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June 17-23, 2007 Issue |
Posted 6/12/07 at 8:00 AM
Reno Dropped the Ball
Regarding “Pornography Crackdown”
(April 22):
Wayne Laugesen missed the boat. When
Janet Reno fired every U.S. attorney — all 93 of them — she also dropped every
pornography case under investigation and on the dockets.
During her two terms as attorney
general there were only a few minor porn cases that were weakly prosecuted. The
porn industry was able to expand exponentially and now it is too late to bring
it under control. It metastasized.
Porn is damaging our nation as
seriously as all the illegal drugs combined. Only our prayers and our votes can
change the course of America’s future.
J.
Norman Sayles
Lodi,
California
Jesus, Mary, Joseph
Regarding “To Have, To Hold and to
Work With” (April 29):
I am amazed at how the Holy Spirit
seems to be working wonders with Catholic groups that are moving along the same
lines independent and unknown to each other.
To strengthen family life, which is
the basis of all societies and which is suffering horrendous attacks from a
Godless materialistic ideology of our times, the Holy Spouses Society offers
the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, Joseph of Nazareth as models to imitate. Should
the majority of married couples follow this ideal, our society is assured of salvation
from its slow slide into chaos and ruin.
What particularly caught my
attention was the emphasis on Joseph and Mary as a couple. Many devotions and
prayers in the Church emphasize Jesus and Mary, but somehow St. Joseph gets
lost on the sidelines. In my prayer life I can never exclude him. My prayer is
always: “Jesus, Mary, Joseph.” I do not even say “and Joseph,” because it seems
like a put-down or something secondary.
I am convinced that this approach is
absolutely necessary for our troubled times and is a vindication of what
Scriptures states unequivocally, “What God has joined together, let no one
separate!” The whole mystery of our salvation resides in the great mystery of
the incarnation of Jesus as God made Man who comes to save us from eternal
damnation. And that mystery was always lived out by the three members of the
Holy Family who were never separated from each other: Jesus, Mary, Joseph.
Paul
Leehan
Seal
Beach, California
‘Artificial’ Contraception
In your article, “Northern Lights” (May
13) in the Culture of Life section, Father Jim Whalen uses the term “artificial
contraception.”
Is there a contraception that is not
artificial? I now have seen this false term in about seven different Catholic
papers.
All good wishes and prayers.
Father
Paul B. Marx, OSB
St.
John’s University
Collegeville,
Minnesota
No Justified Reason?
In the May 27 issue’s Letters to the
Editor, there was an editor’s note to the first printed letter, “A Stab in the
Back?” The editor’s note clearly stated that Popes John Paul II and Benedict
XVI have written there was “no just cause of war in Iraq.”
In my earlier academic studies
regarding “just war theory,” I remember discussion about a school of thought
that basically says that, “if you have the means to relieve suffering of
people, by using force to remove an oppressor” than you are justified in doing
so. I cannot cite the source of that line of reasoning; however, in removing
Saddam from power, were we not justified in that action by giving 23 million
Iraqis the chance for a “better” life and ridding them of the oppression of a
tyrannical dictator?
I’ve been wondering how that aspect
would be explained in saying there was no justified reason to go to war in
Iraq.
I’d be appreciative if you could
help me with my Catholic understanding of that dilemma.
I attend Holy Spirit Parish in
Burke, Va., and attend Mass as often as I can at the Basilica of the National
Shrine in northeast D.C.
Chris
J. Krisinger
Colonel,
USAF
Burke,
Virginia
John Paul II on Iraq
Bob Barattini’s letter to the
editor, “A Stab in the Back?” in the May 27issue, correctly
characterizes the opposition of Pope John Paul the Great to the Iraq war, but
omits what he thought was of greatest importance once the war had begun. Here
is what John Paul said:
“The many attempts made by the Holy
See to avoid the grievous war in Iraq are already known. Today what matters is
that the international community help put the Iraqis, freed from an oppressive
regime, in a condition to be able to take up their country’s reins again,
consolidate its sovereignty and determine democratically a political and
economic system that reflects their aspirations, so that Iraq may once again be
a credible partner in the International Community” (Jan. 12, 2004, Address to the
Diplomatic Corps).
“It is the evident desire of
everyone that this situation now be normalized as quickly as possible with the
active participation of the international community and, in particular, the
United Nations Organization, in order to ensure a speedy return of Iraq’s
sovereignty, in conditions of security for all its people” (June 4, 2004,
Address to President Bush).
