Thought that this small item from The Tablet (12/10/05) would be of interest to MOJ-readers.
Australasia
Bishops back celibate gay priests.
AUSTRALIA’S CATHOLIC bishops have welcomed the Vatican’s instruction on homosexual men seeking ordination, while endorsing those priests who are homosexual and faithful to their vows of celibacy.
In a brief but carefully worded statement issued after their recent plenary meeting in Sydney, the bishops said that while the document – officially released last Tuesday but leaked to The Tablet the previous week – repeated matters previously addressed by the Vatican, “we welcome the clarification that the Church does not see as fit candidates for priestly ordination men who are homosexually active, those who have deep-seated homosexual tendencies and those who support gay culture.”
However, the bishops noted that the document did not call into question “the validity of the ordination and the situation of priests in whom homosexual tendencies emerged either before or after ordination. It makes clear that all priests are called to live a life of chastity.”
The president of the bishops’ conference, Archbishop Francis Carroll of Canberra and Goulburn, told The Tablet that the bishops wanted to reassure priests in the light of the Vatican’s instruction. “We had a pastoral concern for priests already ordained who may acknowledge that they are homosexual and certainly did not want them to feel in any way threatened,” he said. He added that he did not believe any priests would have felt any threat to their continuance as priests if they were doing their best to live celibate lives.
“Some of the earlier speculation would have had us believe that it would have been a severer document than it has turned out to be,” he said, adding that the document outlined what was already in place in Australian seminaries.
Michael Kelly, a gay Catholic writer and activist, wrote in Melbourne’s The Age newspaper on 29 November that the instruction was just the latest stage in the Vatican’s campaign to halt the progress of civil and spiritual liberation for gay people. “This campaign has revealed an ugly side of the Church, a side that rejects modern science and psychology, forbids dialogue, and uses power as a blunt instrument of control,” he said.
A poll earlier this year found that three-quarters of Australia’s Catholics do not believe homosexuality is immoral.
Mark Brolly, Melbourne
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005
Australasia Bishops back celibate gay priests
Eavesdropping and "omniscience"
I like The Revealer, but Jeff Sharlet's claim (linked to here by Rob) that the recent reporting (not "revelations"; there is, I think, a bit of a "shocked, shocked!" quality to many of the critics' reactions) about the Administration's electronic eavesdropping on conversations thought to involve persons connected with an international terrorist organization (is this "domestic spying"?) reveals a widespread "acceptance of omniscience as a legitimate aim of government" is a bit of a stretch. It does not reflect a misplaced or idolatrous desire for "omniscience" for an electrician to want to know everything he possibly can about the ancient and possibly dangerous wiring in my house before he works on it. And -- putting aside, for the moment, the policy, legal, and military merits of the Administration's eavesdropping -- it does not seem to reflect a misplaced hunger for omniscience for government to want information that, it is reasonably argued, is essential to carrying out a task that everyone believes is at the heart of its obligation to the common good.
For two good posts on the legal and constitutional issues, read Orin Kerr and Cass Sunstein.
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
The Theology of Domestic Spying
The Revealer's Jeff Sharlet writes:
The ongoing revelations of the Bush administration's domestic spying don't make for a religion story, but the disclosures do echo theological concerns. At issue is omniscience, the government's power to know whatever it wants about whomever it wants. Bush expanded that power and defends doing so. So far, so political. The theology comes in the mainstream liberal response.
At first glance, it seems to be outrage. But look again. Here's Newsweek's Jonathan Alter on "Hardball": "The critics of the president in this case are not trying to weaken national security. It's not that we're eavesdropping, it's how we're eavesdropping..."
Imbedded in this statement is the acceptance of omniscience as a legitimate aim of government. The only remaining argument is over the social contract that shapes the government's acquisition of information. But since we're talking about potential omniscience here, a better term than social contract might be "covenant." Biblical language is necessary to describe potentially biblical power. And since Bush's critics have been so cowed by the need to fight "the enemy" -- an abstract figure, rarely named -- that they accept the implicit premises of the covenant of omniscience, if not the precise terms, isn't Bush correct to respond out of the whirlwind? "Where were you when I defended the nation?"
