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The Curt Jester

"It is the test of a good religion whether you can joke about it." GKC

The Weekly Benedict

The Weekly Benedict eBook – Volume 35

by Jeffrey Miller October 21, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

Weekly Benedict

This is the 35th volume of The Weekly Benedict ebook which is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Benedict. This volume covers material released during the last week for 8 October, 2012 – 21 October 2012.

The ebook contains a table of contents and the material is arranged in sections such as Angelus, Speeches, etc in date order. The full index is listed on Jimmy’s site.

The Weekly Benedict – Volume 35 – ePub (supports most readers)

The Weekly Benedict – Volume 35 – Kindle

There is an archive for all of The Weekly Benedict eBook volumes.  This page is available via the header of this blog or from here.

October 21, 2012 0 comment
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PoliticsPro-lifePunditry

Consistency

by Jeffrey Miller October 20, 2012October 20, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

You really can’t expect much from an article titled Why isn’t Paul Ryan on Catholic bishops’ ‘wafer watch’?

Mitt Romney and his Catholic running mate, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, while pro-life, allow for exceptions in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of the mother.

That might sound more conservative than Obama and Biden, but it is not in keeping with Catholic orthodoxy, argued Fordham University theologian Michael Peppard in the New York Times last week. Peppard says the sanctity of life is a prophetic teaching — not a political position.

In his op-ed, headlined “Paul Ryan, Catholic Dissident,” Peppard writes that there are no allowable exceptions when it comes to abortion.

None. Nada. Zero.

Therefore Ryan, who was in lockstep with Catholic orthodoxy before becoming Romney’s running mate, no longer is.

Have the bishops put Ryan, as they have Biden, on what’s called “wafer watch,” warning that he better not be taking communion if he continues to support a woman’s right to choose?

Not that I have heard.

First correction is that it is certainly true there is no allowable exceptions for direct abortion, this does not include cases involving double effect such as in ectopic pregnancies which are indirect abortion. Just to make a minor clarification.

Now first off it seems rather odd that a theologian who has written for the Huffington post and Commonweal is really the person who is going to schools people on Church teaching regarding abortion. Kind of the Church says this, but I am willing to write for the extreme pro-abortion organizations and write an article for the NYT proclaiming Rep. Ryan as dissident. Considering he has no track record proclaiming extreme pro-abortion Democrats as such. Besides the theologian who would even use the term “wafer watch” is more concerned with using an offensive neologism than being a truly Catholic theologian.

Michael Peppard had written.

The Catholic stance on abortion is not political but prophetic — a holistic and unyielding defense of the sacredness of life. The church’s staunch position on fetal personhood was on display two years ago in Phoenix, when Margaret McBride, a nun on the ethics board of St. Joseph’s Hospital, authorized an emergency abortion to save the life of a dying woman. Sister McBride was automatically excommunicated by her bishop (though later reinstated quietly). Mr. Ryan’s new position unites him with Sister McBride in defending the threatened life of a pregnant woman.

A theologian who says abortion “not political but prophetic” seems to me not to be a very good theologian. The teaching on abortion is a truth grounded in the natural law. Regarding the truth of Church teaching is not a “staunch position” and he couldn’t even bring himself to capitalize “Church.” Plus the phrase “automatically excommunicated by her Bishop” is so stupid it even makes armchair Canon layer like me chuckle. The Sister  was automatically excommunicated by her action and the bishop recognized the fact. As for Sister McBride being later reinstated quietly. The Hospital had emailed the Catholic News Service that she was no longer excommunicated. If this is true (never confirmed by the Diocese as far as I know) then she had repented of her action which is a very good thing. Mr. Peppard is trying to have it both ways here.

But it is always a good idea to look at your dismissiveness of what somebody said for reasons outside of what they said. This article really proclaims a “What is good for the goose is good for the gander” appeal. The so-called Communion wars that broke out with Sen. John Kerry’s Presidential run and that rears its head from time to time now has lead to Democrats wanting to put the shoe on the other foot. Though with Sen. John Kerry this was hard since his foot is often in his mouth.

There has been some outcry against Peppard’s original article, for example by the Catholic League. Though I think some of the critics have missed the point. It does not come down to a question of whether a Catholic may vote for a politician who is much more restrictive of abortion. The real question is would Rep. Paul Ryan meet the criteria under the infamous Canon 915? Here is a bit of trivia for you Canon 915 is the only Canon with its own Wikipedia page.

