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Letters 01.11.2009
January 11-17, 2009 Issue |
Posted 1/5/09 at 12:52 PM
In “Hot Water Over Communion and
Obama” (Nov. 30), Father Dwight Longenecker writes that because of Internal
Revenue Service concerns, priests are “not allowed” to “speak out more
forcefully before the election” on pro-life issues and that it’s “the role of
the laity” to do so. With all due respect, that’s like saying the sheep are
supposed to lead the shepherd.
A number of prominent priests
courageously speak in defense of life no matter the season. Among them are the
Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word (EWTN), Father Frank Pavone
(Priests for Life) and Father Thomas Euteneuer (Human Life International). The
IRS hasn’t shut down these high-profile witnesses, so why should obscure
diocesan priests be afraid?
Moreover, on Judgment Day, priests
and bishops won’t likely be asked whether they appeased the IRS — but whether
they did everything in their power to protect the unborn. The reason that 54%
of Catholics voted for the most pro-abortion candidate in history is precisely
because of the clergy’s historical silence on this issue.
If 3,500 homeless people were being
butchered in the streets every day would our priests be equally silent?
Wouldn’t they at least pray at every single liturgy for an end to the
slaughter? Yet, in most parishes, the word “abortion” is rarely or never heard.
The message to Catholics: Abortion is no big deal.
As long as this scandalous silence
continues, and as long as bishops compound the problem by allowing pro-abortion
politicians to receive holy Communion — which simultaneously jeopardizes souls,
defames Our Lord, decreases faith in the Real Presence, and shouts from the
rooftops that abortion is no big deal — the Catholic Church in America, endowed
with the fullness of truth, remains uniquely culpable for the blood of millions
of children.
Father Longenecker is right to urge
the laity to get “into hot water” to defend the unborn. However, it’s more
essential that he and his fellow priests do the same.
What the Church needs now are
heroes. She needs heroes in every single vocation of which she is composed.
Yet, above all, she needs heroes in the form of her priests, those men who by
virtue of their ordination are called to wage war against evil and to lead the
laity in persona Christi — in the person of the
greatest hero of all time.
Don Himmelspach
Saginaw, Michigan
Catholic ‘Lite’
I would like to comment respectfully
on your Nov. 30 issue.
It is good to have the hope you
expressed in “Hope for America: No. 3: The New Springtime of the Faith”: The
election was not the end of the world, as prophets of doom might imply. But we
need to ask: Is Cardinal Stafford a prophet of doom or simply a realist? Let us
quote the good cardinal: “If 1968 was the year of America’s ‘suicide attempt,’
2008 is the year of America’s exhaustion” (“Cardinal Critical of Obama”).
In “Hot Water Over Communion and
Obama,” you mention the controversy surrounding Father Newman, who told his
parishioners they had better go to confession before receiving the Eucharist if
they voted for Obama.
Then your answer to the problem of
why Catholics were indistinguishable from the general population in the last
election is to give your readers a “How (and Why) to Return to Sunday Mass.” It
only skirts the main reason we need to go to Mass. That is, simply, missing
Mass on Sunday is a mortal sin (Catechism of the Catholic Church, No. 2181).
The only way to take away a mortal sin is through the sacrament of penance (No.
1484). If you die with a mortal sin on your soul, you are in danger of going to
hell (No. 1861). And you might want to help Father Newman out and tell your
readers that if you receive Communion in the state of mortal sin that you have
committed a sacrilege, which is a sin against the Holy Spirit, and the act
itself is to eat and drink unto condemnation (No. 1864).
Before we can get to the springtime
of Christianity, we have to go through the winter. You mentioned some of the
winters Catholics have had to go through in your editorial. I am deathly afraid
that we have not seen the winter of our unfaithfulness yet, that the winter is
just beginning.
I thank God for priests like Father
Newman and Cardinal Stafford, for they tell the truth, even if it isn’t always
pleasant. I suggest that as you offer your readers “improved tools” to help
them with their faith that you tell the hard truth and not the Catholic lite
that I see in your Mass guide. Catholic lite is what got us into this mess.
Fear of the Lord will get us out.
Don Moga
Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin
Editor’s note: Your
point is well taken. We would clarify that the statement “We can and must
believe, with the late Pope John Paul II, that God is preparing a new
springtime for Christianity,” didn’t originate with us, but Pope Benedict XVI.
