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The Curt Jester

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

Punditry

Feast with the Least (attendance)?

by Jeffrey Miller January 1, 2009
written by Jeffrey Miller

Using just anecdotal evidence I wonder if today’s Holy Day of Obligation is the least attended. Year after year no matter what parish I might go to on the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God there is but half the people there you would see on a Sunday or some other Holy Day of Obligation.

I guess sleeping in after partying all night is preferable to actually honoring the Blessed Virgin Mary on her feast. Yeah it’s gravely sinful to miss Mass on a Holy Day of Obligation without serious reason – and a hangover is not one of them. The idea that missing Mass is gravely sinful is certainly not something you hear much anymore since it is one of those things that went-out-with-Vatican-II-but-didn’t-really-go-out-with-Vatican-II.

The parish I went to today is usually so packed on Sundays and other Holy Days of Obligation that you have to park in satellite parking and they have a couple of dedicated vehicles that can carry 40 some people to the front entrance. Today though no problem parking with plenty of empty spaces near the main entrance. I would be curious if this is something my readers have observed.

The lack of attendance only give bishop’s credence for transferring feast days to the nearest Sunday, a practice I abhor.

January 1, 2009 65 comments
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News

Giving the devil his due

by Jeffrey Miller December 31, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

In contrast to the teacher at a Catholic school, here is a Catholic teacher at a public school also suing.

ST. MARYS DEANERY — A fourth grade teacher from the Coldwater Exempted Village School District has filed a federal suit against two teachers’ unions over the fact that her compulsory union fees are used to promote abortion and homosexuality.

Kathy Hart, who is Catholic, has been a teacher in the Ohio public school system since August 1996. Hart sued the state’s largest teacher union for forcing her to pay compulsory union dues that are used to fund union activities that violate her religious faith.

National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation attorneys are providing Hart with free legal aid and filed the suit last month in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, Eastern Division.

The NEA had agreed to allow her dues to go to a charity they mutually agreed on but the Ohio Education Association (OEA) refused to do so.

Hart’s case follows a case involving another Ohio teacher who won a federal district court ruling saying that requiring her to pay dues to the National Education Association is a violation of her First Amendment Rights.

Carol Katter, who is also Catholic, sued to stop being forced to fund the organization because her money would be used to promote abortion. Katter, who is a mathematics and language arts instructor in the St. Mary’s district of Columbus, indicated she was told her dues could go to a charity but OEA officials eventually told her they couldn’t disseminate her dues elsewhere, because she couldn’t prove that her Catholic faith went against her membership in the union.

Quite the legal dodge since the Catholic faith has no problem with the idea of unions, just the cooperation with evil that the dues are going to. I guess Teacher’s unions supporting homosexual acts and abortion is there doing there part to reduce teacher/student ratios in the classroom.

December 31, 2008 12 comments
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Other

Seeking a spiritual director

by Jeffrey Miller December 31, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Fr. Philip Powell, OP makes some great points on seeking a good spiritual director.

For those who want to go deeper on the subject I highly recommend Seeking Spiritual Direction: How to Grow the Divine Life Within by Fr. Thomas Dubay, S.M.

December 31, 2008 2 comments
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Punditry

A Catholic Education

by Jeffrey Miller December 30, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

SAN ANTONIO, Dec. 30 (UPI) — A teacher at a Roman Catholic school in San Antonio fired after she married a divorced man has filed a federal discrimination complaint.

The principal of Central Catholic High School urged Marquis LaFortune, 25, a week before her wedding in November to resign or to have her husband-to-be seek an annulment of his first marriage, options she turned down. She told the San Antonio Express-News that the firing took some of the joy out of the preparations for the marriage.

“I would have resigned if I’d felt like I’d done something wrong,” she said. “I couldn’t get out of bed. It’s just been this cloud. It was supposed to be the best week of my life, and I had to pull myself together for the ceremony.”[article]

“I would have resigned if I’d felt like I’d done something wrong,” – because how you “feel” about it is important.

LaFortune has filed a complaint with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The Catholic Church is an equal opportunity employer and anybody who teaches in a Catholic school and tries to get remarried should be fired.

School officials learned of her fiance’s marital status from an article in The Pep, the school’s newspaper. She helped manage the paper.

Doh!

December 30, 2008 42 comments
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News

Father and Son become Catholic priests

by Jeffrey Miller December 30, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

In what is believed to be a first, a father and son, both former Anglican clergy, have been ordained as Catholic priests and are now working for the same archdiocese, Birmingham.

Father Dominic Cosslett, 36, and his father, Father Ron Cosslett, 70, were both ordained by Archbishop Vincent Nichols, pictured above by Peter Jennings. Nichols is the favourite to succeed Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor as Archbishop of Westminster when he steps down early next year and the latest ordination of Father Dominic on 20 December shows he is continuing in the tradition of true Catholicity to which the British church has so long been witness.

