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Letters 09.20.2009
September 20-26, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/11/09 at 1:13 PM
Kennedy, Good and Bad
Regarding “Edward Kennedy’s Catholic
Legacy: America’s Culture Wars” (Sept. 6):
Sen. Kennedy’s eminently privileged
life was dedicated to serving the underprivileged. He skipped the first stone
that had a ripple effect upon many of his Catholic colleagues’ efforts to
defend the poor. Regrettably, he missed the mark badly; it continues as a shallow
response to serve the very least among us.
Jeanmarie
Passafiume
Louisville,
Kentucky
Cut Ted Some Slack
I
just wonder, out loud at times, how would Jesus our Christ have treated Ted
Kennedy if he were in our human presence today? I think of Peter, who denied
Jesus three times — and eventually found recognition as head of the very human
Catholic Church. Jesus spoke kindly of Peter even in his humanity. Would it not
behoove the Register to do the same with Ted Kennedy?
Bev
Sauer
Marietta,
Georgia
Obama’s Word on Abortion
Your tone in “Does Obama Really
Want Less Abortion?” (July 26) is one of trying to catch the
president in a lie. This is counterproductive. You should take him at his word
and push him into living up to it by adopting the Pregnant Women Support Act
developed by the Democrats for Life of America. If he’s sincere, there’s no
reason he shouldn’t support this bill.
You should hold his feet to the fire
by frequent references to the bill (H.R. 3192 and S. 2407) and tracking the
number of co-sponsors (more than 40 in the House). Quote Democrats who use
language about reducing abortions; ask why they aren’t co-sponsoring the bill.
Brian
Yates
Newton,
Massachusetts
Scaring the Elderly?
Regarding
“Obama Care and the Right to Life: Elderly Patients May Face Pressure to Die”
(Aug. 9):
You
should recognize that this headline, in a responsible Catholic publication,
will automatically turn many of the faithful against health-care reform before
they’ve even read the story under the headline. Was that your intention?
I
am 82 years old, a Catholic all my life. My oldest son celebrated his 60th
birthday July 26. When he was born, we did not have health insurance. No big
deal. The total medical bill associated with his birth was $200, and we paid it
out of pocket. The $200 included prenatal care, postnatal care, doctor and
hospital.
We
now live in a different world. I understand these birth services would now cost
more than $10,000. Most people could never pay these costs out of pocket. They
need health insurance, which is why the country needs health-care reform.
I
don’t know how you reach the conclusion that health-care reform, which includes
an opportunity for seniors to discuss an end-of-life directive with their
doctor, amounts to “Elderly Patients May Face Pressure to Die.”
Only
30% of senior Americans have an end-of-life directive. I think it would be a
constructive move for the Register to encourage the clergy to encourage
Catholics to prepare an end-of-life directive at an early age and even to offer
them counseling on the Church’s position on sensitive matters.
Again,
your headline disappoints me.
Gus
Delaloye
Murphy,
Texas
Condoms by the Numbers
Regarding “Bailing Out Abortionists?” (Sept. 6):
If out of the 100 girls using condoms 15 girls get
pregnant within the first year, how many get STDs or AIDS? These 15 pregnancies
result from a condom failure that occurred on one of seven days during a
woman’s cycle. Meanwhile, she can be infected with AIDS or STDs due to condom
failure any day of the year.
Karen
Stein
Cazenovia,
New York
Eucharistic Emphasis
Relevant to “Loss in Translation”
(July 12):
I commend the Vatican and Pope
Benedict XVI for their efforts aimed at restoring greater sacrality to the holy
Mass through the practice of Communion on the tongue, consecration celebrated ad
orientem (facing east) and the use of Latin.
Latin is the official language of
the Catholic Church. It is a “dead” language that prevents the translation of
words into the vernacular using ambiguous terms that undermine Church doctrine,
such as the use of inclusive language. The universality of Latin makes it
easier for all believers to experience more fully the mystery of the Mass. It
imbues a heightened reverence and sense of the sacred.
