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The Curt Jester

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

Politics

At least Satan could quote the Old Testament accurately

by Jeffrey Miller April 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

CNSNews.com) – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is fond of quoting a particular passage of Scripture. The quote, however, does not appear in the Bible and is "fictional," according to biblical scholars.

In her April 22 Earth Day news release, Pelosi said, "The Bible tells us in the Old Testament, ‘To minister to the needs of God’s creation is an act of worship. To ignore those needs is to dishonor the God who made us.’ On this Earth Day, and every day, let us pledge to our children, and our children’s children, that they will have clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, and the opportunity to experience the wonders of nature."

I usually have an odd chuckle when a pro-abortion Democrat once again appeal to doing it for the children. I guess ministering to the needs of God’s creation doesn’t include children in the womb.

Article

April 24, 2008 5 comments
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News

The definition of pandering

by Jeffrey Miller April 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Sharp-eyed Thomas Peters reports on Hillary Clinton on the day of the PA primary wearing a Madonna bracelet. Though I thought a Madonna bracelet now meant wearing a Red String Kabbalah Bracelet like pop star Madonna.

I do find it highly ironic considering the images on the bracelet like Our Lady of Guadalupe and Blessed Mother Teresa. Considering the saintly dressing down the Clintons got at the National Prayer Breakfast in regards to abortion it is rather strange. I remember Hillary at Mother Teresa’s funeral with her looking like she was extremely bored and like she would rather be anywhere else. Our Lady of Guadalupe has become a pro-life icon and is so prevalent in anti-abortion protests that seeing on such an abortion advocate is rather a stark contrast.

But I guess if you are Hillary Clinton you change the way you talk when speaking among a mostly black audience and where you suspect there are a lot of Catholics you wear a Madonna bracelet.

April 24, 2008 9 comments
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Parody

Not baptized?

by Jeffrey Miller April 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

The Arizona senator, who was raised an Episcopalian, has attended North Phoenix for nearly two decades, but is not a member because he has not been baptized into the church.

On Wednesday, he told reporters that he had been baptized in Panama, where he was born, and talked about a photo in his memoirs of himself as a baby in a baptismal gown, with his father and grandfather.

"It’s like a dress," he chuckled.

But he was more guarded about his current plans with regard to baptism, calling them "a private thing."

"I’ve been in discussions with Pastor Yeary, and we’ll continue those discussions," he said. "It’s a personal thing, it’s a very personal thing concerning my faith and I am proud of my faith, I am proud of my belief and the sustenance and the redemption that I have received.

"And my faith was tested in extraordinary fashion and it was my faith that got me through not the next day, or the next hour but the next minute."

I remember reading media reports before saying he was not baptized which seemed doubtful to me considering that he was raised Episcopalian. I do find it ironic how wrong Baptists get baptism though. That they don’t baptize infants and that many Baptists rebaptize. So much for one faith, one baptism, etc. But I guess if you believe that baptism is just a token of salvation and a testimony of faith then rebaptisms comes as no surprise. But it sounds suspiciously to me like St. Paul asking "were you baptized in the name of Paul" when you try to make denominations differences in regards to baptism.

April 24, 2008 5 comments
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Liturgy

South Carolina Governor Proclaims "Liturgical Dance Day"

by Jeffrey Miller April 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

No it is not in the Onion unfortunately.

April 24, 2008 5 comments
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News

Singing priests sign �1m music deal

by Jeffrey Miller April 23, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Three Roman Catholic priests have geared up for global superstardom by signing a £1 million contract with music giant Sony BMG.

Father Eugene O’Hagen, 48, his brother Martin, 45, and their old school friend David Delargy, 44, who all hold parishes in the Northern Ireland diocese of Down and Connor, sealed the deal by the steps of London’s Westminster Cathedral.

The singing trio, known as The Priests, said they would give money they made themselves from the music to charity.

The group have a special exemption in their contract, which allows them to break off from promotional duties to deal with parish work such as presiding over funerals.

The three realised their musical prowess at St MacNissi’s College, Co Antrim, where they were nicknamed Holy Holy Holy due to their shared determination to enter the priesthood.

