of his book. This is well known and some might think it irrelevant, but I believe it's important as it gives further insight into his character.

As I found researching my recent piece on Christopher Hitchens, one can discover a fair amount about a person's anger and dissent by studying their past.

Perhaps it's time someone took a closer look at Kueng's.

Incidentally, two things I missed out of the Hitchens piece which should probably have been included: firstly that he is a heavy drinker (though this is well known), but secondly I've since discovered that his mother and her ex-Anglican vicar lover took their own lives after becoming caught up in the cult of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, "the sinister windbag who had brought enlightenment to the Beatles in the summer of love," as Hitchens puts it.

Yet more fuel to stoke Hitchens's hatred of religion, though ironically the Catholic Church was the only serious critic of the "free love" mentality of the 60s and 70s.

Picture: a caricature of Hans Kueng I drew for The Tablet a year or two ago.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Hitchens and the Pope

I've written a short expose of Christopher Hitchens, along with an analysis of the strange plan he and Richard Dawkins have cooked up to arrest the Pope when he comes to Britain.

Hitchens's past cannot but have an effect on how he sees religion. Someone said Thomas Merton also had a past, as of course did many great saints. Yes, but the difference is that they eventually turned to Christ and then walked in the light.

On the Pope's visit, I agree with this assessment of Father Z, that my fellow Brits will be pleasantly surprised when he sets foot in the country:

* He is not going to fit the image promoted by the MSM (mass media) and their twisted expectations.
* They will see a man who is joyful and serene.
* He will not be depressed or morose or crushed or over-burdened.
* He will not soften his message to the English people about the need for God in their lives.
* He will not dodge hard issues, such as the clerical abuse controversy, but will confront them head on.
* People will flock to see him and listen to what he has to say and his message will make more sense than what they get from the MSM.
* Vocations to the priesthood and religious will rise after his visit.

As with everywhere he visits, he has a great tendency to disarm his critics by his meek, humble and completely unimposing personality.

It's also his 83rd birthday today - Happy Birthday Holy Father!

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Journalists Abandon Standards to Attack the Pope

Journalists such as myself will of course make mistakes, but when so many are made in a story, you've got to start wondering if there's not a hidden agenda. In much of the mass media's coverage of the sexual abuse scandal (The London Times, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, NBC), it's quite clear there is.

Here's an excellent expose of a recent story, by Phil Lawler of Catholic World News:

Journalists abandon standards to attack the Pope

We're off and running once again, with another completely phony story that purports to implicate Pope Benedict XVI in the protection of abusive priests.

The "exclusive" story released by AP yesterday, which has been dutifully passed along now by scores of major media outlets, would never have seen the light of day if normal journalistic standards had been in place. Careful editors should have asked a series of probing questions, and in every case the answer to those questions would have shown that the story had no "legs."

First to repeat the bare-bones version of the story: in November 1985, then-Cardinal Ratzinger signed a letter deferring a decision on the laicization of Father Stephen Kiesle, a California priest who had been accused of molesting boys.

Now the key questions:

• Was Cardinal Ratzinger responding to the complaints of priestly pedophilia? No. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which the future Pontiff headed, did not have jurisdiction for pedophile priests until 2001. The cardinal was weighing a request for laicization of Kiesle.

• Had Oakland's Bishop John Cummins sought to laicize Kiesle as punishment for his misconduct? No. Kiesle himself asked to be released from the priesthood. The bishop supported the wayward priest's application.

• Was the request for laicization denied? No. Eventually, in 1987, the Vatican approved Kiesle's dismissal from the priesthood.

• Did Kiesle abuse children again before he was laicized? To the best of our knowledge, No. The next complaints against him arose in 2002: 15 years after he was dismissed from the priesthood.

• Did Cardinal Ratzinger's reluctance to make a quick decision mean that Kiesle remained in active ministry? No. Bishop Cummins had the authority to suspend the predator-priest, and in fact he had placed him on an extended leave of absence long before the application for laicization was entered.

• Would quicker laicization have protected children in California? No. Cardinal Ratzinger did not have the power to put Kiesle behind bars. If Kiesle had been defrocked in 1985 instead of 1987, he would have remained at large, thanks to a light sentence from the California courts. As things stood, he remained at large. He was not engaged in parish ministry and had no special access to children.

• Did the Vatican cover up evidence of Kiesle's predatory behavior? No. The civil courts of California destroyed that evidence after the priest completed a sentence of probation-- before the case ever reached Rome.

So to review: This was not a case in which a bishop wanted to discipline his priest and the Vatican official demurred. This was not a case in which a priest remained active in ministry, and the Vatican did nothing to protect the children under his pastoral care. This was not a case in which the Vatican covered up evidence of a priest's misconduct. This was a case in which a priest asked to be released from his vows, and the Vatican-- which had been flooded by such requests throughout the 1970s -- wanted to consider all such cases carefully. In short, if you're looking for evidence of a sex-abuse crisis in the Catholic Church, this case is irrelevant.

