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The Curt Jester

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

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The Apostles to the SF/Fantasy Community

by Jeffrey Miller January 9, 2010
written by Jeffrey Miller

As a fan of SF author John C. Wright I always look forward to his next book/story. Often though his blog posts I enjoy just as much. His conversion has made him sort of an Apostle to the Science Fiction/Fantasy Fans. As a fan of that genre since childhood it did not often challenge my materialistic atheist beliefs. That a large group of SF/Fantasy fans are atheists/agnostics makes the intersection of the fans of his books and what he says on other matters on his blog rather interesting.

This time in response to one of his readers he posts on “the problems of overpopulation” which is quite an excellent read and exposes the myth of overpopulation as preached by modern Malthusian Chicken Littles.

Additionally SF writer Michael Flynn who I am also a great fan of returns to “Return of the Age of Unreason Part II” on the Scientific Revolution and it’s connection to Western (specifically Christian) thought. Both of his posts on this are the response to a “freethinker” who a Michael Fly says “He writes that he is “not a Middle Age scholar” and then sets about proving it. “

Nice to see that both of these Catholic authors have taken the time to engage the lies of the age so often construed as common knowledge.

January 9, 2010 3 comments
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Pro-life

I job decline I like

by Jeffrey Miller January 5, 2010
written by Jeffrey Miller

Creative Minority Reports points to this article in response to the decline of the number of abortion doctors.

Address the shortage of abortion providers. We all know the drill: the average age of an abortion provider in this country is soaring upwards, and many doctors who deserve to retire and spend their days playing golf stay in the business because there’s so many women who need abortions and so few people to provide them. Few counties have abortion providers, and many women have to travel hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles to get one. And it’s because younger doctors don’t want to perform abortions. They don’t have any memories of the horrors of septic abortions (unlike many older doctors), and the harassment they face if they join up seems like too much trouble.

The problem is complex, but not unfixable. We should lobby for stronger protections for abortion clinic workers, so that fear doesn’t drive would-be providers away. More importantly, we need to find a way to get people with the right attitudes and the right skills into the business. Programs encouraging bright, young pro-choice people into medical school to train as ob-gyns who perform abortions is a good start. Pushing medical schools not only to teach the procedures for abortion, but also to highlight the dangers of self-abortion would also help. Perhaps a scholarship program for medical students who train to be abortion providers, or a debt forgiveness program for those doctors that provide abortion? There are endless possibilities, and we should undertake them.

Amazing they always pull out the canard about people not becoming abortionists because of security risks. Funny how people become policemen, fire fighters, and soldiers and yet they can’t find doctors to brave the so-called risk. As tragic as the extremely rare murder of abortionist has been, it is still extremely rare.

No mention is made about those abortionist who stop being abortionists or the group that helps them the Society of Centurions.

I guess it is just hard finding people who are idealistic enough to spend years in training in order to kill and not to save life. Thank God there is still a stigma on this profession and that the “best and brightest” are not drawn toward this anti-vocation. No kid grows up wanting to be an abortionist – though plenty want to be doctors.

You all want to wonder at someone who sees the “horror” of septic abortions and not the “horror” of successful abortions. The problem is not septic abortions, but women choosing abortion in the first place. Their misguided attempt at the cure of a pregnancy does not mean we should have doctors to provide it. Besides the statistics for so-called back alley abortions was made up out of whole cloth by former abortionist and founder of NARAL Bernard Nathanson who is now Catholic. Women seeking abortions when abortion is illegal is tragic. But the tragedy is them seeking an abortion in the first place.

January 5, 2010 4 comments
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Humor

Predictions

by Jeffrey Miller January 5, 2010
written by Jeffrey Miller

Bishop Vasa is one person I greatly admire and this little piece from him certainly increases my admiration.

The following hoaxes/myths will be exposed in 2010:

Manmade global warming
Atheistic evolution
Relativism is the only absolute
Abortion is “health care”
Nobody can do health care better than the government
A Catholic can be pro-choice
The government will take care of you
How Obama saved America
America no longer needs God

Come, Lord Jesus!

The Most Rev. Robert F. Vasa is bishop of Baker, Oregon.

A list of predictions from various Catholics at Inside Catholic,

January 5, 2010 0 comment
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Pro-life

More Grave New World

by Jeffrey Miller January 4, 2010
written by Jeffrey Miller

You might think it was rather odd that an auto mechanic instead of fixing cars helped to destroy them. You would notice the strange disconnect between a person dedicated to repairing cards instead helped to keep them from ever running again.

Unfortunately we have a much worse disconnect with so-called Physician-Assisted Suicide.

Montana legalizes euthanasia

When I saw the headline I wondered how that could happen in a state like Montana. Then I slapped my forehead and emitted a “doh” – judges of course.

