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The Curt Jester

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

The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 119 – 20 October 2015

by Jeffrey Miller October 20, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from from 12 September 2015 to 20 October 2015.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 11 October 2015

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 8 October 2015 – Those with no name
  • 9 October 2015 – The well-mannered evil one

General Audiences

  • 14 October 2015

Homilies

  • 3 October 2015 – Mass celebrated for the Gendarmerie Corps of Vatican City State
  • 18 October 2015 – Holy Mass and Canonization of four Blesseds

Speeches

  • 12 September 2015 – To the personnel of the Cooperative Credit Bank of Rome
  • 17 September 2015 – To Participants in the International Symposium on the Pastoral Care of the Street, organized by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People
  • 1 October 2015 – To participants in the General Chapter of the Comboni Missionaries of the Heart of Jesus (1st October 2015)
  • 3 October 2015 – To participants in the Meeting sponsored by the “Fondazione Banco Alimentare”
  • 9 October 2015 – Remarks of the Holy Father during the General Congregation of the Synod of Bishops

Papal Tweets

  • “Dear young friends, do not be afraid to give your all. Christ will never disappoint you.” @Pontifex 16 October 2015
  • “Corruption is a cancer on society.” @Pontifex 20 October 2015
October 20, 2015 0 comment
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ApologeticsScientism

Sola Scriptura and Science Alone

by Jeffrey Miller October 14, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

Having read my share of Catholic apologetics and listened to countless hours of Catholic radio I have certainly encountered the irony of the idea of Sola Scriptura. That you can’t use scripture alone to discern this doctrine and also that this is a Protestant tradition passed down.

Listening to the Catholic Answers shows where they field questions from atheists it led me to realize just how much Sola Scriptura was like scientism. Over and over I heard atheists object to the existence of God since it was not scientifically provable. That the only tool for discerning truth was science. Scientism sees the universal applicability of the scientific method and approach, and that empirical science constitutes the only valid method for discerning reality. That this belief is a philosophy and thus not scientifically provable via the scientific method seems to be totally lost on the most atheists. Even when this is pointed out to them the appeal is once again to science. Admitting that philosophy can be another tool in discerning truth is a bridge-too-far for many atheists.

I can certainly understand this since when I was an atheist I was totally skeptical of philosophy as a tool for discerning truth. The relativism inherent in the little philosophy I was exposed to made me reject this area. That I had a philosophy that rejected relativism was lost on me. I wanted to know truth while at the same time never demanded that empirical science be able to prove the concept of truth in the first place.

So I find it interesting the crossover between scripture alone and science alone. Oddly there is almost the same fundamentalist understanding of scripture between the two groups. Both exclude other possible interpretations not interpreted through their single lens. Those that have thought about scripture being the highest authority and that that they can’t know the canon of scripture through this authority, just live with this ambiguity. Same with the science alone believers. They can’t prove via scientific experimentation that science is the only authority, even less so when it comes to concepts like truth. René Descartes wanted to build a system of provable concepts and bootstrap this from the first provable concept that didn’t rely on anything else and so on. Others have been attempting to do the same since and to the same end.

As a Catholic I am really just learning what it means to be able be not limited to a single interpretive lens. As an atheist I loved science and was spellbound by the wonder of the natural world and what we could discern. Now I still have that in spades magnified by even more wonder. Strangely while this wider view increases the number of things I don’t understand, I now have more tools to use to discern truth. Each intellectual tool has its own areas of competencies. The narrow view of what science is now limited to is a fall from when theology was known as the queen of the sciences.

October 14, 2015 2 comments
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The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 118 – 13 October 2015

by Jeffrey Miller October 13, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from from 17 September 2015 to 13 October 2015.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 4 October 2015

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 1 October 2015 – Nostalgia for God (1st October 2015)
  • 2 October 2015 – The angel and the child
  • 6 October 2015 – Mercy first and foremost

General Audiences

  • 7 October 2015

Messages

  • 18 September 2015 – Video message of the Holy Father to Hungarian religious

Speeches

  • 17 September 2015 – Audience to young consecrated persons
  • 18 September 2015 – To participants in the Symposium organized by the Vatican Observatory
  • 5 October 2015 – Introductory remarks by the Holy Father at the First General Congregation of the 14th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops

Papal Tweets

  • “Dear young friends, ask the Lord for a free heart so as not to be ensnared by the false pleasures of the world.” @Pontifex 8 October 2015
  • “Work is important, but so too is rest. Shouldn’t we learn to respect times of rest, especially Sundays?” @Pontifex 10 October 2015
  • “Let us learn solidarity. Without solidarity, our faith is dead.” @Pontifex 13 October 2015
October 13, 2015 0 comment
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Punditry

Don’t Panic

by Jeffrey Miller October 7, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

With the Extraordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family now in session and everything that has led up to it, I have seen lots of reactions. There is the “finally” crowd who think the Synod will be changing Catholic teaching and are happy about it and there are the doom and gloomers who think the Synod will change Church teaching and are not happy about it.