Those who have been excommunicated or interdicted after the imposition or declaration of the penalty and others obstinately persevering in manifest grave sin are not to be admitted to holy communion.

Previously Rep. Ryan had not supported such exceptions and is now going along with them. He basically has promised that the Romney/Ryan team will not act in regards to legislation and these exceptions. Leave off the fact that they will have no way to legislate on this in the first place at the Federal level, I don’t excuse such an attitude as simply being politically pragmatic and we know that he is “personally opposed.” The law is a teacher and what a politician publicly supports is also a teacher to a some extent. A political compromise concerning the moral law is a compromise of the moral law. Does this rise to the level outlined in Canon 915? It doesn’t seem to me to be such a solid case as in Catholic politicians who have voted for the evil of abortion and supported abortion in almost all cases. That being said I would also think it would be a good thing for Rep. Ryan’s Bishop to talk to him about this.

Michael Peppard  called for consistency and I would ask it from him as well. He is using this as a gotcha with no real concern with Mr. Ryan’s moral compromise. If what Ryan has said really does rise to the level explained in Canon 915 than it should be applied to him as a medicinal remedy to get him to repent of his support of the exceptions. I would certainly like to see a wider application of this Canon as a way to help Catholic politicians to receive the truth and to fully repent and when the case is just. I don’t care a whit about what political party the person belongs to but first off for their soul and then for the common good.

This brings me to another point. Earlier this week Matthew Warner wrote an excellent article I’m always confused by the “incest” exception for abortion. He brought up a point that had eluded me before. The large majority of cases involving incest are also cases of rape (statutory and otherwise).  He certainly makes some good points.

October 20, 2012October 20, 2012 4 comments
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Pro-lifePunditry

Contraceptive consequentialism

by Jeffrey Miller October 18, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

It really is quite creepy how often the President has talked about abortion in relation to his daughters.

— ➡️Curt Jester⬅️ (@CurtJester) October 18, 2012

Candidate and President Obama has done this multiple times and most recently in the second presidential debate.  Most famously he said that he didn’t want his daughters, “punished with a baby.” Equal opportunity has come to mean that women must become like men and not being able to get pregnant. Instead of the “sacred feminine” feminist will talk about it is more like the “scared feminine” where fecundity is a disease to be treated.  A pregnancy is only good if it was fully intended with conditions such as  right time, economic circumstance, and perhaps a Sun/Moon/Uranus conjunction.

Hearing statements from the President, Vice President, and their allies in the last couple of weeks show that part of the responsibility of a Democratic Party candidate is to proclaim the exceptionalism of Planned Parenthood. The President had previously said “I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism.”, but his pride and support of Planned Parenthood is super patriotic in the sense of devotion and support. To be a modern day Democrat is to be a Planned Parenthood apologist.

It does seem that an organization that is so loved by Democrats is the one they seem to know so little about.  The President repeated the lie that Planned Parenthood did mammograms – something that has been debunked multiple times.  The Vice President even said  “And now these guys pledge that they are going to defund Planned Parenthood, which under law cannot perform any abortion.”  Well actually it is under law that they can’t perform mammograms since none of their clinics have a license to do so.  The President and some ads from Democrats have also lied that a President Romney would reduce access to cancer screenings.  Well Planned Parenthood can’t do cancer screenings, but they can prescribe you a class 1 carcinogenic in the form of hormonal contraceptions so that your chance of cancer is higher.  Really the President seems to be an extension of Margaret Sanger’s “Negro Project”.

“The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. And we do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population, and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members.” (Margaret Sanger letter – 1939)

Rather odd that the one thing Planned Parenthood does the most of and makes the most money from is abortion and the non-coincidence  that this is never brought up when it comes to taxpayer funding.

As I have mentioned before it is interesting that with all this focus on female contraception that “safe sex” is almost never even mentioned anymore. I guess all those sexually transmitted diseases, which are still increasing, are no longer a concern. Maybe if you want to create the narrative that birth control is prohibitively expensive you just don’t want to promote cheap condoms as policy. Though the Obama Administration was quite willing to flood Peru with cheap condoms. The whole safe sex meme was always a bad response and once again birth control was favored over self control as Chesterton reminded us.

The artificial neutering of women as a form of equality reminds me of the Gnostic “Gospel of Thomas” where the Gnostic Jesus says “Look, I will lead her that I may make her male, in order that she too may become a living spirit resembling you males. For every woman who makes herself male will enter into the kingdom of heaven.” The same goes for the liberal kingdom of heaven.