Montana has become the third state to legalize euthanasia after its high court ruled December 31 that “we find nothing in Montana Supreme Court precedent or Montana statutes indicating that physician aid in dying is against public policy.”
“What the court did, in essence, was to place the issue back into the hands of the legislature, where it should be,” said Jeff Laszloffy of the Montana Family Foundation. “They said there’s nothing currently in statute that prohibits the practice. It’s now up to us to go into the next legislative session fully armed and ready to pass statutory language that says, once and for all, that physician assisted suicide is illegal in Montana.”

Well I guess you can’t blame those judges. After all a judge who thinks he can legislate has it backwards and just might think a physician trained to heal people would help them die instead. Even more messed are those doctors who get this wrong and have decided instead of “First, do no wrong” have selected “First, make sure somebody is paying for this.”

January 4, 2010 7 comments
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Punditry

I am glad to be able to call him Venerable

by Jeffrey Miller January 1, 2010
written by Jeffrey Miller

The New York Times has lots of laughably bad coverage, especially when it comes to the Church. A current article is titled “Why a Rush to Pius XII Sainthood?” Yeah it’s only been over 50 years since he died. Yeah that’s a real rush job.

The question of Pius’s wartime record remains open, and will stay that way as long as the relevant archives are closed.

I guess he means the archives that were opened up ahead of schedule in 2003, though an archive of 16 million documents will take time to totally sift through. Much of the wartime documents have been made available and the whole archive up to 1958 is not going to throw anymore light on this. The main thing is the archives are not closed to researchers.

So what was the rush? The answer is politics — which does not make for an edifying religious spectacle. The common perception, disputed by the Vatican, is that by pairing Pius XII with John Paul II in the Dec. 20 decree, Benedict had hoped to satisfy both the conservative and the liberal wings of the Catholic Church.

What? This is so nonsensical it is hard to pry apart. Of course when labels such as conservative and liberal are used it always leads to confusion. If anything both Popes could only be seen as on the conservative side if you were going to apply such a label. The Spirit of Vatican II types and Women’s Ordination supporters would never call Pope John Paul II liberal. Pope John Paul II was loved by many people, but certainly not all that much by the self-proclaimed progressive Catholics.

The article goes on with this line of reasoning of taking Pope Benedict’s action with a political point of view and of course also quotes from the infallibly wrong-headed Fr. Reese for support.

This article is quite disingenuous by not specifying all that we do know about Venerable Pope Pius XII and the actions he took largely behind the scenes to save the Jews that he could. No mention is made that the Jewish community for years after the war had nothing but praise for the actions of this Pope. In the last several years along with many fine books on Venerable Pope Pius XII and his wartime record there have even been books written by Jews defending this great Pope.

In a recent article Gary L. Krupp of the Pave the Way foundation has become a defender of this Pope. He had assumed like many others that the charges against Pope Pius XII were true and he says he was shocked to find during his years of compiling the documentary evidence just how wrong this was. His recent article was “Friend to the Jews.” The fact is there is really no documentary evidence showing any kind of animus towards the Jews and a wealth of evidence showing quite the opposite.

When articles come out condemning Venerable Pope Pius XII it shows a total lack of journalistic integrity and just plain bias – common enough for the NYT. He wants to frame this as a conservative liberal divide and I would say he is just projecting his own motives.

Many people were surprised by Pope Benedict XVI advancing the cause of Pope Pius XII. After all there had been plenty of stories about how his cause had stalled – plenty of stories that were totally wrong. Sure Pope Benedict does have to make prudential political decisions during his papacy. Canonizations sometimes become political such as the case of St. Joan of Arc and St. Thomas More who were canonized much later due to political reasons. I don’t believe that Pope Benedict sees either of these two Venerable Pope’s as being political at all. I think it is much more accurate to look at what Pope Benedict does as advancing the truth. If men live lives of heroic sanctity and their causes prove this then there is no real reason why their cause should not be advanced. It does not matter that some people have a bad opinion of him or that they think he could have done more to help the Jews. Besides the decree of Heroic Sanctity does not mean that every prudential decision he made was perfect.

In some ways I am glad for some of the negative press thrown on this wartime Pope. As a result I have learned much more about this Pope that died days before I was born. All that I have learned has made me appreciate and admire this man. I enjoy saying Venerable before his name and hope within my lifetime to be able to call him a saint.

What annoys me the most is the revisionist history. There was no negative view of Pope Pius XII in regards to the Jewish people until the 1963 Rolf Hochhuth’s play, “The Deputy.” There is strong evidence that play was a KGB-directed and financed bid to smear Pius. It is only after this point that this view grew. This is so sickening that a play could be used as the basis to slander this pope. The fact that Hitler attempted to kill Pope Pius XII never factors into their view. No evidence matters, except for some play.

