Here is the Archbishop's statement from yesterday.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Archbishop Chaput on Notre Dame and the issues that remain
Saturday, May 9, 2009
Gratitude and Ingratitude
As you know, Thursday I found myself on a beach 10 miles from our hotel with my wife and youngest child. We had no shoes (imagine me shoeless at the police station), no money, phone, doucmentation. We were in a state of great dependence. And as I mentioned, a young couple - engineering students - helped us, spending the better part of the afternoon with us rather than on the beach.
Yesterday morning I prayed: "I am grateful, forgive my ingratitude." We were truly grateful, there is no doubt about it. But, as I lay half awake yesterday morning my mind seemingly involuntarily played over and over a hundred "what ifs" games - if only we had done this or that we could have avoided the whole mess. My mind did not go to the "what ifs" concerning what if the couple hadn't been there, hadn't been willing to help, didn't speak English. This suggests to me that although I am far along on the journey of faith to laugh at our misfortune and express gratitude for the help given, I am not so far along on the journey to have this attitude of gratitude embedded in my very fiber. Gratitude is still a conscious act of will rather than a deeply ingrained habit - a complete openess tothe gifts given.
"I am grateful, forgive my ingratitude."
Friday, May 8, 2009
Dependant Rational Animals
Today, most of us operate with the illusion that we are self-sufficient autonomous human beings. But life has a way of crashing in on us, sending us back again to the school of dependency. Sickness, financial difficulty, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, ice storms, war, bombings such as OKC and NYC, etc. ought to teach us lessons from experience about our dependency and interrelatedness. But, just like school children who empty the contents of their brains as soon as midterms end, we quickly forget the lessons learned in this school.
As I blogged yesterday, my latest school of dependency occurred on a beach in the Bay of Salerno. Barefoot, with no ID, phone, or money, I was completely dependent on the charity of others. What a gift to be brought again to this point.
Although MOJ is not a travel blog, I burden you with this because from the beginning of the blog five years ago, I have continued to think that the most important contribution that we can make to legal thought is asking (and offering an answer to) the anthropological questions. Often our discussions of left/right, conservative/liberal serve only to divert our attention from the sickness that pervades our culture, including our political/legal culture. Let's face it, both left and right suffer in different ways from the sickness we might call radical autonomy. And, we can offer a cure. We can ask (and offer an answer to) what are our origins, purpose, and ends.
My latest school of dependency reminds me of how much I have breathed the noxious fumes of radical autonomy that are poisoning western civilization. Only the law of the gift - the law of charity - can provide a cure. And, what gives us hope that such a culture can be created? Christ, the supreme gift!
Thursday, May 7, 2009
The Fleeting Nature of ...
For the past week my wife Maria and I have been in Athens (and now Italy) meeting our youngest at the end of her study abroad experience in Athens. The experience has given me time to reflect on the fleeting nature of political institutions and our own earthly existence. As we walk through the physical remnants of Greek and Roman civilization (and their predecessors), I am reminded that they existed only for a small blip in the earth's chronology. Visiting Pompeii and Herculaneum reminded me how cities could be wiped out in a day. Watching the waves wipe out my footprints in the sand reminded me of the fleeting nature of my own life and how 100 years from now nobody will have any memory (and probably no knowledge) of me. Such is the nature of this human existence. For my light reading, I brought along Robert Harris' wonderful novel, Pompeii. And, for my less light reading, I brought along St. Augustine's City of God. As you probably reminder, Augustine is defending Christianity against the charge that it (and the prohibition against worshiping pagan god's) led to the downfall of the Roman Empire. He charged some with ingratitude for falling to see blessings in the midst of hardship.
I was sitting on the beach near Paestum (Greek temples near Agropoli, Italy) this afternoon thinking about this with a post formulating in my head when we discovered that the bag with our passports, wallets, camera, car keys, etc. was missing - stolen from a nearly deserted beach right from under our eyes. In the midst of the inconvenience, which we are still dealing with, we were sent two angels - a young couple Francesco and Emiliana who were a few yards from us. They called the police, took me to the police station, translated while a filed the report, went back to the car to get the license number, brought me coffee, brought my wife and daughter water, and brought us back to our hotel - basically giving up their whole afternoon for us. How should we react? Upset over our misfortune? Or, thankful for this couple? I choose thanks and may I have the awareness and love to give up my afternoon for someone else in need.
BTW - we are having a great time.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Securing Religious Liberty in an Age of Growing Intolerance
Tom Berg among others has posted (here and here) on gay marriage and religious liberty. In one post, Tom writes: "It may be time for defenders of traditional opposite-sex marriage to shift some attention from trying to stop gay marriage to trying to secure religious liberty protections, at least in states where there is a significant prospect that the courts or the legislature will recognize gay marriage." And, I agree wholeheartedly in the need to work tirelessly to secure religious and admire those persons who are called to labor in that vineyard.
But, I wonder if it isn't a tad naïve to think that religious liberty will really be secure without a fundamental shift in our nation's anthropological foundations. We might secure short-term protection, but my bet is that these protections erode over time – possibly very quickly.