Recently a study showing that contraception reduces abortion rates has been much touted. The same people who say there is nothing morally wrong with abortion are saying this is a good thing. In the study they pushed implant forms of contraception along with IUDs. The reason abortion supporters have redefined conception to after implantation is so that abortion inducing products which prevent implantation by physical or chemical means can be ignored as causing abortions. Well I will wonder off the implantation and call this a lie. What the study is really saying is that they can reduce surgical abortions by means that sometimes induce early abortion. Regardless the argument that one intrinsic evil helps reduce another intrinsic evil is just not appealing to me. Just a form of contraceptive consequentialism.

Lydia McGrew at “What’s Wrong with the World” has a good article on the many other problems with this study.

Included in her post is something rather amazing about the timing of the study.

The results were so dramatic, in fact, that Peipert asked the journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology to publish the study before the Nov. 6 presidential election, knowing that the Affordable Care Act, and its reproductive health provisions, are major issues in the campaign.

“It just has so many implications for our society,” he told NBC News.

October 18, 2012 4 comments
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Punditry

Pope punishes Bishop by making him an Archbishop

by Jeffrey Miller October 18, 2012October 20, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

INDIANAPOLIS –  A high-ranking Holy See official who tried to resolve tense relations between the Vatican and U.S nuns was transferred Thursday to a Midwestern archdiocese of fewer than 230,000 parishioners.

The newly appointed Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin said he didn’t know if the move was related to his efforts to reconcile the heads of the Roman Catholic Church with nuns who some theological conservatives complained had become too secular and political.

“No one told me it was tied to the investigation,” Tobin, a 60-year-old American Redemptorist priest, said at a news conference in Indianapolis. He succeeds Archbishop Daniel Buechlein who retired last year.

Yeah that really sounds like the motive that Pope Benedict XVI would have.  If you don’t toe the line exactly you will be made and Archbishop of  228,000 Catholics.  If he really wanted to punish him even more severely he might even make him a Cardinal.

The article goes on to quote two priests that have never been quoted in a news article —  Rev. Thomas Reese, Rev. James Martin S.J. Actually I mean pretty much quoted in any news article on the Church seeking negative spin.

Rev. Thomas Reese is quoted as saying  “He said part of his job was to explain Women Religious to the Vatican.”  When did he say this? Google seems to have amnesia on him ever being quoted of him saying anything so condescending. I call BS on this. To be fair though it is not beyond the pale  that he might have said it.  He certainly was somewhat critical of the investigation of the LCWR . I have to say if he was accurately quoted in context that “No one told me it was tied to the investigation” that this a rather odd reply.  Mainly though I call BS that this was some petty reprisal from the Pope.

Source

October 18, 2012October 20, 2012 6 comments
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Punditry

I’m personally opposed to “personally opposed”

by Jeffrey Miller October 16, 2012October 18, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

I was glad to see after the Vice Presidential debate last week that the USCCB had immediately come out with a statement on the total falsity of Joe Biden’s claims about the HHS mandate. Even if it didn’t even mention his name. It is not as if people reading the statement would not know the answer to that.

Still I would like to have seen another statement released regarding what was the “elephant in the room” or really the “infant in the womb.” Joe Biden pulled out the ole “personally opposed” Kennedy chestnut and added about not being able to impose his faith on others. This tortured reasoning has been pulled out again and again and it really should be answered by the USCCB when used in this circumstance before an audience of some fifty million people.

The bishops have spoken on this before both individually and via the USCCB such as in the document “Living the Gospel of Life”

Since the entry of Catholics into the U.S. political mainstream, believers have struggled to balance their faith with the perceived demands of democratic pluralism. As a result, some Catholic elected officials have adopted the argument that, while they personally oppose evils like abortion, they cannot force their religious views onto the wider society. This is seriously mistaken on several key counts. First, regarding abortion, the point when human life begins is not a religious belief but a scientific fact — a fact on which there is clear agreement even among leading abortion advocates. Second, the sanctity of human life is not merely Catholic doctrine but part of humanity’s global ethical heritage, and our nation’s founding principle. Finally, democracy is not served by silence. Most Americans would recognize the contradiction in the statement, “While I am personally opposed to slavery or racism or sexism I cannot force my personal view on the rest of society.” Real pluralism depends on people of conviction struggling vigorously to advance their beliefs by every ethical and legal means at their disposal.

Which is great for the 100 or so Catholics that might have actually seen this document.

