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The Curt Jester

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

Punditry

And Hillary must decrease

by Jeffrey Miller February 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

a band plays “Obama-alujah” and thousands stand in the chill night ready to be rapturous.

As the New York Times continues the Obama as Messiah meme.

Well for one thing I would really like an Obama rapture just as long as it occurs before election day and his true believers are taken up from earth. Though instead of "Left" Behind I guess it would be the right that would be left behind.

I think the most interesting thing about the Obama messiah meme is that so far it seems none of the MSM has asked Obama about his reaction to people speaking a about him in messianic terms and of course there is all the Obama iconography that has appeared and is associated with his campaign. He says he is a Christian and surely is aware of the context in which he is being described. It certainly seems to me that a Christian would be quite embarrassed about anybody speaking of them in messianic terms and would request that it would be stopped. Obama-alujah is pretty over the top and soon they will be throwing palm leaves in his path. Surely St. John the Baptist was embarrassed about this confusion in his own time in people thinking he was the Messiah and he quickly put them straight. Though unlike St. John the Baptist I guess his motto is "I must increase."

Via "Is Obama the Messiah?"

February 24, 2008 4 comments
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News

Save me from myself

by Jeffrey Miller February 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

It is rather cool, but surreal, to see former Korn guitarist Brian "Head" Welch being interviewed on the Protestant television show "Life Today." He has a new book out called Save Me from Myself: How I Found God, Quit Korn, Kicked Drugs, and Lived to Tell My Story .

February 24, 2008 11 comments
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News

Our Gang

by Jeffrey Miller February 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

South Albany High is in the headlines this morning after the principal disciplined a student who refused to take off a crucifix. The school’s principal, according to this report in this morning’s Albany Democrat Herald, suspected the cross was a gang symbol. The student insisted it wasn’t.

Maria Salazar is very clear: Her son is not a gang member and she gave him a crucifix to wear out of love.

Principal Chris Equinoa is equally clear: Religious items are not banned, but he reserves the right to ask a student to remove, or cover up, any item he feels could indicate gang affiliation — even a crucifix.

Well the Catholic Church just isn’t a very good as a gang. Snitches like Judas were treated quiet compassionately by Jesus. No requirement for membership to kill someone, though we are asked to die to self. We don’t have the Bloods, but we do have the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. I do wonder if this principal would consider the Ichthys an early gang symbol?

February 24, 2008 13 comments
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News

Sad good news

by Jeffrey Miller February 24, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Mass attendance in the Denver Archdiocese is higher than that of the national average, shows a recent survey commissioned by the Denver Archdiocese. The survey also shows that a majority of Catholics in the archdiocese, 51 percent, are fervent or faithful in their belief. A total of 45 percent of local Catholics polled said they attended Mass in the prior week, compared to 32 percent nationally.

I don’t see how 51 percent can be fervent or faithful and have 45 percent attend mass the prior week. Unless you had a large percent of them being ill or having another valid excuse for having to miss Mass. But considering the false idea promulgated that missing Mass for other than a narrow list of valid reason is no longer gravely sinful. Can it be any surprise of lower Mass attendance rates when this false idea was never fervently refuted?

While the survey included a caution that Mass attendance can be overstated, the results are evidence that a much higher proportion of Catholics within the archdiocese are attending Mass compared to Catholics nationwide.

The study, conducted last fall by Boulder market research firm Core Insights, polled 834 self-identified Catholics living in the archdiocese and included 74 in-depth one-on-one interviews. The survey margin of error is 2.8 percent.

Using the most recent U.S. Census results, the study shows the total general population living in the geographic area of the archdiocese to be nearly 3.3 million people. The 2008 Archdiocesan Directory shows that 407,500 people are registered parishioners (figure from December 2006). A majority of those polled in the survey, 58 percent, said they were registered parishioners.

Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., said the survey was done to get more comprehensive information about the archdiocese than an annual Mass attendance survey, which is conducted every fall.

It is rather sad that the good news is that 45 percent of Catholics are going to Mass weekly – which surely is good news compared to the national average. Though it is also rather sad that our national rate of Mass attendance of 32% is a high watermark compared to much of the industrial world.

The main motivation given by those who said they “definitely” or “probably” would attend Mass, was “a desire to be in the presence of the Lord,” which was cited by 21 percent of the participants.

Experiencing a sense of community, hearing a good homily, and receiving the Eucharist are key factors contributing to Mass attendance, the survey reveals, with high majorities of those polled — 82, 74 and 65 percents respectively — saying they either somewhat, strongly or completely agreed with those statements.