Fr Eugene, of the Parish of Ballyclare and Ballygowan – Church of the Sacred Heart and and Church of the Holy Family, described the signing as "breathtaking".

Fr Martin, of the Parish of Cushendun – Church of St Patrick (Craigagh), Church of St Mary, The Star of the Sea (Culraney) explained the reason behind the clause which allowed the priests to carry out their parish duties.

He said: "Our work means a great deal to us. We are priests first and foremost. Our work will be at the heart of our plans."

It seems to me judging the business of most priests that their "pastoral rider" on their contract will pretty much keep them from doing an promotional work.

Update: Mulier Fortis has a video of them and they actually sing sacred music and are very talented.

April 23, 2008 3 comments
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Punditry

Before you reform the Church you have to know what the Church is in the first place

by Jeffrey Miller April 23, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

In a typical Fr. Reese. S.J. article in Commonweal on "Reforming the Vatican" he starts of with the fact that the structures of the Church have developed over time and I guess from his analysis all in the wrong direction.

The contemporary papacy rules the church with powers that would be the envy of any absolute monarch: the pope holds supreme legislative, executive, and judicial authority with few checks on his power. This power is especially evident in the appointment of bishops.

Though one of those checks being Papal Infallibility and the promise of the Holy Spirit that the gates of Hell will never prevail against the Church. That is a pretty good check and balance that even morally evil popes never changed Church teaching.

He then goes on to talk about the history of how Bishops were selected from when the faithful in the early centuries were chosen via general acclaim and the various systems that included control by nobles and kings up to the present day. He does give a fairly good historical overview of this.

All of this changed in the nineteenth century, when revolutions wiped out most of the Catholic monarchs in Europe. Rather than returning the selection of bishops to the local church, popes made it their own prerogative. Unsurprisingly, this led to the appointment of bishops who were loyal to Rome and would support its preeminence in the church.

Wow this leads to the appointment of Bishops loyal to the Church and who actually believed in the role of the Pope! Well this would be nice if it actually always happened. But the Pope relies on the recommendations of the local Church and the Papal Nuncio and is not infallible in this regards.

But the appointment of bishops is not the only example of the papacy’s consolidation of power. In the early centuries of the church, regional or national councils of bishops helped define doctrine, coordinated church policy, and even provided a forum for judging bishops. The bishop of Rome acted as a court of appeal when bishops and councils disagreed.

For liberals everything is always about power, nothing can be done because it might be more prudent or efficient. The Bishop of Rome though has never acted as a court of appeal. Always the Pope made the final decisions as to what was approved and not approved in a council. They did not simply appeal to him upon conflicts since even unanimous decisions would have to be signed off by the Pope.

National bishops’ conferences are the true successors of these councils, but the Vatican refuses to allow them the independence to act like the councils of old. Similarly, ecumenical councils once had greater independence; according to some theologians, the councils even had the authority to impeach popes.

Say what? But I guess whenever you are about to say something really stupid you start off the sentence with "according to some theologians" and I guess this is a form of plausible deniability. There is just so much mistaken in what he says on both impeaching the pope and bishops conferences being the true successors to councils. There is no absolute requirement for a local bishop conferences. I believe then-Cardinal Ratzinger has even said that they have no theological basis for existence. They are simply a prudential structure that has been setup for administrative reasons to serve the Church. It is strange how many progressives will attack the authority of the pope which certainly is backed up by scripture and Apostolic Tradition and of course dogmatic teaching and yet will praise bishop conferences which have no real authority other than what the individual bishops as a whole give it. This type of statement would claim that a local bishops conference can decide doctrinal questions and I guess different local bishop conferences could come up with contrary answers. The local conferences in no way will ever be the successor of a true ecumenical council and the real councils were never independent from the pope in the first place.

The centralization of power in the Vatican was often a legitimate response to the political interference of kings and nobles in the life of the local church. Popes could stand up to kings better than the local church could. But now that few kings or noblemen are in a position to meddle with the church, one could argue that such centralization is no longer necessary—and that it is in fact counterproductive.

