|
Letters 06.14.2009
|
Posted 6/5/09 at 10:01 AM
‘Answering’ Logic
Regarding “Answering Notre Dame”
(May 31): Excellent editorial! Thanks for giving us the logical arguments we
need to evangelize those pro-choice people we all know. Many of them are
mesmerized by President Obama’s charismatic words and demeanor and can’t see
the truth. Our task is to wake them up!
At Mass in honor of Memorial Day, I
thought of our many fallen heroes and those still fighting for our freedom.
Then as I prayed for them and thanked God for them and for our nation, I
realized how much I have always loved my country; I realized how sad and
concerned I am for its future.
We are Christian soldiers on the
front lines who must die to ourselves in order to win this battle. Prayer is
vital. But we must also take action. Most of us are doing just that, but we
must inspire others to join us.
Victory will not be easy, but with
God’s help, we can win. Yes we can! Blessings and Godspeed to us all.
Nancy
Gail Jordan
Mercer
Island, Washington
Finding Common Ground
Regarding “Where Is the Middle
Ground?” (June 7): At Notre Dame, President Obama called for all to try to find
common ground on the issue of abortion. As a first step in that direction,
let’s ask him to agree that late-term abortion is torture.
Daniel
J. Kelly
Bloomfield
Hills, Michigan
Regarding “Institutional Hypocrisy”
(May 10): Could it be a coincidence that I happened to be reading about John
Paul II’s ad limina visit with Polish bishops who
were flustered by their communist government’s accusations that they were
trying to “ram their old Catholic rules” (in this case, forbidding
abortion) down everyone’s throats? They were afraid (understandably so) and
wanted John Paul to help them find common ground so the Church could
survive.
John Paul took this as a teaching
moment and encouraged them to remain firm, because the communists could not
find common ground when it involved taking away the fundamental right to life —
there was no middle ground.
He reminded them of Jesus’ words:
“Do not be deceived” (Luke 21:8) and “You are not to prepare your defense
beforehand, for I myself will give you wisdom in speaking that all of your
adversaries will be powerless to refute” (Luke 21:14).
Obama’s ploy to find “common ground”
succeeded admirably. God help us.
Joseph
Callagher
Shingle
Springs, California
Notre Dame: The Last Straw
Only 10 years ago I was a Catholic
filled with the Spirit, going to daily Mass and weekly exposition of the holy
Eucharist.
This Notre Dame scandal is the last
straw; I can no longer bring myself to step into a Catholic church, and it is
all over the issue of abortion. Why isn’t Father Jenkins’ bishop or the Pope
hauling him in? You refer to “bishops’ increased engagement” (“10 Signs of
Hope,” May 24). To me, the bishops’ issuance of “letters” and “strong letters”
is a sham.
My downslide started in the Diocese
of St. Petersburg, Fla., during the Terri Schiavo case, when I was there
protesting and the local bishop was nowhere to be seen. I saw how he issued a
letter on his website that was in contradiction to what the Vatican had issued.
Terri was a Catholic; haven’t we
always been told we are all family?
If so, where are our shepherds, the
bishops? They are so afraid of offending everyone that they are afraid to
pronounce the truth and actively defend children being killed.
And then there’s the scandal of
Pelosi teaching Catholic untruths on national TV, yet she continues to receive
holy Communion (implying unity with the Church).
I am now a lost sheep. I have a deep
faith in God, Jesus Christ and his Mother, Mary. The Catholic Church may have
the vicar of Christ, but I have no doubt that if the Church goes astray Jesus
wants souls to join him in heaven, so he will get them however (through
whatever church) he can.
I don’t know how I can come back
until the Church stands up and becomes a shepherd again. And I see no sign of
that happening; the Church seems to be heading the secular route, along with
many other Christian denominations.
I still have stuck in my mind an
incident from a few years ago in Colorado, where parishioners refused to return
church property that was in question of who owned it. They were subsequently
and quickly excommunicated. I wonder if that bishop considered the hypocrisy:
Take the Church’s money, and you are excommunicated; but kill children, and we will
slap your hand. Money is more important than human life? Dear Jesus, help us
and the Church!