A lesser majority of those polled, 55 percent, said they either somewhat, strongly, or completely agreed with the statement “prayer and spiritual reflection is a reasonable substitute for Mass.”

Well prayer and spiritual reflection are certainly not a reasonable substitution for Mass for those that are able to attend, but certainly they are preparations for entering into the Mass.

“The individuals who feel most stressed and time constrained feel they need to rest up and repair themselves by not attending Mass,” said Marc Miller, founder and chief strategist of Core Insights. Their view, he said, is “My faith will go on.”

However, people with this perspective usually know they are missing the Eucharist, the homily, and sense of friendship and community that come from public worship, said Miller.

This is one thing I have never understood about modern society is this feeling of time constraint and too little time. You would think with all of our "time saving gadgets" and the fact that most people are able to work a much less part of the day than was found in agrarian or other cultures that they can find no place for the typical one hour Mass on a Sunday. The irony is that those who feel the most stress might benefit all the by entering into the Mass and receiving Our Lord in the Eucharist.

Nearly half, 47 percent, said they feel the archdiocese is clear and consistent in communicating position on current issues.

Despite national and local coverage of sex abuse cases involving Catholic priests in the past, a clear majority of those polled expressed trust in the priests of the Denver Archdiocese. A majority, 57 percent, said they have a high level of trust in priests today.

“From the data, we know that there’s a strong belief and confidence in the Archdiocese of Denver that really stems from an understanding of what Archbishop Chaput is doing,” said Miller.

It would certainly seem that this is no fluke of higher Mass attendance under an Archbishop who is a very public Archbishop who truly leaves and teaches the Catholic faith and is willing to enter the public square to defend and protect the faithful.

Four broad groups were identified by the survey: the fervent, those who actively express and live their faith and support their parish and the archdiocese (29 percent); faithful followers, those who hold more traditional beliefs, are reverent and look to the Church for guidance (22 percent); under development, those who are uncomfortable with their personal spirituality, are seeking something more and need religious education (20 percent); and detached doubters, those who disagree with various Church teachings, are disengaged and seldom attend Mass (29 percent).

That most Catholics in the archdiocese are fervent or faithful in their beliefs is very positive, said Miller. Those who are less engaged with the Church, he noted, would benefit from additional religious formation.

We want to use this information as a platform for evangelization, said Archbishop Chaput. Both in terms of energizing those who are already Catholics but lukewarm in their practice, and reaching out to those who have no religious commitment.

Amen.

St. John’s Valdosta Blog
February 24, 2008 12 comments
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Pro-life

Futile Care Theory

by Jeffrey Miller February 23, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Yvonne Sullivan, 28, lost consciousness suffering from severe blood poisoning moments after being told that baby Clinton had died. Despite grieving for their lost son, her husband Dominic, 37, kept a round-the-clock vigil at her bedside for two weeks as she lay in intensive care.

But when doctors told him they could have to switch off her life support machine, Mr Sullivan took drastic action–by giving his wife a firm telling-off. He held his wife’s hand and demanded: "You start fighting. Don’t you dare give up on me now. I’ve had enough, stop mucking around and start breathing. Come back to me."

Two hours later she started to breathe steadily again.

…She even remembers hearing her husband yelling at her as she lay in a coma and says it gave her the strength to pull through.

She said: "I can’t remember exactly what he said but I never liked getting told off by Dom. Something inside me just clicked and I began to fight again. When I came round I thought he’d been gone a few minutes, then he told me I’d been out for two weeks. It’s a miracle. I owe him so much."

Via Secondhand Smoke.

February 23, 2008 7 comments
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Punditry

Ecological Stations of the Cross

by Jeffrey Miller February 23, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Excerpts from the Ecological Stations of the Cross

Second Station: Jesus Embraces the Cross
(Earth as Suffering Servant—Isaiah)

Meditation:
Mother Earth, you are alive with Christ’s Spirit. You, like Christ, are the suffering servant. You serve all Earth’s creatures so splendidly and graciously, but we often treat you as nothing more than a storehouse of goods. May we awaken to see both your suffering and your generosity. May we only harvest wood from your forests in ways that are sustainable and may we leave your ancient, mystical, old-growth forests to grow in peace.