January 1, 2010 5 comments
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Pro-life

So why not a statement saying so?

by Jeffrey Miller December 30, 2009
written by Jeffrey Miller

Sister Carol Keehan is upset by a report in the New York times that the Catholic Health Association is split with the USCCB in regards to the health care bill passed by the Senate. Fair enough – anything printed in the NYT is worth closer inspection and large rocks of salt.

“There is not a shred of disagreement between CHA and the bishops,” she said. “We believe there is a great possibility and probability that in conference committee we can work toward a solution that will prevent federal funding of abortion.” [reference]

Though I would have to wonder why the CHA has made no public complaints of the passed Senate bill? This bill without a doubt provides for federally funded abortions along with a host of other problems. Yet their site has made no statements since the 17th of December. That statement said:

The Catholic Health Association is pleased to learn of the work being done to improve the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2009. As we understand it, the Senate intends to keep the President’s commitment that no federal funds will pay for abortions and in addition, provide significant new support for pregnant women.

While we have yet to see the manager’s amendment or Senator Robert Casey’s final abortion amendment language, we are encouraged by recent deliberations and the outline Senator Casey is developing. It is our understanding that the language now being written would prohibit federal funding of abortion, ensure provider conscience protection and fund programs to provide supportive care to some of the most vulnerable pregnant women in our society.

Especially now that a public health insurance option is no longer on the table, we are increasingly confident that Senator Casey’s language can achieve the objective of no federal funding for abortion. We urge Congress to continue its work toward the goal of health reform that protects life at all stages while expanding coverage to the greatest possible number of people in our country. We look forward to reviewing the final language these improvements contemplate.

Well there was more than just a shred a difference between what the USCCB said about the Casey amendment and what the CHA said. That amendment was horrific and a travesty in every way. To support it without seeing the text is extreme naivety. Sen Casey has been more than just wishey-washey when it comes to abortion. There is no way anyone could just take his description of the amendment without seeing the actual text.

The senate bill that passed included the wording of the Casey amendment. So is this a case of the CHA being for it before they were against it? What has changed to make them now against the bill and with the USCCB? Well nothing. The bill is just as toxic as it was on the 17th of December.

So count me skeptical on the CHA’s opposition since they have not even taken the time to write one statement in opposition to it. In fact all of their announcements have been generally supportive with only some “concerns.”

December 30, 2009 4 comments
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Book Review

A Joseph Two Pack

by Jeffrey Miller December 25, 2009
written by Jeffrey Miller

Recent I received two books for review that really fit together hand and glove.

One book I read last year was The Sign of the Times by the late Fr. Gilsdorf. I so loved that book and it was one of my favorites of the year. The success of the release of that book got the publisher to also release Go to Joseph a little book that he had written and never published. It is a power packed short book as Fr. Gilsdorf goes through the scriptures in reference to Saint Joseph. The silence of Joseph is well known since we never have any of Joseph words in scripture, but only his decisions fully aligned with the Holy Spirit and that he was a just man. Scripture does not even record his death and after Jesus’ visit to the Temple at age 12 we hear no more details about Joseph. Fortunately this does not mean that we don’t know anything about this great saint.

Fr. Gilsdorf as an excellent scripture scholar nudges out what can be known about St. Joseph. He does not include any of the apocryphal legends that were written later and has a critical view of what was referenced there. Those sources present Joseph as a older widower and Church art has mainly shown Joseph as an older man. This was done mainly to protect the virginity of Mary, but it seems to me to be almost a sort of slander to St. Joseph and a diminishment of his sanctity. Fr. Gilsdorf expects he was probably a man of 18 or 19 when betrothed to Mary which would fit with the cultural evidence of the time.

Throughout this book he goes through the reflections available apart from scripture where they apply. Devotion to St. Joseph is a relatively new thing in the Church that developed over time and really didn’t pick up any steam till the 1500’s. The book provides a handy time line in regard to this. It is hard to imagine that there were not churches dedicated to St. Joseph in the first millennium of the Church and the mention of St. Joseph by the Church Fathers is very limited.

This book also doubles as a source of apologetics concerning St. Joseph and the Perpetual Virginity of Mary.

What Fr. Gilsdorf has done is to give is a short to-the-point life of St. Joseph that tried to avoid speculation and stick to what we can know. So it is as easy but highly worthwhile read. The last part of the book contains prayers to St. Joseph and other appendices. Julie at Happy Catholic was also quite impressed.

