Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Retreat? Crickets.

The Jews retreated further and further into their ghettos in Poland and Germany, hoping that their getting out of the way would "solve" the "problem" they represented to their approaching enemy.  Will Catholics do the same in the United States?  Retreat into growing ghettos to get out of the way of the march of their own government?   The time has come to find out.  

The U.S. Army has now categorized Catholics as "extremists" alongside such groups as al Qaeda, Hamas and the KKK.  You can read about it here .  I have been saying for some time that the position of much of the U.S. hierarchy is that all the Church asks is to be let alone, and I have said that because that is *exactly* what many U.S. bishops and the USCCB itself have said, as I demonstrate in the paper linked above.  Where are the bishops when Catholics are now being lumped in with al Qaeda?  You can search the USCCB's prolix website in vain.  The Army has apparently now removed the document in which the categorization appeared, but that is surely cold comfort, as is the fact that the Army asserted that the source of the characterization was "not in the chain of command." Surely decisions about what the U.S. Army considers "extremism' -- and deserving of military treatment as such -- should be made at the core of the chain of command.

Catholics should be expressing loud outrage at their own govenment's falsely accusing Catholics of the characteristics and aims that mark al Qaeda and the KKK, but all I hear is the sound of crickets chirping. This silence, especially in its studied, even "principled" form, is an example of an ideology I have castigated here at MOJ before: the liberal's militant insistence that "the Church be sufficiently nothing so as to live at peace with the rest of the world" (Louis Veuillot).  The Church can indeed live in a *true* peace with the world if, but only if, she is allowed to go about her work of freely preaching the Gospel and correcting and transforming culture.  No true peace is purchased by reducing the Church to sufficiently nothing that her voice is silenced.  It is the U.S. state that today is the unjust agressor as it targets the Church; in response, the Church must insist upon her freedom to teach the world the peace of the Gospel, the peace that the world knows not. The Church's ways are not those of al Qaeda and the KKK, and Catholics must now insist upon as much to a U.S. government that demonstrably cannot think clearly enough not to equate the Church and al Quaeda.          

Catholic "Traditionalists" v. Pope Francis

University of St. Thomas law professor Charles Reid has a thoughtful commentary on the phenomenon at ReligiousLeftLaw, here.  I think many MOJ readers will be interested.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

"If the Church Is Serious About Welcoming Gays..."

That's the title of an op-ed in this morning's Times.  MOJ readers may be interested in evaluating the authors' recommendations.  Here

Friday, April 5, 2013

Church and State in a nutshell: Garnett on PBS

Here's a short clip from an upcoming PBS documentary, "Constitution USA with Peter Sagal", in which I very . . . efficiently explain (what I think is) the "right way to understand" the separation of church and state.  Another way to describe the video would be to say that it presents "two very bald guys wandering around a courtyard."

Rock 'n' Roll as a Search for the Infinite

For all those in, near, or dying to visit South Bend:  Here's a really cool upcoming event, sponsored by Notre Dame's Center for Ethics and Culture:

Rock'N'Roll as Search for the Infinite

At 8PM on Thursday, April 11th, in the McKenna Hall Auditorium, John Waters, Irish music journalist, author, and playwright, will give a presentation entitled, "Three Chords and the Desire for Truth: Rock'N'Roll as Search for the Infinite." In this presentation, Mr. Waters will discuss the work of different rock'n'roll musicians and examine the way in which this work reflects a longing for something much greater than the drugs, sex, and fame normally associated with the genre. Artists discussed will include Mumford and Sons, U2, Dave Matthews Band, Pink Floyd, and others.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

"A Tale of Two Graduations"

Go here to learn more about Doe v. Elmbrook, an interesting new cases being handled by the good folks at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty.  The en banc CTA7 ruled that it was unconstitutional for a school district to hold graduation events in a church auditorium -- which was selected because it was an appropriate and cost-effective venue (objectively better than the school gym) -- because "the sheer religiosity of the space created a likelihood that high school students and their younger siblings would perceive . . . a message of endorsement" and because using church space in this way was "religiously coercive."  One of the dissenters, though, Judge Easterbrook, noted that the “only message a reasonable observer would perceive is that comfortable space is preferable to cramped, overheated space. * * * No reasonable observer believes that renting an auditorium for a day endorses the way the landlord uses that space the other 364 days.”

Stay tuned!

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

The Decline and Fall of the Great University

I am grateful to Susan for bringing to our attention the matter of Johns Hopkins University and what is considered to be generating discomfort for some members of the university to have a recognized pro-life group on campus. What Christopher Dawson projected a half century ago regarding certain beliefs not only being unwelcomed but being pushed out of existence is the reality of the present age.

I wonder if those responsible for the denial of the pro-life organization's recognition would also be "uncomftable" with the need to: work, study, write, publish, think, evaluate, research, discuss, debate, and (perhaps most importantly) search for the objective truth which does, in fact, exist if we care to look for it.

 

RJA sj

 

Providence College Professor Reflects on Pope's Embrace of His Disabled Son

Paul Gondreau reflects that

our culture often looks upon the disabled: as weak, needy individuals who depend so much upon others, and who contribute little, if anything, to those around them. Pope Francis’ embrace of my son yesterday turns this logic completely on its head and, in its own small yet powerful way, shows once again how the wisdom of the Cross confounds human wisdom. Why is the whole world so moved by images of this embrace? A woman in the Square, moved to tears by the embrace, perhaps answered it best when she to my wife afterward, “You know, your son is here to show people how to love.” To show people how to love.

The lesson my disabled son gives stands as a powerful testament to the dignity and infinite value of every human person, especially of those the world deems the weakest and most “useless.” Through their sharing in the “folly” of the  Cross, the disabled are, in truth, the most powerful and the most productive among us.

Pro-Life Group at Johns Hopkind Denied Official Club Status

The opening line of an article with the above headline reads, "The Student Government Association at Johns Hopkins University has denied a pro-life group official club status at the Baltimore school for fear the group will make students feel uncomfortable."  Yes, you read that correctly. One of the SGA members explained, “We have the right to protect our students from things that are uncomfortable. Why should people have to defend their beliefs on their way to class?”  

My first thought was that Johns Hopkins must have very few official student organizations if the test is whether a group will make any students feel uncomfortable.  But I see they have quite a few.  So it must be OK to make students uncomfortable on some subjects, but not others.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Reminder: "Intellectual Property and Religious Thought" Conference

A reminder of this conference at St. Thomas Law on Friday.  A great lineup of speakers (information and registration here).  Paul Griffiths (Duke Divinity) and David Opderbeck (Seton Hall Law) may be familiar to MoJ readers.  And a subject of growing importance on which Catholic thought (among other faiths') has a lot to say (I claim).

Tom 

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