He doesn’t explain exactly how this is counterproductive. The Pope as the ultimate decider of episcopal ordinations is also a corrective to a diocese that has gone off the rails. We don’t want to see places like the Diocese of Rochester and others to perpetuate themselves with like minded bishops. To have various diocese perpetuating their own form of Catholicism in whatever form it might take would be counterproductive. That the modern approach was not used in the early church and beyond is simply because they did not have the forms of timely communication that we are now use to.

Now we come to his reforms:

Make the Vatican a bureaucracy, not a court. Most countries have found that a royal court composed of a king and his nobles is not a good way to govern. The Vatican is still as much a court as a bureaucracy, with cardinals referred to as princes of the church and bishops acting like nobles. I would recommend that no Vatican bureaucrat be made a bishop or a cardinal. One of the problems with nobles and bishops is that it is difficult to fire them even when they are incompetent or when there is a change in administrations. Such a reform would also remind the Vatican bureaucracy that it is a servant of the pope and the college of bishops and not itself part of the magisterium.

The problem here is that he is starting with too broad a generalization of how curial officials act and the idea that non-Bishops in these positions would make a major difference. That because they are called princes of the Church that they necessarily act like that. Last I checked we all suffer from original sin. Truly he has a point about having a greater difficult in firing incompetent Bishops and Cardinals in the curia, but is this really a major problem that we need to eliminate cardinals and bishops from the equation? The trend of having more lay people serving in the curia is a growing one and a positive one and surely having a mix of clergy and lay people in the curia is the better solution.

Strengthen the legislative bodies in the church. At the same time that the role of the nobility in governance was declining in civil society, the role of independent legislatures was increasing. No modern political philosophy would advise a polity to depend only on the wisdom of an executive. There is universal recognition that the synod of bishops created by Paul VI has failed to rise to expectations. I would recommend that no member of the Vatican bureaucracy be a member of the synod of bishops: they could attend the synod as experts and staff, but not as voting members. All of the members of the synod should be elected by episcopal conferences; none should be appointed. The synod should also meet on a regular basis—say, once every five years—and, of course, the synod would need committees to prepare agendas and documents between meetings. There should also be an ecumenical council at least once every generation.

I think the idea of timed synods is mistaken. Nothing is worse than meetings timed on a schedule that have nothing to do with need. We are having a meeting because it is Tuesday. The Synod of Bishops is at the service of the Pope and called when he thinks something requires this collaboration. The reality is that since the Second Vatican II council 21 special and general assemblies have been called and general assembles are occurring roughly every four to five years already. I get the idea that he just doesn’t like how the synods have turned out because they have not created the changes in doctrine and practice he desires. I also wonder why he thinks being a member of the curia and a synod would be a conflict in the first place? They are not in opposition to each other unless you think that the role of the synods is to mainly change the curia and this is seen as a loss of power. The idea of timed ecumenical councils is even worse. Do we put the Holy Spirit on a calendar?

Convert congregations into elected synodal committees. Vatican congregations and councils are committees of cardinals and bishops appointed by the pope. Each is responsible for a special domain within the church-such as liturgy, ecumenism, evangelization, and canon law. The Vatican cardinals are the most influential members of these committees. The chairman of each committee (called a prefect for a congregation and a president for a council) is also the head of an office of the same name. These offices advise the pope and implement church policy.

Not sure exactly what a "elected synodal committee" are and who they would be elected by. Though generally I guess it flows from the idea that Vatican cardinals are the cause of problems and this is consistent with the rest of his reforms.

One important function of any legislative body is oversight of the bureaucracy. Members of Vatican congregations and councils should therefore be elected by synods or by episcopal conferences; that way synods and conferences can act as policy-making and oversight bodies for the Vatican bureaucracy. Vatican bureaucrats should not also be members of congregations, though they could attend meetings as experts and staff.

First off how in the world could individual conferences perform these elections? I guess you could have something like a football draft where each conference takes turns with an appointment. Conferences could trade picks since this model is all about power and influence. Time and time again he forgets that there is oversight and it is called the pope. But the purpose of Fr. Reese’s reforms are about moving responsibility from the pope and distributing it. That the papacy should be all about the pope being in union with the bishops and not the fact that the teaching magisterium consists of the pope and the bishops in communion with him. Time and time again I get the idea that progressive really don’t believe in papal infallibility and that if they could just get their own guy in there everything would change. The fact that doctrine doesn’t change within the Church is due to stubborn popes and not the protection of the Holy Spirit seems to be their view.