I marvel at what seems to me the rigid intolerance of those who preach tolerance. Photographers cannot be left alone to decline a job involving photographing a same-sex civil commitment ceremony. Catholic Charities cannot be left alone to run its adoption agency according to its own moral compass. Doctors, nurses, pharmacists, and lawyers might be required to subordinate their consciences to the will of the state. J. Budziszewski gives us valuable insight into this phenomenon in his excellent book "The Revenge of Conscience." But, I want to suggest a different, but not necessarily inconsistent, explanation. Many people I talk to think the following. A) Individual autonomy seems to be the paramount good in our society. Each individual is an autonomous chooser who is free to choose among a smorgasbord of private ends for her life. B) One of the state's chief tasks is protecting the individual's ability and right to choose her own private ends. C) Public space is regulated, ordered, and controlled by the state at least partly toward the end of maximizing private autonomy. D) Most public activity (practicing law or medicine, running a business, taking pictures commercially, growing food for sale, etc) is licensed or supervised in some way by the state. E) Many who view private autonomy as the paramount good view those who hold state licenses as operatives of the state and not as independent moral agents. F) As state operatives, doctors, lawyers, photographers, adoption agencies can be required to subordinate their consciences to the will of the state. In this world, there exists only state space and private space; civil society is eviscerated. If those in power (now or in the future) have this view of the world, religious liberty may be secure for private worship but not much else. All the charitable, social, and educational works of religious bodies might be considered public and subject to state control. It is possible that some might even view worship, including the administering of the sacraments, as a public function subject to state discipline. I am not suggesting that any of this will happen in our future. But, as we attempt to secure religious liberty and conscience protection, we ought also to keep an eye on the underlying foundational shifts in society and the possible implications of those shifting sands.
Deirdre McQuade on the FDA's approval of the "Morning-After Pill" for minors wihout a prescription
The USCCB's pro-life spokesperson, Deirdre McQuade, had the following to say about this recent FDA action:
Much to the surprise of the morning-after pill’s early advocates, five years of research in Europe and the U.S. shows that increased access to emergency contraception has failed to reduce rates of unintended pregnancy and abortion. But it has led to greater sexual risk-taking among adolescent populations, in turn leading to higher rates of sexually-transmitted disease. In the unlikely event a teenager will bother to read the Plan B package insert all the way to the end, she will find sound advice: ‘Of course, not having sex is the most effective way to prevent pregnancy and stay free of STDs’.
For the full release, click here.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
We will never forget
those who died and those who were injured 14 years ago today in the Oklahoma City bombing and those who came to aid them.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
"I dreamed a dream"
Over 26 million people have now viewed the youtube video of Susan Boyle singing "I Dreamed a Dream" on the show "Britain's Got Talent. Catholic News Service reports:
The audience snickered and the judges of "Britain's Got Talent" either rolled their eyes or allowed their blank expressions to betray their bemused skepticism as the awkward-looking middle-aged woman told them she wanted to be as famous as the popular British actress and singer Elaine Paige.
Then Susan Boyle began to sing, and they were spellbound and shocked by the beauty of her voice and rose to their feet in applause.
But Father Basil Clark, who watched the show on television at his home in Broxburn, Scotland, was not surprised.
He has seen the situation unfold many times before, having regularly accompanied Boyle, 47, on the annual Legion of Mary pilgrimage to the Marian shrine in Knock, Ireland.
"When I watched the judges' faces it reminded me of what I was like when I first saw Susan singing -- absolutely blown away by the quality of the singing and by that fantastic voice," said Father Clark, dean of West Lothian, the district that covers Boyle's home village of Blackburn.
For the rest of the story, click on the link above. For the video click here.
UPDATE: James Martin, S.J. writes (click here for the full post) on America's blog:
The way we see Susan Boyle is very nearly the way God sees us: worthwhile, special, talented, unique, beautiful. The world generally looks askance at people like Susan Boyle, if it sees them at all. Without classic good looks, without work, without a spouse, living in a small town, people like Susan Boyle may not seem particularly "important." But God sees the real person, and understands the value of each individual's gifts: rich or poor, young or old, single or married, matron or movie star, lucky or unlucky in life. God knows us. And loves us.
"Everybody is somebody" said Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan at his installation Mass in New York City yesterday. That's another reason why the judges smile and the audience explodes in applause.
Because they recognized a basic truth planted deep within them by God: Susan Boyle is somebody.
Everybody is somebody.
Friday, April 17, 2009
Has the Vatican really rejected Obama's proposed ambassadors?
This question has been addressed on MOJ here and here. The answer may be technically "no" because "no candidates have been formally submitted." But, according to the London Times, the answer is "yes" - three candidates have been rejected in the informal vetting process, including Caroline Kennedy and Doug Kmiec.
UPDATE: President Obama would be well served, IMHO, by selecting a pro-life Democrat MOJ blogger as Ambassador to the Vatican.