Father Dominic was formerly an Anglican priest at the Church of Christ the King at Lourdes in Coventry. His father, Father Ron Cosslett, aged 70, also a former Anglican priest, was ordained as a Catholic priest by Nichols 3 July 2005. He is now priest-in-charge harge at St Joseph’s, Darlaston in the West Midlands.

Father Dominic, who is not married, has from a young age felt called to a celibate lifestyle. “Although as an Anglican marriage was open to me the way I live my life is naturally a celibate one,” he told me yesterday. His mother converted five years ago at the same time as his father and his sister and their children followed them over about a year ago.

Father and son concelebrated, celebrating the eucharist at the older Father’s parish, for the first time at Christmas. [article]

The rest of the article has some nice quotes on the journey to Rome. I guess we have to thank Anglicanism for showing the silliness of the three branches theory, though it at least had some surface plausibility before. The new branches theory is that without the Pope as the Vicar of Christ and the magisterium you will keep branching off and branching off forever.

December 30, 2008 7 comments
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Tech

Techtemptions

by Jeffrey Miller December 30, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Have have started a new tech blog on the temptation of tech called Techtemptions. The name is a play on how technology is often a temptation. The temptation to always have the latest cool tool, the fastest computer, video card, etc. Oh Lord take away my tech temptations, but not yet.

Frankly being a geek and user of technology I wanted a place to write about tech that normally wouldn’t go with the Curt Jester blog. Besides the internet needs more opinions on stuff and I am doing my part. Besides the plethora of Catholic podcasts I listen to I also listen to a number of tech podcasts and the blog is the perfect place to weigh in.

Plus I wanted to play around with WordPress. For more than six years I have been using Movable Type as the publishing platform for this blog. So far I am pretty impressed with WordPress.

December 30, 2008 2 comments
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Humor

Raving Theist again

by Jeffrey Miller December 30, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

The Raving Theist has more on his conversion. This proves that while us followers of brainwashing cults have to leave our brains behind, at least we get to retain our funny bones.

His headline does remind me of this extremely hilarious John Cleese podcast video.

December 30, 2008 1 comment
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Other

Raving Theist

by Jeffrey Miller December 28, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

One Christmas blessing this year was a couple days before Christmas The Raving Atheist announce he was now the Raving Theist in a post “Christ is Lord“. Three years ago he appeared in the atheist documentary “The God Who Wasn’t There” and so at first blush many might think this was a hoax. Especially since last year on April Fools another person who was part of the same documentary released a video singing a Christian praise song. Some of his friends such as Dawn Eden vouch for him on this and I believe that this is no joke.

I first became aware of the Raving Atheist blog over six years ago after he had commented on my old “Atheist to a Theist” blog. Some years later via Dawn Eden I discovered that he decided to rethink the language he used towards Christians and his “Godidiot of the Week.” From what I remember he as a pro-life atheist was reforming his opinions of Christians because of the ones he met in the pro-life movement. He decided to be much more civil in what he said. Since that time he would occasionally guest post on Dawn’s blog and helped produce the video for her book on chastity.

Over the years I have prayed for his conversion and I have tried to pray for a number of other atheists. Though I never prayed for them as consistently as I should. When I was an atheist I was also a pro-life atheist and so it was easy for me to identify with him. I am more happy than surprised by his conversion since I had thought him to be in the category of being an honest atheist – someone who would follow the truth wherever it lead. Most of the so-called “new atheists” I do not place in this category such as Professor Dawkins and his followers.

Conversions always give me great joy. Though part of it is a selfish joy since they remind me of my own conversion. I still like reading conversion stories and watching The Journey Home. Each person is an individual and while we are all touched by grace, we respond in different ways. There are often plenty of similarities, but each conversion is a unique answering to grace. I hope that the now “Raving Theist” will give us his conversion story.

As you might expect the atheist community is not exactly pleased by this announcement. Many of the “Now that you have been brainwashed into a cult” variety have commented in a post that has garnered so far almost 400 comments. I found it interesting that former atheist Jennifer of Conversion Diary noted that it was the comments by Christians on his blog that surprised her “they weren’t the unreasonable people I’d stereotyped them to be.” I can certainly relate to that sentiment. As a pro-life atheist I came in contact with pro-life Christians who I came to admire and they were not as brainwashed as I had come to believe. That they actually used reason to defend their pro-life beliefs and not just quoting scripture surprised me. Just as the first time I heard Saint Aquinas’ ways of knowing that God exists surprised me. People often build up stereotypes of groups of people they disagree with. As an atheist my stereotype of Christians was of unreasoning people who had blind faith and nothing more. This became more difficult to automatically go to with actual contact with Christians. Though since my conversion I have also found that many Christians have stereotypes of atheists. That their rejection of God is mainly a rejection of sin so that they can do as they please. While no doubt this is true of some, many atheists truly believe that reason leads you to reject the idea of God. I can only speak for myself and that I thought atheism to be true and even though it is quite stark as a philosophy I wanted to follow the truth.