Create an independent judiciary. One of the most important elements in a government that operates under the rule of law is an independent judiciary. To allow the executive to indict, prosecute, judge, and sentence a defendant is today considered a violation of due process. The treatment of theologians accused of dissent by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) is one of the scandals of the church. The potential for such scandal will remain as long as the CDF continues to act as policeman, prosecutor, judge, and jury. An independent jury, perhaps made up of retired bishops, could correct the problem.

Anybody that actually looks at the record of the CDF in regards to the treatment of dissenting theologian will find a record of very slow deliberations and less than a handful of actual excommunications. Some would think that the scandal of the CDF is how slow they react and how rare any punitive action is. I happen to think that the CDF is doing this functioning quite correctly in giving every opportunity for these theologians to explain themselves adequately. Can he give one example of a theologian that has had some punitary action given that did not deserve it? What he really wants is that no theologian be disciplined as long as they espouse a faddish heresy to his liking. I doubt if he is much upset with the actions by the CDF in regards to Archbishop Lefebvre. He also does not explain how this "independent jury" would be so different and what the actual problems are with the CDF. I guess the CDF is the boogeyman for some and you just have to reference it and it is understood to be evil.

Elect bishops. The appointment of bishops by the pope is a modern innovation that follows a corporate model, whereby the pope acts as CEO and the bishops as branch managers. While this corporate model is highly centralized, successful political models teach us that local leaders need to be chosen by local citizens. Today it might be possible, and advisable, to return to the system endorsed by Pope Leo I, so that every bishop would be elected by the local clergy, accepted by the people of his diocese, and consecrated by the bishops of his province.

This model works much better in the early Church when communities are much smaller and just being members of the Church could get them martyred. Cafeteria Catholicism was not very prevalent then. Today it does not seem very practical and exactly what would this mechanism for acceptance be? Would they take a poll or vote on it? Would Catholics who thinks they can be a good Catholic and miss Mass regularly be acceptable voters? If the selected bishop actually teaches the hard sayings of Christ is he going to get accepted in a culture such of ours? With the current model of input by the local Church, papal nuncio, and final decision by the Pope really gives us the best model for now and increases the connection between the local Church and the Pope. Somehow the checks and balances he wants don’t apply when it comes to the selection of bishops. Though I don’t know why I am spending time fisking this article. If someone sees the Pope as CEO and bishops as branch managers they really need to go back and take Church ecclesiology 101. There is a reason we call the Pope Holy Father and not Holy CEO. Why we see bishops as shepherds and not branch managers. The CEO/branch manager understanding of the Church could hardly be more wrong.

Hey how about the laity getting to vote on the next Jesuit General or perhaps the editorial boards at America and Commonweal Magazines? Power to the people!

Strengthen episcopal conferences by making them councils. Not everything can or should be decided by a centralized government. Catholic social teaching speaks of the importance of subsidiarity in political structures and policy: what can be done locally should be done locally. In ancient times, local and regional councils of bishops played an important part in determining church teaching and discipline. Episcopal conferences need to become episcopal councils. They need to regain their independent role in establishing church policy. They should not need to have every decision and document reviewed and ratified by the Vatican. Bishops must be trusted to know what is best for the local church.

Unless that bishop is the Pope I guess. Bishops do have a lot of autonomy in how they best spread the Gospel and a lot of leeway within their own diocese regarding their flock. They just don’t have the authority to "teach another Gospel." Again we see the suggestion of having what would be hundreds of councils as if this idea shouldn’t be mocked for its stupidity especially in regards to determining Church teaching. That you could go from country to country and have Church teaching change. Local and regional councils were never independent from the authority of the Pope and if you wanted to go by this model we would all be Aryans today or whatever heresy that would have replaced it. If Bishops must be trusted to know what is best for the local Church than we can eliminate bishop conferences.

What are the chances of such reforms actually taking place? As a social scientist, I’d have to say they’re probably close to zero. The church is now run by a self-perpetuating group of men who know such reform would diminish their power. It is also contrary to their theology of the church. But as a Catholic Christian, I still have to hope.