Eighth Station: Jesus Speaks to the Women of Jerusalem
(Women and Education, Hunger, Poverty and Sustainable Population Growth)

Reflection:
Christ, you look with compassion on women: the birth-givers, the nurturers, and the comforters. May we commit to sustainable world population growth by bringing women out of poverty; by providing adequate nutrition, health care and education, and by honoring the lives of all women.

Point to Ponder:
Unsustainable population growth is a direct result of poverty, hunger and illiteracy, especially for women. Without food, economic security, and education, no amount of family planning programs will curb high birth rates.

These Ecological Stations of the cross are reportedly from Immaculate Conception Church in Durham, NC. These were sent in from a reader of Fr. Zuhisdorf and I think Fr. Z was right to wonder if someone was putting him on.

Unfortunately these don’t appear to be parody and it looks like the Ecological Stations of the Cross was a project of St. Elizabeth Garden of Learning in Oakland, Calif. This center is part of St Elizabeth’s Church in Oakland. The National Catholic Reporter previously had an article on these "stations of the cross" so these are all too real. Almost as strange is this mosaic above the Church’s altar at St. Elizabeth which is an emerging Peace dove is destroying a U.S. Military 9 mm Beretta pistol.

These stations as "Collaborative Public Sculpture" were sponsored by the Office of Peace, Justice, and Integrity of Creation, of the Franciscan Province of St. Barbara. Pope Benedict previously referred to a statement by Bishop Sorrentino of Assisi about the "abuse" of the figure of St. Francis. This abuse is mostly of seeing St. Francis first and foremost as a radical environmentalist which loses its proper order of his love of creation principally as a fruit of the love of the creator. Much of environmental spirituality is like hanging great paintings in a museum and putting the tag of "anonymous" underneath them. They have made God the anonymous author of creation and if he is mentioned at all it is sort of as a footnote.

As a side note it really saddens me to see terms like "family planning" and "population growth" used in a Stations of the Cross. It is as if they agree that Hell is other people and the number of people as a great evil. They seem to forget the history of environmental scare mongering and how all the dire predictions of the past never happened. It reminds me of "prophets" who make predictions of the end of the world and when it doesn’t pan out set new dates.

Let us love God first and foremost and then our neighbors and be proper stewards of all the gifts that God has given us in creation. It is when this order is reversed or torn asunder that things go wrong.

February 23, 2008 15 comments
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Pro-life

It's her choice

by Jeffrey Miller February 22, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

My daughter came tumbling out of her religious education class recently, shouting, "Mom, I want to go to Washington; they’re killing babies!"

Next to her my 5-year-old chimed in, jumping up and down: "I want to go, I want to go!"

Dread flooded my stomach and chest; the abortion debate had reached my doorstop.

I knew it was coming. Years before when it came time to enroll our oldest daughter in CCD – Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, religious education for Catholics — I thought of the conflicts that lay ahead.

In CCD she’d be taught things my husband and I didn’t believe and, quite frankly, things we didn’t want her to believe.

We don’t believe that homosexuality is a disorder, we don’t believe the use of contraception is wrong and we don’t believe that having an abortion is a sin, or evil.

But the Catholic Church is home for me, and it is more than the sum of the doctrine I ignore, more than the sum of its scandals and newspaper headlines.

It has something important to teach its members – and my children — about right and wrong, about love and commitment, about social justice and compassion.

And I pledged at my wedding and their baptism that any children would be raised Catholic.
" Have faith," I said to myself when I signed our oldest daughter up for CCD four years ago.

"You’ll hear a lot more about it in the coming years, and you’ll have to make your own decision about what you believe," I said, "but what’s important is that you know people have different opinions. The Church believes one thing; Mom and Dad believe another."

…A few days after that CCD lesson my husband and I sat down with our daughter and her science book and turned to the chapter on cells and cell division. We talked about when life begins according to science, and according to the church and talked some more about what this means in terms of an abortion.

She got bored after a while and squirmed away.

But she’ll be back and we’ll continue the discussion adding more of the missing pieces as she grows old enough to hear them.

And then, it’s her choice.
Article

Those who take their faith seriously have a hard time understanding cultural Catholics and exactly why they want to belong to a Church they fundamentally disagree with. Besides the Church exactly what other "organization" that they have problems with and who they see teaching as sins things that are totally fine would they let teach their children. Whatever happened to Isaiah injunction "Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil;" which surely they see the Church as doing? That certainly there are other religious denominations that fall much more in line with what they believe. I guess this is just a fundamental disconnect or a sort of religious patriotism of the sort of "My Church right or wrong." She says that it is important that the Church teaches what is right and wrong and than says that the Church is wrong about what it says is right.