Now fact-checking Catholic politicians who distort the Church’s teaching is not really their purview. Really you would need a full-time staff just for Rep. Nancy Pelosi. You also have to pick your battles. Issuing a statement every time some Catholic politician says something theologically stupid would be an easy way for the media to ignore you – or ignore you more than they already do. Still the USSCB statement after the debate certainly did get some coverage.

Archbishop Chaput did comment on this as the “latest outrageous example” of the phony divide between belief and action. At the same time he also said “I call you as a Catholic, to forget about the labels, be a liberal sometimes, a conservative sometimes, but a Catholic first.” This is of course exactly right. Really I think the USCCB should have corrected VP Joe Biden on the “impose my faith” aspect and corrected Rep. Paul Ryan on supporting the abortion exemptions.

Now if you were to try to take Biden’s argument seriously on not being able to impose one’s belief than his career has a legislature is rather odd. It is not as if he only voted on legislation that was supported by 100% of his constituents. Every act of the legislature imposes something on others that they don’t like. Plus you just can’t take the argument seriously at all while they are imposing the HHS mandate on Catholics and others and then bragging about it.

Possibly I am falling in the trap of wanting the USCCB to do things. Well actually I have fallen into that trap. When really what I should be wanting is individual bishops to be vocal when such outrageous statements are made. Some of them certainly have been vocal on this. Or really a both/and approach would be quite fine with me. The line that Biden used should be slapped down and as the media loves to say “slammed” so that the next pro-abortion politician might just think a little bit before using it.

October 16, 2012October 18, 2012 14 comments
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Pro-life

Taxing the elderly to kill the young

by Jeffrey Miller October 16, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

So if you had a country with 0.497 population growth what would you do?

Well if you were France you would you would have the government totally cover the cost of abortion (though not the moral cost).  If you were France and already running a $13 billion dollar health-care system deficit you would also pay for it with a tax on retirees.  Death and taxes together again.

October 16, 2012 2 comments
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Punditry

Catholic buzzwords and phrases I would ban.

by Jeffrey Miller October 15, 2012October 16, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

Last month Fr Alexander Lucie-Smith wrote up a list of ten Church buzzwords he would like to eliminate.  An interesting list  and one I mostly agree with.  Some of the buzzwords listed were not ones I had thought much about, but can see that they are indeed buzzwords.

So this got me thinking about my own list of buzzwords and phrases I could do without.  Now I would admit that some of the ones I am going to list might just be perfectly acceptable and even be used correctly in faithful circles.  I am going by mostly my own reactions to them and the negative connotations they have for me.  So that should be enough of a disclaimer.

  1. Presider.  The announcement at the start of so many Masses that Fr. so-and-so will be the presider. This has the Mass as meeting connotation where instead of a priest as In persona Christi  we have  heading this meeting is. Now the term “presides” and “presider” does show up in English translations of Vatican documents.  I just think the use of this just before Mass starts is not helpful.  Though really the Mass needs no introduction such as this. Heck if they are going to go ahead and do this I would almost prefer a Soap Opera substitution phrasing such as “The part of Jesus is now being played by Fr. so-and so” — well not really.  Celebrant doesn’t annoy me as much, but let’s just skip the introductions.
  2. Worship Space. I like how the term shows a proper orientation towards  God.  But what is wrong with the world “church”? Why substitute “worship space” which seems much more abstract?  “Honey it is time to wake up the kids so we can go to worship space.”
  3. Faith Community. Again a fairly accurate term, but I pretty much only find the word used in more liberal environs.  Welcome to our faith community is another part of the introduction I hear from time to time.  Just use “parish” instead of going with more wordy phrases.
  4. Sending forth hymn.  This one grates on me whenever I hear it which just shows how irrational pet-peeves can be.  Maybe though it is because when at the end of Mass the Cantor announces a “Sending forth hymn” it is usually a hymn that really sends me forth to escape the sounds attacking my ear drums. It is rather amazing how many times a “Sending forth hymn” is accompanied with castanets. Now Peter was called to cast a net, but not the choir.  Besides “Recessional hymn” is good enough for me.  Though the whole 4-hymn or 5-hymn sandwich for Mass I could also easily rant on.
  5. Prophetic voice. It is pretty much a certainty when somebody says they are speaking with a prophetic voice they are doing anything but that.  Just the problem with the pride of calling yourself a prophet or the group you associate with is enough to set off warning signals.  Those who proclaim a prophetic voice seem to know nothing about the prophets.  The prophets were persecuted and martyred because they called Israel back to the faith and proclaimed against their errors. The self-proclaimed prophets are more pathetic than prophetic.  They call people away from the faith and then proclaim errors as truth.  They say the Church will change her teachings — just add time.
  6. Healing Mass. Technically there is no specific category of a Healing Mass, generally though all Masses involve healing.  What is usually meant by this term is Mass followed by some kind of healing prayer service.  Sometimes you even see the Sacrament of Anointing given out like a blessing where people just stand in line and receive the sacrament.  When I have encountered this there was no discernment regarding danger of death or any other caveats about when it is appropriate to receive this sacrament of healing.  When prayers for healing in a liturgical or non-liturgical occur in context of the norms of the Church I of course have no objection.  I just prefer accurate terms.
  7. Progressive.  Chesterton said enough about this in Heretics that I will not attempt to improve on him.
  8. Seamless Garment. I am not critiquing Cardinal Bernadin’s original use of this  which certainly reflects a truth.  Rather I critique what it has morphed into.  In the modern use I call it the “Shameless Garment” since it is used rather shamelessly to be an excuse to vote for pro-abortion politicians or be involved with pro-abortion groups just as long as they also do some objective good.  The hierarchy of truths which the Seamless Garment should reflect has been flattened down to make all issues equal.
  9. Catholic Identity. Used mostly by those who should be sued for Catholic Identity Fraud.  Usually is a term used as a veneer to apply a Catholic patina to an institution that has mostly lost it’s Catholic faith.
  10. Eucharistic Minister. Part of the flattening out of the clergy and the laity. It is not just for ease of use that the actual title “Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion” is replaced.  I don’t have to rant about how ordinary the extraordinary is at Masses since that has been well-covered in the Catholic blogosphere.  Really though this one was just easy pickings to round off my list to ten.

