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The Curt Jester

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

News

Black Collar Market

by Jeffrey Miller September 11, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

URBANA, Ill. (AP) A Catholic priest on the University of Illinois campus has been charged with selling cocaine from his church office and rectory.

The Reverend Christopher Layden pleaded not guilty Thursday to two counts of delivery of less than 1 gram of cocaine within 1,000 feet of a church and one count of possession with intent to deliver 1 to 15 grams of cocaine near a church.

The 33-year-old was arrested Wednesday at St. John’s Catholic Newman Center after investigators found 3 grams of cocaine and drug paraphernalia while searching his home and office. His bond was set at $50,000.

The Catholic Diocese of Peoria says it has suspended Layden.

It is sad when a priest succumbs to substance abuse, but dealing? There has to be a Newman Center joke in here somewhere.

September 11, 2008 16 comments
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Politics

Pilate was not a governor

by Jeffrey Miller September 10, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

If I hear the "Jesus was a community organizer and Pilate was a Governor" meme one more time I am going to scream. In fact while writing this I just heard it again on the radio – arg. But I guess it does say a lot about those who are willing to use it. They say it as if it was actually a slam against Sarah Palin. I have heard some stupid Democrat inspired religious memes in the past such as the "Holy Family was homeless" but this surely takes the cake.

To start off Pontius Pilate was not a governor he was a Prefect of the Roman Judaea province. But even if it was a governor then what they would say would prove too much since it would include any Democrat who was a governor. Now if you are going to do a Pilate comparison which candidate most fits the mode? Mark Hemingway at the Corner said that when it came to Jesus that Pontius Pilate merely vote "Present" Jay Anderson asks "Between Gov. Palin and Sen. Obama, which do you think would be more likely to utter the question "What is truth?" I think when it comes to washing your hands because of condemning innocent blood surely this is the modern Democratic party. When it comes to abortion, cloning, ESCR, Euthanasia, and even some cases infanticide then surely you hear the sounds of washing hands from the likes of Obama and company. State Senator Obama determined that it was more politically expedient to let children die that were born alive after a failed abortion to protect abortion. Pilate would have understood Obama’s politically expediency since he did the same thing.

The idea of Jesus as community organizer proves that they know nothing of who Jesus is and that they don’t know what a community organizer is in the first place. But I guess they can’t help themselves in continually comparing Obama to Jesus. Some people have the idea that a community organizer is kind of like a volunteer community helper in the Jimmy Carter Habitats for Humanity mode. When it reality a community organizer is a paid political position that does little if any actual good in communities. Habitats for Humanity is something that actually does good and their is a reason Obama doesn’t brag about his accomplishment during his time as a community organizer. But I can’t blame people for not knowing what this is since even Sen. Obama mentioned in one of his autobiographies that he didn’t know what it was when the job was offered to him. Community organizer came to us from Marxist agitator Saul Alinsky in a work called “Rules for Radicals” and is really a model for grievance-mongering. In fact it was some of Alinsky’s former students that hired Obama in the first place.

It seems the modern liberals seem to have almost the same view of Jesus as the zealots did. That he would serve a political purpose and a change in government. When the truth is that Jesus did everything he could to avoid being seen in these terms. The community that Jesus died for on the cross was for the whole human community and the sins of our community. Jesus was not limited to helping out in a community in temporal terms in Nazareth or Jerusalem, but in eternal terms by dying for our sins and enabling us to live with him forever. The organizing he has done is to order all things for our good. His job title is Messiah not community organizer, though Obama seems to aspire to both. Jesus taught us who are neighbor is and that we needed to broaden our definition of who are neighbor was and that besides loving them, that we must also love our enemies. That we are to administer to the poor and the sick, not that we are to agitate for the government to take care of our responsibilities towards our neighbor. At our judgment Jesus will ask us what we did for the least of these not what government program we supported. Son of God, son of man, prince of peace, Messiah, and even carpenter are all on his resume, but community organizing is not.