David
Widdoes
Tampa,
Florida
Editor’s
note: If “the bishops’ issuance of ‘letters’ and ‘strong letters’ is
a sham,” then St. Paul is in trouble. So is St. Peter. And St. John. And Christ
himself, in Revelation. Take heart! The Church has always issued letters and
strong letters — and the sins and errors of prominent Catholics that those
letters spell out have always been here, too.
Words Mean Things
A notice in my parish bulletin was a
perfect example of a serious problem we pro-lifers have had in discussions with
others since 1973: Words mean things. And the other side has known it all
along.
The headline of the bulletin notice
read: “Calling Catholic Men Ages 10-18!” The article invited boys
between those ages to join Squires, the youth group of the Knights of
Columbus.
I understand the psychology, but we all know that a 10-year-old boy is no
more a “man” than a 10-year-old girl is a “woman”; and a 17-year-old girl
is no more a “woman” than a 17-year-old boy is a “man.”
Yet
that is how girls were con-sis-tently described in the May 17 article
“Judge Forces Plan B for Minors.” The article discussed a U.S. district
court judge’s decision: “Women as young as 17 are now able to purchase
Plan B — the ‘morning after pill’ — without a prescription.” The other side
owns the vocabulary, and we have joined them in its misuse.
The
article uses the word “women” 16 times and the word “girl” once. Proponents on
both sides of the issue are quoted.
The
battle is lost before it’s joined when we accept the rules of our opponents.
“Woman” connotes a mature, thoughtful person of the female sex (I won’t
cede them “gender,” a word pertaining to grammar, either), whereas
“girl” connotes a person of the female sex who is not completely
independent or capable yet of making major life decisions without advice
or counseling.
We’ve
finally learned that “freedom to choose” is a meaningless sentence
frag-ment, “fetus” is a baby, not a clump of undifferentiated cells, and
“interruption of pregnancy” is an ugly euphemism for the intentional,
violent killing of a helpless human baby by an adult.
Why,
then, do we begin this discussion about allowing 17-year-old girls to purchase
Plan B, an oral means of introducing an excessive amount of human hormones
into their bodies with the intention of preventing or aborting a
pregnancy, with two strikes against us? We not only allow the other side
to set the vocabulary, but also adopt it ourselves.
Words have
meaning; don’t give the opponent the verbal edge.
Richard L. Johnson
Kirkland, Washington
Really Catholic
If
the University of Notre Dame scandal does nothing else, it should cause us to
question Notre Dame’s purported role as the national Catholic university, as
you discuss in “Is Notre Dame Catholic?” (Daily Blog, May 23).
There
is a real national Catholic university, but it is
not Notre Dame. It is The Catholic University of America in Washington.
Acclaimed
by the Cardinal Newman Society for its faithfulness to Catholic identity, there
is no question of its loyalty to the magisterium. CUA draws a national and
international student body that is bright and committed to our faith. CUA’s
many graduate and professional schools, its theological seminary, as well as
undergraduate liberal arts college, are excellent and highly ranked.
Kudos
to the president of CUA, the Very Reverend David O’Connell, C.M., for not
abiding infidelity.
Dr. Eugene J. Cherny
Des Moines, Iowa
Deacons’ Role
We
get several subscriptions sent to us at the parish for our bookshop sales. I
read the Register, as does my wife.
Most
of what you print is dead-on and solid, of which I am very grateful, but I have
one small complaint.
In
an article in the May 17 issue entitled “Teaching the New Missal,” it states:
“There are other ways to get the word out. For instance, in the Archdiocese of
Hartford, Conn., the Office of Divine Worship plans to have Msgr. Sherman speak
at a workshop for clergy, deacons and lay leaders …”
You
must know that deacons are clergy. To separate them in this way further
confuses the general public as to what a deacon is: a member of the clergy. The
diaconate, unfortunately, struggles for an identity within the Catholic clerical
community. We ask nothing more than proper recognition and consideration as
clerics.
Deacon
Gilbert R. “Gil” Nadeau
Clark
Mills, New York
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|