In his book The
Spirit of the Liturgy, the Pope points out how the “turning of the
priest toward the people no longer opens out on what lies ahead and above [but]
has turned the community into a self-enclosed circle.” He suggests that both
the priest and people should be facing east during the Mass.
Many may also not be aware that the
practice of receiving Communion in the hand was not mandated by Vatican II, nor
was it introduced in response to calls from the laity. Instead, the established
practice of piety — receiving the Eucharist kneeling, on the tongue — was
changed improperly and hurriedly, and the new practice became widespread even
before it was formally approved by the Vatican.
The ineffable mystery of the real
presence of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist requires a deeply reverent attitude.
Taking the body, blood, soul and divinity of Christ in our unanointed hands as
if it were a mere piece of bread is something in itself deeply irreverent and
detrimental for our faith.
Paul
Kokoski
Hamilton,
Ontario
Government Money
Regarding “Catholic Charities’ Deal
With the Feds Scrutinized” (Sept. 6):
I believe it was a grave mistake on
Father Snyder’s part to take $100 million from the Obama administration. This
will lead to a large number of pro-life Catholics holding back on their
donations to the Church.
In the long run, the charities will
suffer more, as the pro-lifers will be afraid that the strings attached to the
government moneys will cause Catholic hospitals to be forced into providing
abortions.
It’s like accepting 30 pieces of
silver.
Bill
Dalton
Ocala,
Florida
Common Crosses
In regard to “Repairing Same-Sex
Attraction” (Aug. 23):
It’s a statistical fact that most
teenagers who regard themselves as homosexual go “straight” as adults, so
changes in sexual orientation are not only possible, but common (which is why I
wonder why GLAAD, the Gay/Lesbian Alliance Against Discrimination, campaigns so
hard to put homosexual “role models” on TV shows aimed at teenagers).
Just the same, for those who wish to
avoid sin, same-sex attraction must be a cross to bear. But what makes “gay
activists” think that heterosexual males don’t go through life resisting sexual
temptation? She’s too young, she’s married, you’re married: The temptation to
commit sexual sins is why pagan cults practiced prostitution and infanticide as
sacraments.
One more thing: We should
remember that, if you bear your cross faithfully, you will gain your
crown. And so same-sex attraction could be a means to obtain holiness.
Don
Schenk
Allentown,
Pennsylvania
Enough Obama, Already
Upon receiving my copy of the
Register yesterday, I was most disappointed to see yet another photo of our
current president plastered across the entire front page. I know you are a
strong Catholic publication, but I fail to understand why you continue to
publish large, flashy photos of him. The week of the election, you also
published a photo of him, larger than life, smiling and waving. At first
glance, it appears as if this may be a positive story. What
message are you giving to your readers and, more importantly, your non-readers
who may see a copy of your paper?
As a loyal reader, I’m telling you,
I don’t want to see the man. I don’t want to look at his winning smile. I don’t
want to see the Pope smiling with him. I don’t want to have to look at him at
all, for all I see is evil. He is a liar and a deceiver, and I don’t
understand why well-meaning Catholics continue to give him the benefit of the
doubt. He and his staff are liars (many calling themselves Catholic when they
are indeed not). They are advocates for mass murders — the killing of unborn
children. They continue to shove their agenda down our throats, and I’m tired
of the press that I trust giving him coverage.
Why not publish a photo of a person
who is going to be negatively affected by his health-care plan: a baby in
utero, a disabled or elderly person? I am so tired of seeing this man with
the deceiving smile that I have ceased watching all news/TV programs and only
listen to Catholic radio. I’m on the verge of cutting out your newspaper, as
well.
JoAnn
Mendenhall
Carmichael,
California
Photo Frustration
Why is it that, whenever there is
news involving Obama, we have to see a huge picture of him on the front page of
the National Catholic Register? I have to turn it over when I bring it in, so I
don’t have to look at him. Every time I see him, I see “his way of seeing
babies” — which is as burdens and punishments.
Can’t you just keep a small file
photo of him, similar to a passport picture, and use that all the time? I’m
sure most of your readers would appreciate it.
Joan
Witry
Edina,
Minnesota
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