Yes it is all about power. People serve in the curia only for power. No other motives possible. Protecting the faith from error, the liturgy from abuse, and all the other roles performed are all just about power. But he is right that his reform won’t be implemented because of their theology of the Church. Fr. Reese’s ecclesiology is much different with no role for the papacy other than as a figurehead that should rubber stamp anything coming across his desk. I wonder if he considers Apostolic succession as a "self-perpetuating group of men."

April 23, 2008 32 comments
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News

Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman?

by Jeffrey Miller April 23, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Vatican City, Apr 23, 2008 / 03:12 am (CNA).- The Vatican has approved the beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman, the English convert and theologian who has had immense influence upon English-speaking Catholicism, the Birmingham Mail reports.

I really hope this time the reports are true and that he is indeed beatified later this year.

April 23, 2008 4 comments
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Punditry

Various rants

by Jeffrey Miller April 22, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

As a listener of plenty of podcast including many Catholic podcasts – one thing that annoys me is that the ones put out by major Catholic organizations don’t have any cover art. If you have pretty much and recent MP3 player with a video screen, use iTunes, most recent versions of Winamp and many other media players they will show cover art for the podcast or song if any is embedded. Instead for all of the EWTN podcasts, Catholics Answers, Greg Popcak’s HMS radio, and Mark Shea’s "Rock Solid" I get treated with no cover art and a big question mark on my iPod Touch. Almost all Catholic podcasts put out by amateurs include the cover art. Even Vatican Radio has finally got on board in including it. It would be nice if at least they used a generic cover art for their podcast, even better if it was tailored towards the program itself. It would be a lot more professional for them to use cover art considering how many media devices can use it.

I would complain about the America Magazine podcast also not including covert art if I could actually listen to their podcasts without my iPod accidentally becoming a missile. Having interviews with people like Fr. Roger Haight, S.J., Fr John "Let Terri Schiavo die" Paris, S.J. Phillip Pullman fan Donna Freitas, and the author of the worst biography on Pope Benedict XVI is not exactly my cup of tea. Now if they had a separate feed for Fr. Jim Martin I would subscribe to that. Actually though I am subscribed to their podcast feed, I just usually end up deleting more shows than I listen to.

It also annoys me when EWTN puts up blogs by Raymond Arroyo and Joan Lewis without RSS feeds. Memo to EWTN: WordPress is free and you don’t have to attempt to roll your own blogging software.

While I am on petty rants. Please give me back the original Catholic Answers theme music. I loved how the violins punctuated the opening Catholic Answers Live, plus you have to love the irony of using a piece from "New Age" musician Yanni for Catholic Answers. The new theme isn’t very distinctive and much more modern sounding, though I guess I don’t have to worry about Hans Kung being a guest any time soon, though he would make a great April Fools guest.

April 22, 2008 10 comments
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Parody

Prayer Attention Deficit Disorder

by Jeffrey Miller April 22, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

You know you are trying to be more serious about your faith and the the first step is prayer, yet every time you try to pray you easily get distracted. You can’t even go from the Hail to the Mary without thinking about something not exactly pious. It seems to you that every time you sit down to try to pray fervently you spend more time distracted then actually talking with God.

You have heard about the four types of prayer: Adoration, Contrition, Thanksgiving, and Supplication and wonder if it is just you that has the fifth type – Distracted Prayer? You will be glad to hear that it is just not you that suffers with distracted prayer. In fact reports show that 10 out of 10 people who pray end up being distracted.

Distraction is prayer is known in the spiritual director field as Prayer Attention Deficit Disorder (PADD) or Supplication Attention Deficit (SAD) and is a birth defect caused by original sin. Since Adam and Eve only Jesus and Mary have not had to deal with Prayer Attention Deficit Disorder.

But you ask “Now that I know what the problem is how do I deal with it?”

That is where St. Johnson and St. Johnson’s steps in with the latest pharmaceutical wonder. Our patented ingredients help to put your daily life behind you and to help you to concentrate while praying.

You can find information on our new product Ridalin on television or the sample ad below in your favorite magazine.