The emphasis on promoting Sunday
Mass (along with confession and prayer) is also not ours, originally. Pope John
Paul II made these the emphases for the entire Church in his apostolic letter
at the end of the Jubilee Year.
The Holy Father’s proposal is
brilliantly conceived, we think: To convince someone to commit to Sunday Mass,
confession and prayer is an easy sell, and it reorders the person’s priorities.
Those guides are available online at
NCRegister.com. Click on “Resources” then “How to be a Catholic Guides.”
Readers can feel free to distribute them far and wide as part of their effort
to fulfill what the popes have requested.
Prayer for the President
In light of the monumental problems
now facing our country, this prayer is very timely:
Keep our new President Barack Obama
healthy, safe and out of harm’s way. Give him the wisdom of Solomon and the
integrity and courage of St. Thomas More. Lord, hear our prayer.
Jerry Mazenko
Garden Grove, California
Great Guides
Please have more of your Catholic
guides (Culture of Life, Nov. 30-Dec. 21 issues). They are so excellent. We
need more of these to help evangelize our parishioners.
Father Peter Carota
Ripon, California
Complete Rosary
Concerning “How (and Why) of Daily
Prayer” (Dec. 14), you had instructions on how to pray the Rosary. You left out
the first four beads and just jumped right into the fifth bead for the Our
Father prayer. As my husband, who is a convert, said, “What about the other
four beads? What are they for?”
I always thought that they could be
for the Pope or for your own faith, hope and charity.
Please don’t water down the Rosary.
I have heard about dropping these important first four bead prayers, but it is
just not right. Teach the proper way, especially for new learners.
Jane Nakashian
Boston, Massachusetts
Catholic Promises
You duly note that Pope Benedict
will be able to fulfill Barack Obama’s promises of unity, hope and change in
“Benedict vs. Obama” (Jan. 4). While the arguments put forth by some Catholics
who supported Obama are truly an embarrassment, it is difficult to excoriate
sincere Catholics who once again found themselves between a rock and a hard
place in having to choose between the economic and social-welfare policies of
the Democrats and the anti-abortion promises of Republicans.
The Republican Party has
unfortunately turned abortion into a single-issue political bone, which it
dangles in front of orthodox Catholics and conservative Protestants every
election, with no attempt to link the having of children with the very
necessary resources to raise children and promote stable families.
Let’s face it: With the exception of
a very narrow definition of the abortion issue, how “in communion” are
Republican politicians with the rest of the teachings of the Church?
Jeffrey McHale
Scranton, Pennsylvania
Pro-Life Spotlight
We owe Joseph Nolan (“Pro-Life
Backup,” Letters, Nov. 30) thanks for shining the spotlight on the impressive
safety net in this country of quiet, safe support services for pregnant women
who are facing difficulties or crises.
One reason why Mr. Nolan may be
unaware of them is their tight budgets and the cost of advertising. The
centers, by and large, are staffed by well-trained volunteers and supported by
donations. The word has to get around by word of mouth and very carefully
placed ad dollars. They would be able to boost their visibility through your
contributions.
No one can do it all, Mr. Nolan. I
can’t, you can’t, and individual pro-life organizations can’t. However, I would
reassure you that those in the other aspects of pro-life work in this country
work to support any pregnant woman and direct her to the service best suited to
helping her in her need.
Mary Szydlik
Brooklyn Park, Minnesota
Editor’s note: Look to
the Register for frequent reports on these centers — and how you can help.
Real Choice
Words have meaning and power. Words
can influence and sway. Words can lead and mislead.
We are challenged today by the
current corruption of our English language. “Freedom,” “choice,” “dignity,”
“healing” and “service” are examples of misused words. Their connotation in the
past was to uplift, inspire and hearten. Not so today. We are led by way of
manipulation and obfuscation to consider what is naturally unacceptable and
offensive — the killing of innocent life — acceptable and good. That’s why
companies like VirtueMedia are needed to proclaim the truth (“Thousands Alive
Thanks to Ads,” Dec. 21).
The time is now to return “choice”
to its correct usage and understanding. The real choice is for life. The real
choice is before the act, not after the fact.
Rosalie Monaco
Coordinator, The Real Choice
East Rockaway, New York
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