The next book up is the The Mystery of Joseph
by the late Fr. Marie-Dominque Philippe, OP who died in 2006 and was the founder of the Community of St. John. Whenever I receive a book by Zacheus Press I know I am in for something special. This book was no exception and I can even say one of the finest books I have ever read. Fr. Philippe truly takes an awe-inspiring look at St. Joseph and plums the depth of mystery to give us a theological view of St. Joseph. I was truly stunned as a read this book and really seeing St. Joseph for the first time as a real person. I had wondered why many in the Church had called St. Joseph the greatest saint after Mary, something I wonder no more about. Sure I understood that Joseph was a just man and that while he had authority over the Holy Family no doubt he was also formed in perfection by Mary and Jesus.

Fr Philippe makes the same assumptions that Fr. Gilsdorf did in regards to Joseph and also leads us through the scriptures in the life of this saint. Both authors write about Mary’s vow of consecration to God that makes so much sense in scripture in regards to the Annunciation and her reply. Fr. Philippe calls this the first secret that St. Joseph carried in his heart. The following chapters on the dreams that Joseph received and his thoughts concerning Mary are pure gold with just so much to reflect and contemplate on.

The radical holiness of St. Joseph becomes so apparent that you wonder how you ever could have missed it. Like all saints his holiness starts in obedience and is illuminated by love. So often it seems the chaste relationship of Joseph and Mary is presented as something not fully a marriage. Something second rate when the opposite is true. This books shows the deepness of their love for each other and the sacrifice of St Joseph when he sees that Mary has her own path in relation to God that is wholly hers to pursue without his permission. We all have our own paths towards Christ and we make a major mistake when we have a problem when spouses are not lock-step in the exact spiritual journey. We can learn a lot from St. Joseph in this regard from his humility and love of his wife and God.

I am sure I do an injustice in describing this book. It is so theologically rich that I can only point to how good it is and not give the description that I would desire. The first half of the book following the scripture of itself is reason to read this book. The essays that come after add an equally rich dessert, especially the last essay on St. Joseph St. Mary, and St. John.

These two books just dove-tail so nicely together. One gives us a scripture scholar/apologetic/Church history view of St. Joseph and the other attempts and succeeds into diving into the mystery of St. Joseph. These two men’s view of St. Joseph also fit in perfectly together.

December 25, 2009 11 comments
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Prayer Request

Bittersweet Midnight Mass

by Jeffrey Miller December 25, 2009
written by Jeffrey Miller

At Midnight Mass I found out that our pastor Fr. Leon had collapsed at an earlier Mass and was in the ICU. He had previously been receiving chemotherapy for cancer and had returned t work. So I would ask my readers to pray for Fr. Leon who is truly a humble and holy priest who has fully given of himself for the care of souls.

That announcement was a rather bittersweet way to start Mass, but still the celebration of the Feast of the Incarnation can not truly be dampened. I am able to love Fr. Leon because Christ first loved us and it is his imitation of Christ that so draws my love.

The Mass was still quite beautiful as once again we had members of the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra there to accompany our choir as the performed Missa in C – Trinitatis. Mass is always beautiful, but there is a special joy in celebrating this feast. It is also nice to see the Church totally packed – which is pretty good for a downtown church. I was also glad to see that our assistant pastor informed people about Communion and that only Catholics could receive. Too bad though that I then saw several groups of people just leave. Though that is the sad indicator that the Body of Christ is still fragmented and a reminder to pray for the union that Jesus prayed for.

December 25, 2009 8 comments
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Podcast

The Catholic Laboratory

by Jeffrey Miller December 24, 2009
written by Jeffrey Miller

As a life-long lover of science I was of course delighted to find not only that there was no contradictions between faith and science, but that many scientists were men of faith and that in many ways it was Christianity that birthed the scientific method.

So I was quite glad to come across the podcast The Catholic Laboratory. Produced by Ian Maxfield, a Catholic scientist himself. Normally in each episode he introduces the life and history of another Catholic scientist and their contributions to science. Though he has also had mutl-part episodes for example discussing the multiverse. His presentation is quite enjoyable as he lays out biographies or discussion of science and even tosses out a bad joke or two (bad in a good way). I also enjoyed the interview he did with an author i admire, Benjamin Wiker and I hope he is able to do more such interviews in the future. I would enthusiastically recommend this to all others who enjoy science or are interested in the intersection of science and faith.

December 24, 2009 2 comments
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Humor

Twas the Night Before Christmas

by Jeffrey Miller December 24, 2009
written by Jeffrey Miller

I am a sucker for versions of “Twas the Night Before Christmas” that mention me along with a bunch of other bloggers.

December 24, 2009 1 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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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.
My conversion story
  • The Curt Jester: Disturbingly Funny --Mark Shea
  • EX-cellent blog --Jimmy Akin
  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
  • The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer

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