We Americans know what a sex-abuse crisis looks like. The scandal erupts when evidence emerges that bishops have protected abusive priests, kept them active in parish assignments, covered up evidence of the charges against them, and lied to their people. There is no such evidence in this or any other case involving Pope Benedict XVI.

Competent reporters, when dealing with a story that involves special expertise, seek information from experts in that field. Capable journalists following this story should have sought out canon lawyers to explain the 1985 document-- not merely relied on the highly biased testimony of civil lawyers who have lodged multiple suits against the Church. If they had understood the case, objective reporters would have recognized that they had no story. But in this case, reporters for the major media outlets are far from objective.

The New York Times-- which touched off this feeding frenzy with two error-riddled front-page reports-- seized on the latest "scoop" by AP to say that the 1985 document exemplified:

…the sort of delay that is fueling a renewed sexual abuse scandal in the church that has focused on whether the future pope moved quickly enough to remove known pedophiles from the priesthood, despite pleas from American bishops.

Here we have a complete rewriting of history. Earlier in this decade, American newspapers exposed the sad truth that many American bishops had kept pedophile priests in active ministry. Now the Times, which played an active role in exposing that scandal, would have us believe that the American bishops were striving to rid the priesthood of the predators, and the Vatican resisted!

No, what is "fueling a renewed sexual abuse scandal" is a media frenzy. There is a scandal here, indeed, but it's not the scandal you're reading about in the mass media. The scandal is the complete collapse of journalistic standards in the handling of this story.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Another Excellent Commentary on the Crisis

This one doesn't have the useful detail about how the Vatican works by Fr. Radcliffe (below), but contains other very commendable points.

In Defense of the Pope
by James Conley
First Things

Over these past few weeks a flurry of stories have appeared in the media regarding clergy sexual abuse and its mishandling by Catholic bishops and even the pope himself. Much of this information is dated. The fact that these stories were triggered in part by an attorney with a long and lucrative financial history of litigating the Catholic community and were pressed with such enthusiasm by editors during Holy Week—and in particular on Good Friday—could hardly have been a coincidence.

Sexual abuse of children cries to heaven for justice. It violates everything that is good and holy. It mocks everything Christ said in the gospels. Jesus compared the Kingdom of Heaven to the innocence of a little child. And for a Catholic priest to commit a crime and a sin like this is profoundly evil.

But sexual abuse is not uniquely or even predominantly a Catholic problem. It is a sickness widespread in our culture and also a global problem. Most studies indicate that in the United States as much as 60 percent of all sexual abuse of minors takes place within families.

It's certainly true that some Catholic priests perpetrated this evil on the innocent in years past. And too many Catholic bishops ignored or failed to grasp the gravity of this crime in addressing the problem. These men are gravely accountable to God for their actions.

But no other community or institution has examined itself on this painful issue as rigorously as the Catholic Church. No other group has put into place zero tolerance policies for sexual abuse and created safe environment programs like the Catholic Church in America, to the point where the Church is one of the most secure environments anywhere for children and young people.

And no person has done more to rid the Church of the evil of sexual abuse than the current successor of St. Peter, Benedict XVI. As archbishop of Munich thirty years ago, then as the Prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and now as the Vicar of Christ, Pope Benedict has always been dedicated to his responsibilities of purifying the Church in this area.

I served as an official in the Vatican's Congregation for Bishops for ten years. In that capacity, I worked alongside then cardinal Joseph Ratzinger who was a member of our Congregation. During my last year in Rome I served under the same good man after his election as pope. I learned from direct, first-hand experience that Benedict XVI is truly a man of God, a gift to the Church and a shepherd after the heart of the Good Shepherd.

Benedict XVI named me a bishop in April 2008. As a brother bishop to the bishop of Rome, it pains my heart and should wound the heart of all Catholics, to see the vindictive way he has been treated in the media. The editorial cartoons, the opinion pieces, the vicious attacks on his person and reputation, the disinformation and twisting of facts—all these abuses against responsible press freedom have been repugnant.

No other world religious leader, Jewish, Muslim or other, would be treated in this way. Contempt for the Catholic Church—and don't be fooled; the contempt is directed not just at Church leaders, but at ordinary believers as well—no matter how vulgar or bitter, is the last acceptable prejudice. Why? Because the Catholic Church is one of the few remaining voices that speaks effectively against the moral confusion of our day. The Catholic faith does not and will not bless the damaging moral path some people now seem to prefer.

Let me close with the words of Benedict from his Holy Thursday Chrism Mass in Rome:

"I am always struck by the passage in the Acts of the Apostles which recounts that after the Apostles had been whipped by order of the Sanhedrin, they "rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the name of Jesus" (Acts 5:41). Anyone who loves is ready to suffer for the beloved and for the sake of his love, and in this way he experiences a deeper joy. The joy of the martyrs was stronger than the torments inflicted on them."

Discipleship involves suffering. But suffering does accomplish a powerfully good thing: It clarifies who is willing to suffer for Christ's Church and her mission, and who is not.

James D. Conley is auxiliary bishop of Denver.