September 10, 2008 17 comments
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Politics

Theology of the Body Politic

by Jeffrey Miller September 10, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

It is a rare thing to see Pope John Paul II’s Theology of the Body brought up in a political column, but everyone’s favorite Paragraph Farmer does so in this column a the American Spectator.

September 10, 2008 1 comment
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Pro-life

Doctors for Moloch

by Jeffrey Miller September 10, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

The culture of death continues to make me sick.

Dr. Andre Lalonde, executive vice-president of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC), told the Globe and Mail yesterday, "Palin’s decision to keep her baby, knowing he would be born with the condition, may inadvertently influence other women who may lack the necessary emotional and financial support to do the same."

"The worry is that this will have an implication for abortion issues in Canada," he said.

Under the facade of "freedom to choose", Lalonde said that "popular messages" about women like Palin, who chose not to kill their children "could have detrimental effects on women and their families."

"We offer the woman the choice. We try to be as unbiased as possible," Lalonde said. "We’re coming down to a moral decision and we all know moral decisions are personal decisions."

Though Lalonde said that "the country’s medical professionals don’t emphasize the burden of Down syndrome to pregnant women," and that "giving women balanced information about the potential consequences of either decision does not mean they are being encouraged to abort their pregnancies", statistics reveal that 80-90% of Canadian children with Down syndrome are aborted.

And here I though that less children with Down syndrome being loved instead of being killed was a good thing. The statistic on parents who abort their children with Down syndrome is such a scandal and the 80 to 90 percent rate seems to be true for most countries. This modern eugenics will only get worse as more and more defects can be diagnosed earlier or perhaps a future as seen in Gattaca. I pray the Gov. Palin’s example will serve as an example for all face with this diagnosis.

September 10, 2008 11 comments
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Punditry

And the media looks away

by Jeffrey Miller September 10, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

It seems to me that the USCCB’s statement on Sen. Joe Biden is something rather historic. Has there ever been such a statement on a person who is on a national presidential ticket? This is quite an interesting development considering that in the past that the same types of things said by Sen. Joe Biden have been previously said by countless others with no comment.

As Thomas at American Papist noticed there is pretty much a news blackout on this by the media. Look at this Google news search and only one story talks about the bishop’s statement. Maybe this will change as time goes on, but the bishop’s statement on Speaker Pelosi got plenty of coverage right away.

September 10, 2008 5 comments
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PoliticsPro-life

USCCB statement on Sen. Biden

by Jeffrey Miller September 9, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

This statement is not yet up on the USCCB site but CNS is reporting that this is the statement.

Recently we had a duty to clarify the Catholic Church’s constant teaching against abortion, to correct misrepresentations of that teaching by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on “Meet the Press” (see www.usccb.org/prolife/whatsnew.shtml). On September 7, again on “Meet the Press,” Senator Joseph Biden made some statements about that teaching that also deserve a response.

Senator Biden did not claim that Catholic teaching allows or has ever allowed abortion. He said rightly that human life begins “at the moment of conception,” and that Catholics and others who recognize this should not be required by others to pay for abortions with their taxes.

However, the Senator’s claim that the beginning of human life is a “personal and private” matter of religious faith, one which cannot be “imposed” on others, does not reflect Catholic teaching. The Church teaches that the obligation to protect unborn human life rests on the answer to two questions, neither of which is private or specifically religious.

The first is a biological question: When does a new human life begin? When is there a new living organism of the human species, distinct from mother and father and ready to develop and mature if given a nurturing environment? While ancient thinkers had little verifiable knowledge to help them answer this question, today embryology textbooks confirm that a new human life begins at conception (see www.usccb.org/prolife/issues/bioethic/fact298.shtml). The Catholic Church does not teach this as a matter of faith; it acknowledges it as a matter of objective fact.