What I also find interesting is the defense of abortion by those who say they have faith and belief in God. It is pretty much always a case of moral relativism and situational ethics. Support of the need for abortion is defended by naming the circumstances; whether it is rape, incest, economic, timing, etc – the situation is used to defend the need for abortion. In this article the same arguments are used and in like in most cases there is never talk of a soul, being created in the image of God, why it is okay to kill the innocent because of circumstances, etc. That a believer strangely makes no arguments in a religious context at all and make statements that are totally secular. For a moral relativist as in this case it comes down to "And then, it’s her choice" which is at least consistent, but extends the idea that the truth is what you choose to be the truth.

February 22, 2008 35 comments
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Punditry

Just Words

by Jeffrey Miller February 21, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

I think the pundits have missed what was really wrong about Obama’s “Just words” speech. The charges of plagiarism don’t really seem to stand because of his cozy relationship with Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick and it just isn’t plagiarism when you have permission.

What was the real problem is that he was using his speeches focusing predominately on hope and change and comparing them to “I had a dream” and “We hold these truths to be self evident.” This is rather egotistic in the first place and there is a great difference between his words and those words. For one Martin Luther King’s words and activism were founded on action where his words matched something substantive with his movement of nonviolence and civil disobedience where he was willing to go to jail in face of these racial injustices. The words of the Declaration of Independence were also based on action and people willing to lay down their lives to defend the new country and the ideas in the declaration.

So for Obama using this as a tactic to deflect criticisms that he was all talk with no actual plans by quoting rhetoric that was backed up by plans and action doesn’t really do much. Though I guess the irony is that he was using empty rhetoric to defend himself against the charge of empty rhetoric. Another thing I don’t get about the Obama fascination is all the praises for his speeches when what he is doing is giving a good reading of a prepared speech. When he had to give a talk without a teleprompter and he didn’t want to be reading from a prepared speech it gave a much better idea of Obama the speaker with him bashing President Bush, Karl Rove and former FEMA head Michael Brown and using much more of the language of political liberalism today.

I do think it is pretty cool how far Christopher Blosser’s Is Obama the Messiah? blog has taken off and how much traffic he is getting.

One thing though – with Jesus we got The Beatitudes, with Obama we get The Platitudes. Besides doesn’t the Bible have strong words about the Obamanation?

February 21, 2008 14 comments
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Pro-life

That was then

by Jeffrey Miller February 21, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

Anyone who knows what waterboarding is
could not be unsure. It is a horrible torture technique used by Pol Pot
and being used on Buddhist monks as we speak, said McCain after a
campaign stop at Dordt College here.

That was then and today he voted against the ban on waterboarding and
the bill  that would restrict the CIA to the 19 interrogation
techniques outlined in the Army field manual.   Something he
said he supported before.   The vote was pretty much
along party lines.  If McCain is trying to please the base I
wish he would pick another issue. But unfortunately Republicans are
becoming the party of torture apologists and the ends now justifies the
means.  I was also saddened to see Sen. Brownback do the same.
But there are also plenty of torture apologists among
Catholics also.

February 21, 2008 27 comments
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News

Here and There

by Jeffrey Miller February 20, 2008
written by Jeffrey Miller

The 2008 Catholic blog awards are accepting nominations in a variety of categories:until Feb 29th.

Registration is required before you can nominate a blog

1. All blogs nominated must be Catholic and be focused primarily on Catholicism.
2. Nominating someone for the same category repeatedly is prohibited.
3. Please also restrict nominations to one person per category.
4. For a Blog to be nominated for the "Best New Blog" Category it must have been created since last year’s awards.
5. For a blog to be nominated, it must have been active since last year’s awards. Blogs that have been active in the past year but have now closed are still eligible to be nominated
6. I have requested that your name and email address be submitted on the form. I will keep this information confidential. If your name or e-mail address is missing, your nomination will not be accepted.

Gerald has a post on Cardinal Schoenborn’s cause for the International Theological Institute with photos and information on a fundraising effort for a new campus.

Marcel LeJeune has seen the new move Human Experience by Grassroots Film and has a glowing review of this powerful film.

Here are some new blog announcements:

Not Strictly Spiritual

Meus Questus

This weeks Catholic Carnival.



This Respect Life video is from the New York State Catholic Conference to combat the extreme new law there.

February 20, 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.
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  • 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.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
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