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August 24-30, 2008 Issue |
Posted 8/19/08 at 1:15 PM
True Beauty
I am writing to express my agreement
with Tom and Caroline McDonald’s advice to the couple whose child faced
reconstructive surgery or a life of disfigurement (“Cosmetic or
Reconstructive?” Aug. 10). I cannot imagine how painful it must be to face the
decision those parents face regarding their beloved child. But I do
agree with the columnists that, while the parents love the child
unconditionally and would like the world to do so, to see beyond her surface,
the world does not always meet our hopes or expectations. Sad to say, but in
this world, we sometimes don’t get a second chance, a deeper look beyond that
first impression. Giving this child surgery to create an ordinary, normal appearance
will not necessitate that the child conform to the current, questionable cultural
standards of beauty. It will merely assure that she will be taken for who she
is — without the stumbling block of an extreme appearance.
We wish the world was not this way,
and in a truly Christian society, it would not be. There are good souls in the
world who will see beyond the surface — but they are rare. Making an object
lesson of our child won’t change that.
It does not mean that everyone in
the world is superficial and unkind; it means that even good people have
weaknesses. We need to be understanding of them and their internal “deformity,”
as much as for the physically deformed child.
Jennifer
Heath
Greenfield,
Massachusetts
Catholic With a Small ‘C’
A survey of the Register’s archives
(free to registered subscribers of the print edition) shows that four columns
and one interview in the last two years have thrown more than 7,000 words at
the proposition that William Shakespeare was a Catholic. There is no reason to
object to research aimed at determining the truth of this proposition — until
Shakespeare’s literary merit gets thrown overboard in the process. At least
Joseph Pearce could say, in the July 27 interview, “In my next book, the
follow-up volume to The Quest for Shakespeare,
I will be looking for the solid and astounding evidence for the Bard’s
Catholicism in the plots of his plays.”
Regarding a possible “code” used by
Shakespeare (June 22, 2008), Father Andreas Kramarz, LC, claims “What makes a
code a code is precisely that it cannot be easily detected.” Jennifer Roche had
already shown (“Shakespeare’s Shadow Catholicism,” Feb. 5, 2006) following
author Clare Asquith, “Sixteenth-century society at large reveled in such
showmanship of skill and the dance of the intellect” as are found in riddles,
puns and allegories. It seems arguable that Richard Topcliffe and other
professional persecutors of the Church in England would have been as competent
at detecting esoteric Catholic references as are turn of the 21st-century Catholics
who enthuse about the prospect of being able to call the Bard one of their own.
A known Catholic, albeit one who
lived 350 years after Shakespeare, provides us useful guidance in this matter.
Flannery O’Connor wrote, “It is more than usual to find the attitude among
Catholics that since we possess the Truth in the Church, we can use this Truth
directly as an instrument of judgment on any discipline at any time without
regard for the nature of that discipline itself.”
And Shakespeare would probably be
able to span the centuries and grasp her judgment that, “The Catholic fiction
writer, as fiction writer, will look for the will of God first in the laws and
limitations of his art and will hope that if he obeys these, other blessings
will be added to his work.”
If Shakespeare was not Catholic, he
was manifestly catholic. That should be sufficient consolation for his readers.
John R. Traffas
Wichita,
Kansas
Restoring the Family
Amen! Amen!
I applaud the timely and significant
sentiments expressed in Jennifer Roback Morse’s article (“The New Civil Rights
Movement”, July 13). I work with a nonprofit agency in South Carolina, which
provides both adolescent pregnancy prevention and intervention services.
I have concluded, after years of
work, that we must restore the African-American family. We must see it as a
priority to do so. No longer can we hide behind the “alternative family unit”
terminology, as our families disappear right in front of our eyes — resulting
in havoc among our people. I am heartbroken by the demise of the
African-American family.
I agree with every word of the
article. I hope that abstinence education will become the new civil rights
movement among African-Americans. If so, I want to be a part of the movement,
in an effort to ensure the rebirth of the African-American family that includes
both a mother and a father raising their children together; God’s intended plan
all along.
Donna
Dawkins
Spartanburg,
South Carolina
Trusting Jesus
Regarding “Obama? Why Not?” (July
27), Mr. O’Neill’s letter illustrates why so many who claim to be Catholic
reject magisterial teaching, especially regarding contraception, marriage and
abortion.