The second is a moral question, with legal and political consequences: Which living members of the human species should be seen as having fundamental human rights, such as a right not to be killed? The Catholic Church’s answer is: Everybody. No human being should be treated as lacking human rights, and we have no business dividing humanity into those who are valuable enough to warrant protection and those who are not. Even this is not solely a Catholic teaching, but a principle of natural law accessible to all people of good will. The framers of the Declaration of Independence pointed to the same basic truth by speaking of inalienable rights, bestowed on all members of the human race not by any human power, but by their Creator. Those who hold a narrower and more exclusionary view have the burden of explaining why we should divide humanity into the moral “haves” and “have-nots,” and why their particular choice of where to draw that line can be sustained in a pluralistic society. Such views pose a serious threat to the dignity and rights of other poor and vulnerable members of the human family who need and deserve our respect and protection.

While in past centuries biological knowledge was often inaccurate, modern science leaves no excuse for anyone to deny the humanity of the unborn child. Protection of innocent human life is not an imposition of personal religious conviction but a demand of justice.

September 9, 2008 4 comments
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Pro-lifePunditry

Stay classy Sen. Biden

by Jeffrey Miller September 9, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Ironically I was about to write a post on how embryonic stem-cell research being pretty much a non-issue this election cycle. In the last presidential cycle and the last congressional cycle ESCR was brought all the time among Democrats. This issue was used a lot to try to show those that opposed ESCR as being really mean and of course Sen. John Edwards had said ‘the work we will do when John Kerry is president — people like Christopher Reeve are going to walk. Get up out of that wheelchair and walk again..’ With continuous breakthroughs with adult stem-cell research and no progress on the ESCR front there has been less and less media advocacy on this issue. Some scientists have even abandoned trying to use human cloning as a source for ESCR and have moved on to adult stem-cell research. Politically I have heard very little about ESCR in the last year or two and you got to bet that some voters suckered into funding state research are having second thoughts. So this was pretty much the state of things until today.

"I hear all this talk about how the Republicans are going to work in dealing with parents who have both the joy, because there’s joy to it as well, the joy and the difficulty of raising a child who has a developmental disability, who were born with a birth defect. Well guess what folks? If you care about it, why don’t you support stem cell research?"

Now the context of what he is saying is in relation to embryonic stem-cell research since there is pretty much no one on the face of the Earth against adult stem-cell research. This was always the trick of the media before to talk about stem-cell research generically and Sen. Biden does the same. First off just how crass is this in bringing up her child for political purposes? Democrats have been charging her with using her child for political purposes when that charge can be laid squarely on their shoulders. Earlier today someone from the Democratic Underground put up Sarah Palin’s baby Trig on eBay selling it as a prop. The number of "retard" jokes now told by Democrats in relation to her baby are quite despicable.

But moving on from Biden’s lack of class let me answer the question for him. Because she doesn’t believed in killing an innocent person in order to benfit another. Though the reality is that even if their was a breakthrough in ESCR it would have n effect. Francis Beckwith mentioned that commentator ["george"] at the Commentary Mag blog said "it is absolutely impossible to treat trisomy 21 with stem cells. EVERY cell in the baby’s body has an extra chromosome 21. One would have to physically replace every cell in the baby’s body to see an effect. Not only is Biden a boor, he is a scientific illiterate. Just what we need in charge."

The real question is why do you Sen. Joe "life begins at conception" Biden believe in ESCR? This doesn’t fit you narrative about not wanting to criminalize abortion and the excuses you have used to justify your abortion votes (except partial birth abortion). Sen Biden the other day said that Sarah Palin would be a step back for women. Why is it that you want research that involves hazarding the life of women in order to get eggs for use in research? That some women will have to deal with the severe effects of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome with the drugs used to extract eggs. To paraphrase the charge often leveled at pro-lifers "why don’t you care about the health of women?"