What are your least favorite Catholic buzzwords/phrases.

October 15, 2012October 16, 2012 63 comments
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Book Review

If Aristotle’s Kid Had an iPod

by Jeffrey Miller October 15, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

If Aristotle’s Kid Had an iPod: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Parents by Conor Gallagher is a new book from TAN Books that I believe has been released today.

This is kind of a cross between and introduction to Aristotle and a philosophy book for parents.  He purposely calls it not a parenting book as he says he is not qualified to write one – I think otherwise though.  As a philosophy book for parents I think it succeeds rather well as he takes the wisdom of Aristotle out of just the intellectual into the practical.  Preparing your children for a life of virtue, true friendships, and happiness. As this book has a Aristotelian focus it doesn’t try to project Christian theology upon his thought.  Though there is so much that integrates quite well as the Scholastics found.  Human nature has not changed since Aristotle lived.

I quite enjoyed the format of the book and the way he presented philosophical ideas that are easily grasped.  There is some humor in the writing which keeps it light while discussing serious philosophical ideas regarding human nature and living a life of virtue. The author also used various studies, statistics, and stories to support the underlying ideas.    A summary at the end of each chapters goes over some of the main ideas.  The theme of the iPod is used in these summaries which it calls a “Playlist” and overall I quite liked the layout of the book.  “Aristotle’s Dictionary for Parents” at the end provides references to ideas in the book.

I thought this books succeeds quite well at what it sets out to do both as a introduction to Aristotelian thought and philosophy in general and what it means to our daily lives.  If I every run across a time machine I will be sure to send a copy of this book back to my early self.

October 15, 2012 0 comment
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Pro-life

Why the Little Sisters of the Poor oppose the HHS Mandate

by Jeffrey Miller October 14, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

From an excellent interview by Mary Frances Boyle of the NCRegister with Sister Constance Veit of Little Sisters of the Poor regarding the HHS Mandate.

How will the Little Sisters of the Poor be affected by the HHS mandate?

For the time being, we are not directly affected by the mandate. We have until the end of this year to provide certification that we meet the criteria for the one-year exemption currently in place. So, most likely, if nothing changes in the law, we will have to face this concretely Jan. 1, 2014.

Cardinal [Timothy] Dolan blogged about the HHS mandate and its impact on Catholic organizations and services. He is very clear about the costs of the mandate. For example, if we were to stop offering health insurance rather than comply with the mandate, we would have to pay a $2,000 penalty per employee. This penalty aside, it just does not seem right to us to stop providing health insurance to our employees.
If we chose to offer insurance without the objectionable services, we would honor our consciences, but we’d have to pay $100 per day per employee. As the cardinal figures it, for an organization with 50 employees, that would mean almost $2 million per year.