So I was all set to write a “Don’t Panic” post and relate the current situation in the Church to Church history. I even had it set as a reminder to write something on that subject.

Then I saw Thomas L. McDonald’s post today The Catholic Church Will Survive: Putting Crises in Perspective. If I was much smarter and was an excellent writer this was the post I would have written.

So just read his post instead. Still I will go ahead and meander on the subject myself since the subject must seek release from my brain and that’s what my blog is for.

I am no Church historian, yet the subject does interest me as a amateur and what I have read has intrigued me and helped me try to put things into perspective. It seems to me the Church is always in crisis. We are always coming to some decision point and when we come to a decision there are still waves of effects from even a moment of clarity. This of course is followed up by the next crisis.

The Book of Judges shows that ebb and flow of repentance and falling back into sin. Over and over we see pattern in the Old Testament. The false idea of progress where just the passage of time leads to moral progress is one of those things that can only be believed if you conveniently ignore all of human history and the evidence of your eyes. Still even with that caveat, many seem capable of doing just that. The prophets were never called to affirm the current moral climate, but to denounce it. No surprise that prophets were unpopular. Oddly we have people today claiming a prophetic message who affirm negative moral trends. No surprise that they’re popular and don’t contain martyrs among them.

All of the rest of Church history follows the same template of rise and fall. This is certainly unsettling in every age. Still much of the New Testament is written in response to some problem or other. The pastoral letters are not about how everyone has converted to Christ and are spreading the Gospel to others. Sure this is one aspect, but mostly there are the day-to-day problems dealing with discipline and just plain heresy. Without all this drama no doubt the New Testament would be much shorter.

Rising from the persecution stage of the early Church we again run into the same series of problems facing the Church. Most notable in this early period is the Arian heresy which gained many adherents including many of the Easter Bishops. Not to mention other concurrent heresies in those times and the ones that followed them. I could easily imagine being a Catholic blogger during those times generating link-bait papyrus despairing at Arian episcopal appointments and the banishment of Athanasius once again. To have the Council of Nicea overwhelmingly reject Arianism and yet Arianism was strengthened in regards to power and influence in the Church. Plenty of factions and double-dealing behind the scenes. Agendas and people using theology for a power grab. Yeah nothing has changed.

The time of the Council of Nicea is no real exception. Heresy and corruption are mainstays of Church history along with the saints God raised up in those times. There has never been some idyllic golden age in the Church and there won’t ever be for the Church Militant.

When I first heard the reports regarding the Secret Synod from Edward Pentin I was not surprised. There have always been factions and those plotting to change theology. In fact I would have been more suspicious if such groups did not come to light. The advocates for itching ears always have some new enlightened view to proclaim from their elitist heights. Bad theology always gains adherents as it tends to excavate the narrow way and reduce the need for repentance.

I am no Pollyanna just invoking the truth that the “Gates of Hell will not prevail against the Church.” True as that is there is a lot of damage that can be done that is just short of “prevail.” Still I am not worried that Church teaching is going to be changed. Time and time again at these points of response to crisis, documents produced do not support the current error. Sure there are ambiguities and certainly no guarantee that the orthodox views are stated perfectly. These documents are not inspired and often not even inspired in the other sense.

No the documents that will come out of the Extraordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family do not give me premonitory indigestion. It is almost always the pastoral response that concerns me. Regardless how clear a document is and orthodox it is. It is always the pastoral practice that subverts it. Humanae Vitae did not end discussion regarding the moral licitness of contraception. It was ignored by Bishop conferences, priests in the confessional, down to the practice of the laity. Contraception was a good case in point regarding how so many thought the Church as going to change her teaching. Lots of drama then also regarding the The Pontifical Commission on Birth Control which overwhelming supported contraception in saying it was not intrinsically evil.

Usually what happens is that dissenters find the easiest way to undermine Church teaching is not to teach it or have it taught. Make everything a matter of conscience, an individualist unformed conscience. Since this time around the issues regard divorce and remarriage regarding Communion and to some extent homosexual acts, dissent will take different paths. It is not as if dissenters will be able to publicly “remarry” people or conduct same-sex weddings. Such public dissent would take the same disciplinary path as attempting to ordain women.