Is it any wonder he skipped the installation Mass of his new bishop where Bishop Malooly said:

We will continue to stress the constant teaching of the Church that each person must respect every life from conception to natural death. And we will continue to seek the intercession of Saint Thomas More for Statesmen, Politicians, Supreme Court Justices, Judges and Lawyers–that they may be courageous and effective in defending and promoting the sanctity of human life, the foundation of every human right, the foundation of our love for the poor.

Joe Biden is certainly no Thomas More. "I am personally opposed to the King setting himself up as the head of the Church in England, but because of differing views in a pluralistic society I will sign the parliamentary Act of Succession."

To her credit Gov. Palin is against ESCR in all forms. I wish I could say the same about Sen. McCain. His view on ESCR is that he "opposes the intentional creation of human embryos for research purposes." This though is still the dominant type of research being used for those doing ESCR so it pretty much means that he supports ESCR research using so-called leftover embryos from ESCR. This though is still intrinsically evil. Though this is not currently an avenue of research that is being used much. It is difficult for scientists to get access to these frozen human beings and they need to be donated from the parents. Plus the reason they prefer cloning is that there are tissue match problems involved. I don’t think Sen. McCain understands this very well – maybe he has been taking science lessons from Sen. Biden.

Sometimes I think that Sen. Biden was picked to be like a gaffe lightning rod for Sen. Obama. That Biden would take most of the heat and Obama’s multiple gaffes could be covered up by the gaffe emitting cloud of Sen. Biden.

September 9, 2008 1 comment
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Book Review

Signs and Mysteries: Revealing Ancient Christian Symbols

by Jeffrey Miller September 8, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Signs and Mysteries: Revealing Ancient Christian Symbols is the latest book by patristic scholar Mike Aquilina and a book I was looking forward to reading. In most cases we have some idea as to the root of some of the symbols that have been associated with Christianity, though we might not have the details of how this came to be and their significance in the early Church. Mike Aquilina looks the the symbols that came about in the first four centuries of the Church and does a chapter on each ones that explains their meanings and what historical information we have on them and where they were used. Included are plenty of drawings of these symbols throughout the book that show precisely how they were used.

When early uses of some symbols are more clouded in history he nicely gives some of the theories explaining their meanings. Often we also get references to writings of the Fathers of the Church along with others when it helps to illuminate how these symbols were used in liturgy or devotional practice. I really learned a lot from this book and while I had a general idea of meaning of many symbols I found a wealth of details. For example I will never look at the Ichthys when I see it on someone’s bumper the same way. I knew how it came about and that it was a Greek acronym and often used in the early Church, but I had no idea about the Eucharistic overtones and some of the other theological depths involved. Being an ex-Navy Chief I was also pleasantly surprised to see how the anchor was another common symbol used and it’s meaning.

This book is not meant to be an exhaustive reference of symbols used within the Church, but just the first four centuries. I enjoyed this book so much I would love to see another book in the same style that explains the symbols the Church used in later years and especially in the Middle Ages.

My one caveat about the book is not the content, but the color of the font used. The text is a dark brown color with a light font weight that I found more difficult to read. The color makes drawings turn out beautifully, but I would have much preferred they have had black text with the drawings being the color they used. Our Sunday Visitor has published books in recent years with multiple colors that made the book quite effective and I wish the same was done here. Though this is no real reason not to get this book.

This review was written as part of The Catholic Company product reviewer program. Visit The Catholic Company to find more information on Signs and Mysteries-Revealing Ancient Christian Symbols .

September 8, 2008 0 comment
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Pro-life

Bishop Morlino speaks on Sen. Biden.

by Jeffrey Miller September 7, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Bishop Morlino talks about Speaker Pelosi and Sen. Biden in a homily today. The bishop starts out with a disclaimer that he isn’t talking about Democrats but about specific Catholics who are Democrats. He first gives his critique about Nancy Pelosi and then goes on to talk about what Senator Biden said today. Hat Tip Rocco Palmo.

Here is a of a section of his homily that I transcribed from the mp3.