That's the theological trap mainstream liberals have walked into. The only way out is to re-think the theology; or better yet, to scrap it all together and accept a government that isn't all-knowing.
Rob
Mashed or Latkes?
The wonderful religion-in-media blog Get Religion has an interesting post exploring our culture's tendency to embrace inclusiveness to the point of absurdity, exemplified by the press coverage of the first night of Hanukkah falling on Christmas for the first time since 1959.
Rob
Cultural Strata and Christian America
Guest-blogging for Andrew Sullivan, Ross Douthat laments the cultural status of religious America:
America has a lowbrow culture that's still pretty religious, but whose religiosity tends to be, well, lowbrow - a lowest-common-denominator mix of self-help spirituality and New Age mush. And the highbrow culture, meanwhile, isn't religious at all: it's not anti-religion, exactly, but it definitely considers religious belief an oddity and an anachronism, and orthodox Christian belief dangerously close to fanaticism. Which is one of the reasons that most religiosity in America is so lowbrow - because the highly intelligent people who might elevate the level of religious discourse have their faith leeched out of them by their immersion in the highbrow, in its assumptions and its prejudices. And the people who complain about this - about how we don't have any more Reinhold Niebuhrs, and isn't it a tragedy? - tend to be exactly the people who in an earlier era would have been the Niebuhrs, but who now partake of what Richard John Neuhaus once called "the pleasures of regretful unbelief."
What we need, then - and by "we" I mean Christians, though I obviously think there would be benefits to non-Christians as well - is a more highbrow Christianity, and one that doesn't prostrate itself on the altar of political correctness, as token highbrow Catholics like Garry Wills are wont to do. Perhaps "culture war" is the wrong word to use in this context, since we don't necessarily need more Christians making the case against same-sex marriage, or pushing all their chips into the battle over courthouse displays in Alabama. We need more Christians writing good novels and essays and doctoral theses, and television shows and movies and music - all of which might inter alia make the case for a Christian understanding of, say, sexuality, but which would be primarily works of art and intellect and not polemics, creating a cultural space rather than just a political movement.
We can't expect any favors: The doors of highbrow American culture have been closed against that sort of thing for decades now, and you can't expect the New Yorker or the New York Times to just throw them open - why should they? They're content with the world they've made, in which Philip Pullman is a hero, C.S. Lewis is a sad "prisoner" of his religious belief, science is always under assault from fundamentalism and monotheism is an easy whipping boy for all of history's ills. Christians keep insisting that this world has it all wrong, of course, but it's not enough to say it - we need to show them.
Richard John Neuhaus responds:
Douthat is right, of course, but there is more to be said on this. (When isn’t there?) Lowbrow, anti-intellectual, and downright vulgar Christianity in the public square is an embarrassment. But, in defending the constitutional rights of religion in public, one has no choice but to defend what shows up to be defended. In coming to the aid of those suffering from anti-religious discrimination, I have often wished for a better quality of victim. You don’t always get to choose your battles, or your allies.
I confess to having little patience with Christians of fastidious taste who don’t want to be associated with “them.” So much do they want to distinguish themselves from “them” that they usually end up on the other side. The deeper cultural, historical, and theological reality is that “they” are us. Not all their causes are ours. But their cause (if not always their way) of witnessing to the lordship of Christ in the face of a sub-pagan highbrow culture is ours.
Rob
Monday, December 26, 2005
Becker-Posner on Capital Punishment and Deterrence, Con't
For those of you interested in the discussion about whether capital punishment deters murder (here and here), Becker-Posner continue to opine ... though it seems to me from reading their interesting Christmas Day posting (here) that they still have not read the Donohue-Wolfers paper (here). Well, once the paper is published (as soon it will be) in the Stanford Law Review, few lawyer-economists will not have read it.