Ridalin should be taken with plenty of repentance and can be used when operating heavy machinery, though we recommend using it with the Rosary or other devotions instead. Ridalin can be mixed with sacraments and this is the recommended practice. Ridalin is not recommended for those not serious about living the Christian life and can cause severe reactions when combined with hypocrisy.

April 22, 2008 15 comments
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Punditry

Reactions

by Jeffrey Miller April 22, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

But Harris said she sees the problems caused by small, rural parishes closing due to a shortage of priests as having grave consequences for U.S. Catholic religious life.

"The people of God in the Catholic communion are starving because of the want of Eucharist," she said.

"Why is it that the people of God have to starve while the institution is holding to clergy celibacy?" said Harris, who lives in Schoharie County, about 150 miles north of New York.

"I have to place the excitement of the pope’s visit next to the fact that there are now only a few churches in my county," she said.

…The pope remains a symbol of a hierarchy "that has failed the victims," Kirk said, adding that he believed media coverage of the pope’s visit was focusing too much on Pope Benedict’s pastoral image rather than on what Kirk said was the pope’s potent political symbolism.

"If the pope had gone to the nearest soup kitchen after arriving and (President) Bush had been the third person, rather than the first person, he had met, I’d be happier," said Kirk.

Catholic students are a minority at Union but one of the largest single denominational groups at the predominantly Protestant school.

Although Union is still perhaps best-known for being the midcentury intellectual home of such leading Protestant theologians as Reinhold Niebuhr and Paul Tillich, since the 1970s the school has been known as a leading center of study in the United States for black and feminist liberation theologies. The prominent black theologian James Cone, for example, has taught at Union for more than three decades.

But Union also has had a long tradition of hosting well-known Catholics. Liberation theologians such as Peruvian Dominican Father Gustavo Gutierrez have taught for short terms at Union, which has ties with Columbia University. Catholic scholars not associated with liberation theology, including the late biblical scholar Sulpician Father Raymond Brown, have also been permanent faculty at Union.

Of the current five full-time Catholic faculty members at Union, three are women. Union’s current Catholic faculty includes Jesuit Father Roger Haight, whose book, "Jesus Symbol of God," was sharply criticized by the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith when it was headed by then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict. The Vatican has banned Father Haight from teaching at a Catholic institution.

Another Roman Catholic theologian who has had trouble with the Vatican is Paul F. Knitter, currently Union’s Paul Tillich professor of theology, world religions and culture.

Kirk told [??????????] April 20 that Union was lucky to have scholars like Father Haight and Knitter on the faculty, adding that the student view of Pope Benedict at Union is colored in large part by the pope’s relationship with them, with figures like Father Sobrino and by Pope Benedict’s past criticism of liberation theology.

For her part, Harris — a Catholic who used to be Presbyterian — said her concern about church reform, specifically the need to expand the eligibility for clergy to include noncelibate men and women, is coming out of real and "lived experience."

Catholic women at Union share a commissioning service as a tribute to their work and also as a formal recognition that they cannot be ordained as clergy within their church.

Harris said she would like to be ordained if she could be, though she doubts that her ineligibility will change in her lifetime. Still, she added, "We never thought we’d see altar girls and now we do have altar girls."

So is the above a typical New York Times article? Or perhaps Newsweek, AP, or some other typical outlet looking for the negative side of the Pope’s visit?

No we owe this article to Catholic News Service the U.S. Bishop’s news arm. Surely going to an extremely liberal Protestant seminary is the best place to get reactions to the Pope’s visit. Surely you wouldn’t want to actually highlight the largely positive response from Evangelicals such as in this post.

It is also pretty ironic for those from liberal Protestant congregations that each year have less and less attendance being concerned over the availability of Catholic priests. Anglicans and other allowing pretty much anybody into leadership roles has only lead to splits and smaller congregations and yet this is the cure they would thrust on us. Maybe miserly loves company. There is also an irony of Protestants worried about Catholics not having access to the Eucharist. Why exactly are they worried about access to "just a symbol." Protestantism has been the larger force ever for denying people the Eucharist and while the majority in good conscience don’t realize this, it is rather silly for them to lecture us on access to the Eucharist.

American Papist has a good roundup of reactions to this article.

April 22, 2008 13 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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