Although the four predicted
consequences of widespread use of contraception have all come true in an amazingly
prophetic fashion after Paul VI’s encyclical, Humanae Vitae (The
Regulation of Birth) 40 years ago, we’re told that most self-described
Catholics reject the teaching. As
divorce, illegitimacy, infidelity, abortion, and STDs plague us, we refuse to accept
any connection to the contraceptive mentality. We degraded the marital embrace
(a privileged cooperation with God’s creative love) and reduced it to nothing
more than mutual masturbation to feed our appetites — and are blind to the
consequences.
Mr. O’Neill won’t accept an
“authoritarian proclamation” against contraception by celibate clergy. Neither
can many others accept such teachings. Many of Jesus’ disciples couldn’t accept
“... this hard saying” and “went back to their former way of life” (John 6:60).
What item in the cafeteria line do
we reject, yet tell ourselves we are still “good Catholics”? If we protest, are
we not Protestants?
Mr. O’Neill follows his conscience,
but one’s conscience must be properly formed. As the Catechism states, “The education
of conscience is indispensable for human beings who are subjected to negative
influences and tempted by sin to prefer their own judgment and to reject
authoritative teachings” (No. 1783).
It is never too late to humble
oneself and accept the fullness of truth and become truly free. If Jesus is
God, then the teaching authority he put in place, and protected from error, is
trustworthy — even if it consists of celibate clergy. If we’ve strayed from the
truth, it may be difficult to backtrack to the true, narrow path — but do we
have any other choice?
Larry
Butler
Phoenix,
Arizona
Catholic Confusion
Your excellent coverage — in letters
to the editor from June 8 through July 12 (six weeks) — on this subject “DNC
Response: Democrats Are People of Faith” by John Kelly (May 25), contained 19
letters with approximately 5,440 words. Yet, confusion still reigns among many
Catholics, and the presidential election is crowding us into the last three
months.
The spin in most of the media, and
some Catholic, “sophisticated” elite of academia and Congress distort the true
meaning of the Catholic Church’s position on abortion — relative to other
important issues. Yet, abortion is the greatest holocaust the world has ever
witnessed. The Catholic vote is so important to stop it.
Clarity in the fog of debate is
found in Pope John Paul II (the Great)’s living words. He explained the
importance of being true to fundamental Church teachings:
“Above all, the common outcry, which
is justly made on behalf of human rights — for example, the right to health, to
home, to work, to family, to culture — is false and illusory if the right to
life, the most basic and fundamental right and the condition for all other
personal rights, is not defended with maximum determin-ation.”(Christifideles
Laici,The Vocation and the Mission of the Lay Faithful in the Church
and in the World, No. 38).
Victor A. Fritz
Auburn,
New York
Our Country’s Future
In response to “Obama, Abortion and
Catholics” (July 13), I would anticipate a new president’s first official act
would be to address the most important issue the country is facing — an issue
that could potentially “define” his presidency. Which issue would Barack Obama
first act upon if he is elected? Health care? The Iraq war? Perhaps the economy?
I think it will be none of the
above. From what I have read, Obama’s first promised act as president would be
to sign the Freedom of Choice Act. This would allow abortions to be performed
all nine months of pregnancy, for any reason.
Do we want a president of death,
whose first stroke of the pen would be to kill more children?
Obama’s vote against the Born Alive
Infants Protection Act and his disagreement with the Supreme Court’s decision
that outlawed partial-birth abortion demonstrate where his allegiance — and our
country’s future — would lie under Obama.
Joe
Marincel
Flower Mound, Texas
Corrections
An article on Page 3 of the Aug. 10
issue incorrectly identified the provider of a photograph of Father Frank
Pavone, director of Priests for Life. The credit line should have read
“Courtesy of Maggie Sweet.”
A June 29 article on the Books and
Education page incorrectly stated that University of Chicago professor Herman
Sinaiko secured funds to bring speakers to the university in conjunction with
its Lumen Christi Institute. In fact, Sinaiko was impressed by Thomas
Levergood’s ability to secure such funds. Levergood is a former student of
Sinaiko’s and founder of the institute, which is a center of Catholic thought
on the Chicago campus.
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