Just to be clear: The Donohue-Wolfers paper doesn't argue that capital punishment does not deter; rather, it argues that econometricians cannot say, based on the data that is available or is likely to become available, that capital punishment reduces the incidence of murder ... or that it increases the incidence of murder ("the brutalization effect"). According to Donohue-Wolfers, econometricians *can* say that whether capital punishment reduces the incidence of murder or, instead, increases it, the effect is very small.
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Kitzmiller on the Content of Religious Belief
I appreciate the posts by Rick and Amy about the Kitzmiller intelligent design ruling, and I simply want to underscore how remarkable I found Judge Jones' statement that:
Both Defendants and many of the leading proponents of ID make a bedrock assumption which is utterly false. Their presupposition is that evolutionary theory is antithetical to a belief in the existence of a supreme being and to religion in general.
I know many folks for whom evolutionary theory is antithetical to their religious beliefs. At a minimum, evolutionary theory requires a certain substantive interpretation of divine revelation. This does not mean that the case should have come out differently, but it does make me wary of an effort to erase by judicial fiat a tension that is very real. Imagine if the Court in Dale v. Boy Scouts had written, "The Boy Scouts falsely assume that allowing openly homosexual leaders is antithetical to their objective of developing morally straight young men." Now I agree that such a statement is accurate, but it strikes me as a contested extralegal normative claim that is no business of the judiciary to be making. To probe this area more deeply, be sure to read Rick's thoughtful article, Assimilation, Tolerance, and the State's Interest in the Development of Religious Doctrine.
Rob
Sunday, December 25, 2005
God so loved the world
When all the gifts have been opened and the holiday feast consumed, when all the relatives and friends have gone home and the day has come to an end, this startling reality remains:
God so loves us that not only were we created in God's image, but God became human, like us in all things save sin. The theologian Michael Himes once observed that "the great mystery hidden from all generations and revealed in the Incarnation is God's secret ambition. From all eternity God has wanted to be exactly like you and me. This is the ultimate statement of the goodness of being human, the rightness of humanity. The immense dignity of the human person is at the heart of the Christian tradition because it flows directly from the doctrine of the Incarnation itself. Indeed, the Incarnation is the highest compliment ever paid to being human."
Blessings to all on this Christmas night.
Gloria in Profundis
There has fallen on earth for a token
A god too great for the sky.
He has burst out of all things and broken
The bounds of eternity:
Into time and the terminal land
He has strayed like a thief or a lover,
For the wine of the world brims over,
Its splendour is split on the sand.
Who is proud when the heavens are humble,
Who mounts if the mountains fall,
If the fixed stars topple and tumble
And a deluge of love drowns all--
Who rears up his head for a crown,
Who holds up his will for a warrant,
Who strives with the starry torrent,
When all that is good goes down?
For in dread of such falling and failing
The fallen angels fell
Inverted in insolence, scaling
The hanging mountain of hell:
But unmeasured of plummet and rod
Too deep for their sight to scan,
Outrushing the fall of man
Is the height of the fall of God.
Glory to God in the Lowest
The spout of the stars in spate-
Where thunderbolt thinks to be slowest
And the lightning fears to be late:
As men dive for sunken gem
Pursuing, we hunt and hound it,
The fallen star has found it
In the cavern of Bethlehem.
G.K. Chesterton
(thanks to Holy Whapping).
Saturday, December 24, 2005
Christmas and the Manger
Merry Christmas!
It seems to me that there are two templates for living life: one dominated by power and control, the other by surrender, which comes with faith, hope, and love. Without hope, without faith, without love - without purpose and direction - life is reduced to an attempt to exercise power over whatever little (or big) slice of life we can control.
For centuries, God has proposed an alternative path, a path that will lead to true freedom and happiness. It is the path of surrender to God and His will. Throughout history, God has worked through the weak and the marginalized to show us this way, choosing David, the youngest in his family, to be king; choosing Mary, an unwed teenager, to bear His Son; choosing Israel as His people, etc. On this Holy Night, God drives home this point by becoming (in the form of the second person of the Trinity) a completely vulnerable and dependent baby. His first dwelling - a cave.
Peace on Earth, Good Will to All,
Michael S.