The “complete and immediate pull-out
of all the troops now” that Mr. Barattini favors would in all
probability result in the complete and exact opposite result of the one desired
by John Paul II.
Patrick
J. Grant
Lanham,
Maryland
A Just War
In your May 27 issue, you carried a
letter, “A Stab in the Back?” from a gentleman in Florida who claimed you
“stab[bed] the Church in the back” by publishing an article supporting a Marine
serving in Iraq. His extreme accusation seems to have prompted from you an
extreme, and factually incorrect, response. If I am wrong on this, I am open to
fraternal correction from you, but if you are wrong, I hope you will take it
from me.
It was factually incorrect for you
to claim that “Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI ... say that there was
no just cause of war in Iraq.” Did the Holy Father oppose the ideaof beginning the war in 2002 and early 2003? Yes, he did. However,
did he condemn the war as unjust after it actually became a war in April of
2003? No, he most certainly did not. I would respectfully
challenge you to list so much as one statement made by Pope John Paul II after
April of 2003 — that is, after it became an actual war, and not
simply an idea — which condemns the war as unjust. Or for that matter, I would
respectfully ask you to list at least one direct quote from Pope Benedict XVI
(not media spin or some theologian’s interpretation, but a direct quote) that
proclaims, in the name of the Catholic Church, that the Iraq war is unjust. If
you can, I will thank you for the education on this issue. However, if you
can’t, I would respectfully ask you to refrain from “pontificating” on this matter,
when the Supreme Pontiff (and his predecessor) have not done so.
I would also ask you to make clear
to everyone, not only to your own editorial board, but your readers in West
Palm Beach, Fla., and everywhere else, that Catholics may legitimately disagree
on this issue, and that those Catholics who believe that the war is just are
not stabbing the Church in the back, just because “everyone” says the Pope said
something he did not say.
Larry
A. Carstens
Castaic,
California
Editor’s
Note: Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger spoke about the Iraq war after it
began, in the magazine 30 Days’ April 2003 edition.
Later, as Pope Benedict XVI, he would echo his words about the importance of
“anything positive” being obtained:
“The Pope has very clearly expressed
his thoughts, not only as the thoughts of an individual, but as the thoughts of
a man of conscience occupying the highest functions in the Catholic Church. Of
course, he has not imposed this position as a doctrine of the Church, but as
the appeal of a conscience enlightened by the faith. This judgment of the Holy
Father is convincing from a rational point of view also: reasons sufficient for
unleashing a war against Iraq did not exist. First of all, it was clear from
the very beginning that proportion between the possible positive consequences
and the sure negative effect of the conflict was not guaranteed. On the
contrary, it seems clear that the negative consequences will be greater than
anything positive that might be obtained.”
On June 4, 2004, Pope John Paul II
met with President Bush and also recalled his previous interventions for peace:
“Mr.
President, your visit to Rome takes place at a moment of great concern
for the continuing situation of grave unrest in the Middle East, both in Iraq
and in the Holy Land. You are very familiar with the unequivocal position of
the Holy See in this regard, expressed in numerous documents, through direct
and indirect contacts, and in the many diplomatic efforts which have been made.
... It is the evident desire of everyone that this situation now be normalized
as quickly as possible with the active
participation of the international community and, in particular, the United Nations Organization, in order to
ensure a speedy return of Iraq’s sovereignty, in conditions of security for all
its people.”
Pope Benedict XVI this past Easter
spoke again about Iraq, echoing his words about the relationship between a just
cause of war and positive consequences outweighing negative ones:
“In the Middle East, besides some
signs of hope in the dialogue between Israel and the Palestinian authority,
nothing positive comes from Iraq, torn apart by continual slaughter as the
civil population flees.”
New Pentecost Has Begun
Regarding “The World’s Language”
(May 27):
Perhaps the New Pentecost has
already begun, starting in the ’60s with charismatic renewal. Most charismatics
are traditional in their beliefs. There are many communities and prayer groups
around the world.
Check out yeslord.com. Perhaps the
resurgence of the priesthood especially in the South (Diocese of Savannah) is
another sign. There is a groundswell of very solid Catholics in the world. It’s
beginning.
Tom
Valois
Augusta,
Georgia
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