“Senator Biden does not understand the difference between articles of faith and natural law. Any human being regardless of his faith, his religious practice or having no faith. Any human being can reason the fact that human life from conception unto natural death is sacred. Biology not faith, not philosophy, not any kind of theology; Biology tells us science that at the moment of conception their exists a unique individual of the human species. It’s not a matter of what I might believe. What my faith might teach me. What other people might … Science the best science says at the moment of conception there is a unique individual of the human species. Senator Biden has an obligation to know that and he doesn’t know it. Again I believe that after the Council some theologians, probably some priests, and some bishops allowed him to be confused about this matter. It’s not pretty. The reason I bring this up is because Speaker Pelosi and Senator Biden are Catholics and there on television and they’re giving out their ideas to Catholic people and they are causing confusion. They’re suppose to believe in separation of church and state. They’re violating the separation of church and state by confusing people. I have an obligation to teach. They’re stepping on the Pope’s turf and mine and they’re violating the separation of church and state confusing God’s good people. But why? Because they themselves were confused after the Council and I don’t blame them for that. Bishop’s allowed it, theologians did it and some priests did it and in Canada even some bishops did it.”

I obviously like that the bishop has made the same point on natural law and religious faith that I made earlier today. His mentioning the effects of the aftermath of the Council I think are quite good. This is a nicely charitable look at these two Catholic politicians while still being firm on what they should know.

September 7, 2008 11 comments
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Pro-life

Abortion poisons everything including reason

by Jeffrey Miller September 7, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

SEN. BIDEN: I’d say, "Look, I know when it begins for me." It’s a personal and private issue. For me, as a Roman Catholic, I’m prepared to accept the teachings of my church. But let me tell you. There are an awful lot of people of great confessional faiths–Protestants, Jews, Muslims and others–who have a different view. They believe in God as strongly as I do. They’re intensely as religious as I am religious. They believe in their faith and they believe in human life, and they have differing views as to when life–I’m prepared as a matter of faith to accept that life begins at the moment of conception. But that is my judgment. For me to impose that judgment on everyone else who is equally and maybe even more devout than I am seems to me is inappropriate in a pluralistic society. And I know you get the push back, "Well, what about fascism?" Everybody, you know, you going to say fascism’s all right? Fascism isn’t a matter of faith. No decent religious person thinks fascism is a good idea.

MR. BROKAW: But if you, you believe that life begins at conception, and you’ve also voted for abortion rights…

SEN. BIDEN: No, what a voted against curtailing the right, criminalizing abortion. I voted against telling everyone else in the country that they have to accept my religiously based view that it’s a moment of conception. There is a debate in our church, as Cardinal Egan would acknowledge, that’s existed. Back in "Summa Theologia," when Thomas Aquinas wrote "Summa Theologia," he said there was no–it didn’t occur until quickening, 40 days after conception. How am I going out and tell you, if you or anyone else that you must insist upon my view that is based on a matter of faith? And that’s the reason I haven’t. But then again, I also don’t support a lot of other things. I don’t support public, public funding. I don’t, because that flips the burden. That’s then telling me I have to accept a different view. This is a matter between a person’s God, however they believe in God, their doctor and themselves in what is always a–and what we’re going to be spending our time doing is making sure that we reduce considerably the amount of abortions that take place by providing the care, the assistance and the encouragement for people to be able to carry to term and to raise their children.

I previously joked about Nancy Pelosi’s comment that at least she left St. Thomas Aquinas alone since he is the one that normally gets this bad rap in regards to abortion. Well as Rocco Palmo says "Let the fisking begin."

"Look, I know when it begins for me."

Look up relativism in the dictionary and Biden’s statement should be used as an example.

There are an awful lot of people of great confessional faiths–Protestants, Jews, Muslims and others–who have a different view.