P.Z. Myers (Biologist and Eucharist Desecrater) who use to be on the Raving Atheists forums had this response “Another mind poisoned“.

There’s an interesting analysis of the process of deconversion to be made here. I suspect he’s been getting a lot of personal support and attention from Christians actively interested in converting him over the years, and it’s that emotional massaging that convinced him to throw his brain out the window.

As somewhat who experienced that deconversion I missed out on the emotional massaging part since I didn’t have any personal attention and support from Christians other than prayer. It was an intellectual conversion inspired by grace. Though this is a concept that Myers and others are not enough of a “freethinker” to be able to see. His is the stereotype world where every Christian is a dumb ass fundamentalist with no brain. His world can not admit an intellect like Pope Benedict XVI or the Catholic intellects throughout history both theologically and scientifically. Somehow Mendel managed to be the father of genetics even though he was a monk that must have thrown his brain out the window. Louis Pasteur, Pascal, and countless others did quite well without their brains I guess. Think of what Thomas Aquinas could have done with a brain! But of course to admit that anybody could have an intellectual conversion and that reason could become a path to knowing God violates the atheist’s dogmas. So what part of the scientific method did P.Z. Myers use to determine Raving Theist’s conversion?

Raving Theist as of yet has not announced any details other than listing the Apostles Creed on his blog. While he gives the Catholic part of the Creed a capital letter we don’t know yet if he has become Catholic. I do hope he has simply because I believe the Catholic Church to be the truth, which is the only reason to believe anything. Besides if you are going to go with a “brain washing cult” why not go with the oldest one? We’ve have it down pat! Regardless I wish him the joy of the truth which takes much time adapting to after the desert of atheism.

December 28, 2008 22 comments
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Link

The Black Comedy of Kwanzaa

by Jeffrey Miller December 27, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

John Zmirak with a great essay on Kwanzaa the holiday that the “tenured black separatist and FBI informer Maulana (Ron) Karenga pulled out of his orifice.” Not to mention convicted felon and torturer. Like everything Zmirak writes it is funny and educational.

Kathy Shaidle writes Kwanzaa: my part in its downfall

December 27, 2008 4 comments
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Punditry

Coptic Confession

by Jeffrey Miller December 26, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

CAIRO – Egypt’s Coptic pope has banned the faithful from confessing their sins to priests over the telephone because intelligence agents might be listening in, a newspaper reported on Friday.
“Confessions over the telephone are forbidden, because there is a chance the telephones are monitored and the confessions will reach state security,” the independent Al-Masri Al-Yom quoted Pope Shenuda III as saying.
The leader of the Coptic minority also said confessions over the Internet were invalid because they might be read by websurfers.
“A confession over the Internet does not count as a confession, because everybody can look at it and it won’t be secret,” he said.

The Catholic Church’s reasons for not allowing confessions over distances is rooted in her sacramental theology. Every Sacrament is a personal encounter with the Lord in and through the person of the minister. In the Gospels every act of forgiveness was personal with the person present to him (with healing this was not always so.)

The type of reasoning above overlooks the fact that a confessional booth could be bugged and there was the case where a sacramental confession heard in prison was taped. In those cases of listening in would certainly not invalidate the confession, though it is certainly sinful and those people would be bound by the seal of confession. The same goes for an especially loud penitent when you can accidentally overhear a confession while waiting in line, in that case you would be bound to the seal of confession.

The sacrament of confession, also practiced by Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christians, is normally a very private conversation between penitent and priest.

Unlike Roman Catholic confessions, Coptic confessions are done face to face.

Well actually Catholics can confess face to face also, though they always have the right to confess anonymously behind a protective screen.

Coptic Patriarch Anba Morcos said that people have begun to phone in their confessions.

“It’s a new thing; it’s been happening for the past four or five years,” he said.

That is rather odd that the question is just being addressed now. The Catholic Church answered the question shortly after the telephone was invented. Some people wondered again about this after the internet became popular, but the questions was really already answered. It is not about something being overheard or spied upon because you could use PGP encryption on both ends via email and have a higher chance of security than inside of a confessional. Confession like all of the sacraments is a personal encounter with Christ .

Morcos added that Pope Shenuda has also banned monks in Coptic monasteries from using cell phones.

Of course any personal telephone including a landline the monk used would be “cell” phone by definition.

December 26, 2008 6 comments
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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
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  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
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