So if the mandate is still standing in 2014, all of our U.S. homes will be facing serious financial difficulties. To put this in perspective, we already have to make up at least half of our operating expenses through donations, because Medicaid reimbursements cover only about half of what it costs to care for the elderly in the way they deserve. So the potential fines or penalties we’re looking at just make it that much harder.

To put  this in perspective the Little Sisters of the Poor with roughly 300 religious would need to pay 30,000 a day in fines.  They could of course decide to only help the Catholic elderly so as to actually meet the requirements of the HHS mandate for a religious exemption.  After all according to the HHS Mandate “For the gate is small, and the way is narrow that leads to exemptions, and few are those who receive one (unless they are union donors).”

What actions have the Little Sisters of the Poor taken in order to combat the mandate?

At this point, we have not joined in any lawsuits. Our efforts have centered on praying and educating ourselves about the issue.

We issued our own statement back in March — which is highly unusual for us — because we felt that we wanted to support the bishops as much as possible.

As women religious who are grateful to be daughters of the Church, that is very important to us.

That’s why we issued a public statement and, later on, why we signed on to a joint letter sponsored by the bishops and the Lutheran Church.

During the Fortnight for Freedom, we had a lot of prayer initiatives in our homes, like daily Holy Hours with the elderly and speakers. And I was asked to speak about our mission and the need for religious liberty at a congressional reception sponsored by the bishops’ conference during the fortnight.

I have been a Little Sister for 25 years, and I have never seen our congregation so active on a public issue. So that is an indication of its importance. The only other time I have seen a response like this from our congregation was in the early 1990s, when euthanasia and assisted suicide were being debated in the European Parliament, and our superior general at that time took a public stand.

Normally, our lives are very hidden.

Funny how the media is full of stories of the Vatican cracking down on women religious who serve the poor and none about how the Obama Administration  is cracking down on women religious who serve the poor.  If the LCWR is reformed they will be more able to help the poor, if the President succeeds there will be less women religious able to help the poor.

October 14, 2012 3 comments
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The Weekly Benedict

The Weekly Benedict eBook – Volume 34

by Jeffrey Miller October 14, 2012
written by Jeffrey Miller

Weekly Benedict

This is the 34th volume of The Weekly Benedict ebook which is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Benedict. This volume covers material released during the last week for 3 October, 2012 – 11 October 2012.

The ebook contains a table of contents and the material is arranged in sections such as Angelus, Speeches, etc in date order. The full index is listed on Jimmy’s site.

The Weekly Benedict – Volume 34 – ePub (supports most readers)

The Weekly Benedict – Volume 34 – Kindle

There is an archive for all of The Weekly Benedict eBook volumes.  This page is available via the header of this blog or from here.

October 14, 2012 0 comment
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About Me

Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award-winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.

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Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.
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•Kresta in the Afternoon Subscribe to Podcast RSS
•SQPN - Tons of great Catholic podcasts Subscribe to Podcast RSS
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Archives

Catholic Sites

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Ministerial Bloghood

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  • Da Mihi Animas
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  • Father Joe
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  • Orthometer
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  • This Week at Vatican II
  • Waiting in Joyful Hope
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Bloghood of the Faithful

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  • A Catholic Mom in Hawaii
  • A Long Island Catholic
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  • Ad Altare Dei
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  • Aliens in this world
  • Always Catholic
  • American Chesterton Society
  • American Papist
  • Among Women
  • And Sometimes Tea
  • Ask Sister Mary Martha
  • auntie joanna writes
  • Bad Catholic
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  • Bl. Thaddeus McCarthy's Catholic Heritage Association
  • Catholic and Enjoying It!
  • Catholic Answers Blog
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  • Charlotte was Both
  • Christus Vincit
  • Confessions of a Hot Carmel Sundae
  • Cor ad cor loquitur
  • Courageous Priest
  • Creative Minority Report
  • CVSTOS FIDEI
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  • Darwin Catholic
  • Defend us in Battle
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  • Dominican Idaho
  • Dyspectic Mutterings
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  • Eve Tushnet
  • Eye of the Tiber
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  • Get Religion
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  • Happy Catholic
  • Ignatius Insight Scoop
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  • In the Light of the Law
  • InForum Blog
  • Jeff Cavins
  • Jimmy Akin
  • John C. Wright
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  • Nunblog
  • Oblique House
  • Open wide the doors to Christ!
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  • Patrick Madrid
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  • The B-Movie Catechism
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  • The Pulp.it
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  • The Scratching Post
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  • Unam Sanctam Catholicam
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