As a pessimistic-optimist I will be able to deal with both the clarifying and maddening aspects of the results of the Synod. Don’t Panic, but pray instead.

Photo credit: Good Advice via photopin (license)

October 7, 2015 4 comments
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Book Review

Book Review – The Apostasy That Wasn’t

by Jeffrey Miller October 6, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

There are some things when I run across them in a novel, movie, or even religious discussion immediately set off alarm bells for me. One of them is anything involving the Nephalem. It just never turns out well and most often very silly. Another is Constantine. Constantine gets blamed for a lot by a lot of different groups. At least with the Nephalem, it is something rather mysterious with little scriptural reference. When it comes to Constantine we actually have a wealth of historical information from Christian and Pagan sources. Still Constantine is often used to pointed to as a corruptor of “pure” Christianity and the cause of the great apostasy. From Dan Brown to starters of new religions the start was not from history, but as a required plot line to justify what goes after.

I was naturally delighted when I first found out Rod Bennett was releasing a new book called The Apostasy That Wasn’t: The Extraordinary Story of the Unbreakable Early Church. A semi-sequel to his wonderful Four Witnesses: The Early Church in Her Own Words. The appellation that somebody “made history come alive” is probably overused. Often I found that the author had made history interesting, but not fully alive to my intellect. Rod Bennett does make history come intellectually alive for me with his deft use of storytelling, historical writings, and the fruit of his research.

The introduction starts with a stroll to a period while he was still a Protestant and coming across a place in Tennessee called “Fields of the Wood” built up by a Preacher scandalized by the divisions in Christianity. Who was bringing back the “true church” and started a new congregation. This struck regarding how often this pattern has occurred. The person scandalized by the divisions who promptly create yet another division. The Bullwinkle-syndrome where the optimist church reformer says “This time for sure!” as he pulls another church out of his hat.

Rod Bennett describes the history of Preacher Tomlinson and this preachers own version of the Great Apostasy. This same pattern can be seen with the Latter-Day Saints, Jehovah Witnesses, Islam, and really most of Protestantism. Rod Bennett’s thinking about this preacher’s history led him to realize “Don’t I have, when it comes right down to it, a ‘Great Apostasy’ theory of my own?” This insight led him to studying church history and the reading of the Church Fathers. I think at this point it is mandatory to insert the Blessed John Newman quote “To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant.” Otherwise I could lose my Catholic blogger license.

I was not unfamiliar with this tumultuous and exciting period of Church history. Warren H. Carroll covers this period quite well in one of his volumes of “A History of Christendom.” Still I found it contextualized better and I especially appreciated the lead up in history to Constantine and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge. The state of the Church and how between waves of persecution it was out in the open with various levels of toleration. Even with Diocletian there was originally some toleration before the worst of the persecutions began. It was all much more complicated than the incorrectly simplified history of Constantine being the first to grant such toleration. Especially the erroneous idea that he made Catholicism the official religion of the empire.

He also paints the state of the empire with Rome depopulated and great cities like Alexandria lapsing from their Catholic faith. This historical backdrop sets the stage for such a fascinating piece of Church history. The rise of the Arian heresy by the priest Arius, the calling of the council, and the whole wonderful story of St. Athanasius. The story of Athanasius came so alive for me along with the conjecture that he had gotten involved with St Antony and the Desert Monks at a rather early period of his life. I often felt like I was reading a novel as this history played out. The real story is so odd and seemingly implausible that it only works as history.

Rod Bennett really is a master storyteller and fully employs his skills in describing this period of history along with presenting the actual texts that we have. This is certainly a period of history with many surviving texts from those involved along with of course the Councilar texts. His subtitle is “The Extraordinary Story of the Unbreakable Early Church” and this certainly fits the billing. The Arians had all the power on their side. They had most of the episcopacy of the Eastern bishops and the ear of the Emperors. The figure of Athanasius was unimpressive, but his mark on history wasn’t.

I totally loved this book. So much so that no doubt it also goes on my re-read list.