Within Protestantism and Islam pretty much the dominant view matches the Catholic Church since this is a natural law issue and based on science, not just a theological questions. So this is a rather odd defense. Sure there are people within these groups that have a differing view since this is true even among some Catholics – but it is certainly not the majority view.

The defense of pluralism is one of the silliest defenses of all. It would mean you could not act on anything as a politician, but this is not what they do. No matter what you do you are going to go against some group of people and in this case he is going against the majority of wishes in a pluralistic society. Pluralism is a smokescreen used to obscure an action, not answer it. Abortion has poisoned everything including reason. This excuse could not be used on any other issue without people laughing out loud by this response. I can’t impose what I believe is the truth because there are differing views on this. Funny how it is that he is able to vote for a bunch of things that there are differing views on and is willing to impose his view on a host of issues. Funny how protecting human life he would consider fascism, but forcing abortion, homosexual marriage isn’t what he considers fascism. To the Senators credit though he voted against partial birth abortion so how is it he can by his terms impose his view on this? But expecting reason in the defense of abortion is too much to ask, especially consistency.

No, what a voted against curtailing the right, criminalizing abortion. I voted against telling everyone else in the country that they have to accept my religiously based view that it’s a moment of conception.

Once again he frames this as religiously based. When I was an atheist I became a pro-life atheist during my wife’s first pregnancy. My previous pro-abortion views dissipated with the first kick. But as a pro-life atheist I was not alone since there are a number of pro-life atheists and agnostics. Nobody would argue for example that Nat Hentoff’s views against abortion are religiously bases. This is just a red herring thrown in to once again obscure. He might as well argue that "Thou shalt not kill" is religiously based and since serial killers obviously believe they have the right to do so we can’t legislate morality on them. Though of course this Commandment is part of the natural law available to everyone, just as being against abortion is.

But what we really once again have is the evil that Mario Cuomo brought to us with the "personally opposed, but" dodge. This saying is pure evil and I don’t just say this as hyperbole. "I personally believe that abortion is the intentionally murder of an innocent child, but I will vote to support it because there are differing views." This is obscene language that should instantly disqualify somebody from public office. They are saying that they will vote against their conscience and not stand up for the truth. That he is a consciousness objector to his own conscience. Nancy Pelosi while highly problematic is at least more honest than Joe Biden’s to some degree.

There is a debate in our church, as Cardinal Egan would acknowledge, that’s existed. Back in "Summa Theologia," when Thomas Aquinas wrote "Summa Theologia,"

I think his bringing up Cardinal Egan is quite a mistake. Surely we will have a reply from him shortly since he wrote one of the more scathing responses to Nancy Pelosi. I guess he also didn’t read the USSCB’s recent statement.

In the 13th century, St. Thomas Aquinas made extensive use of Aristotle’s thought, including his theory that the rational human soul is not present in the first few weeks of pregnancy. But he also rejected abortion as gravely wrong at every stage, observing that it is a sin “against nature” to reject God’s gift of a new life.

Aquinas’ objection to abortion at all stages is never referenced by progressives and abortion supporters. They are like Bible proof-texters looking to pull any phrase out of context to support their own view.

Now will we have twenty-six different Bishops respond to Sen. Joe Biden? Though there are some differences between what Nancy Pelosi said in distorting the history of the Church’s view and what Sen. Biden says with his typical "Personally opposed, but…" dodge. Though I think "personally opposed" is much more in need of correction, especially since so many use this. This should have been responded to immediately when Cuomo first used it, but it is better late than never.

In other recent news Nancy Pelosi has accepted the invitation to talk with her bishop. The cynic in me thinks not much will come of this, thank God the Christian in me has seen the paths of grace throughout history and prays for her conversion.

I have just created a new Facebook group called Praying for Pro-abortion Politicians Project (P4) so if you are on Facebook and want to join in here you go.

Update: American Papist adds his always excellent overall coverage.

Father Z adds his comments.

Christopher at Catholics Against Joe Biden also weighs in with a good post.

September 7, 2008 16 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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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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