October 6, 2015 0 comment
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The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 117 – 6 October 2015

by Jeffrey Miller October 6, 2015October 6, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from from 5 September 2015 to 4 October 2015.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

General Audiences

  • 30 September 2015

Homilies

  • 4 October 2015 – Holy Mass for the opening of the 14th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops

Messages

  • 12 September 2015 – Message for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees 2016

Speeches

  • 5 September 2015 – To members of the Parish Evangelisation Cell System
  • 7 September 2015 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Portugal on their “ad Limina” visit
  • 11 September 2015 – To participants in the General Chapter of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (Claretians)
  • 27 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey of the Holy Father to Cuba, to the United States of America and Visit to the United Nations Headquarters: In-Flight Press Conference of His Holiness Pope Francis from the United States of America to Rome (Papal Flight, 27 September 2015)
  • 3 October 2015 – Prayer Vigil in preparation for the XIV Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops

Papal Tweets

  • “Our life is not a pointless wandering. We have a sure goal: the house of the Father.” @Pontifex 1 October 2015
  • “The faith is not a gift just for me. Faith is given to be joyfully shared.” @Pontifex 3 October 2015
October 6, 2015October 6, 2015 0 comment
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The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 116 – 29 September 2015

by Jeffrey Miller September 29, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from from 15 August 2015 to 28 September 2015.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 13 September 2015
  • 20 September 2015

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 10 September 2015 – How peace is made
  • 11 September 2015 – The risk of hypocrisy
  • 14 September 2015 – On the path of humility
  • 15 September 2015 – Contagious motherhood

General Audiences

  • 16 September 2015

Homilies

  • 20 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Celebrations of Vespers with Priests, Men and Women Religious and Seminarians at the Cathedral of Havana
  • 20 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Holy Mass at Plaza de la Revolución in Havana
  • 21 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Holy Mass at Plaza de la Revolución in Holguín
  • 22 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Holy Mass at the Minor Basilica of the Shrine “Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre” (Santiago, 22 September 2015)
  • 23 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Holy Mass and Canonization of Blessed Fr. Junipero Serra at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (Washington, D.C., 23 September 2015)
  • 24 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Vespers with the Clergy, Men and Women Religious at St Patrick’s Cathedral (New York, 24 September 2015)
  • 25 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Holy Mass at the Madison Square Garden – New York, 25 September 2015
  • 26 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Holy Mass with the Bishops, Clergy, Men and Women Religious of Pennsylvania gathered in the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul (Philadelphia, 26 September 2015)
  • 27 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Mass for the conclusion of the Eighth World Meeting of Families at B. Franklin Parkway (Philadelphia, 27 September 2015)

Messages

  • 15 August 2015 – XXXI World Youth Day, 2016
  • 29 August 2015 – Message to participants in the International Meeting for Peace sponsored by the Community of Sant’Egidio [Tirana, 6–8 September 2015]
  • 17 September 2015 – Video message of Pope Francis at the vigil of the Apostolic Journey to Cuba
  • 18 September 2015 – Message of the Holy Father to His Holiness Mar Gewargis III, Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East

Unknown

  • 21 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Prayer during the visit at the Shrine of the “Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre” (Santiago de Cuba, 21 September 2015)
  • 25 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Prayer of the Holy Father during the Interreligious Meeting at the Ground Zero Memorial (New York, 25 September 2015)

Speeches

  • 10 September 2015 – To the Bishops appointed over the past year
  • 10 September 2015 – Address to participants in the meeting sponsored by the Teams of Our Lady (Équipes Notre Dame)
  • 11 September 2015 – To participants in the Meeting sponsored by the “Foundation for sustainable development” on “Environmental justice and climate change”
  • 16 September 2015 – To the Environment Ministers of the European Union
  • 17 September 2015 – To participants of the meeting organized by the Pontifical Council “Cor Unum” on the Iraqy-Syrian humanitarian crisis
  • 17 September 2015 – Remarks by the Holy Father during a via satellite Video Conference hosted by CNN with “Scholas Occurrentes”
  • 19 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Welcoming ceremony at “José Martí” International Airport (Havana, 19 September 2015)
  • 19 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey of the Holy Father to Cuba, to the United States of America and Visit to the United Nations Headquarters: Greeting to journalists during the flight Rome-Havana
  • 20 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Address to students gathered at the Fr Félix Varela Cultural Centre (Havana, 20 September 2015)
  • 22 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – Cuba: Meeting with families at Our Lady of the Assumption Cathedral (Santiago, 22 September 2015)
  • 22 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey to Cuba, United States of America and Visit to the United Nations: In-Flight Press Conference from Santiago de Cuba to Washington D.C. (Papal flight, 22 September 2015)
  • 23 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Meeting with the Bishops of the United States of America at St Matthew’s Cathedral (Washington, D.C., 23 September 2015)
  • 23 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Welcoming ceremony at the South Lawn of the White House (Washington, D.C., 23 September 2015)
  • 24 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Visit to the Congress of the United States of America (Washington D.C., 24 September 2015)
  • 24 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Visit to the Charitable Center of St. Patrick Parish and meeting with the homeless (Washington, D.C., 24 September 2015)
  • 25 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Visit to “Our Lady, Queen of the Angels” School and meeting with children and immigrant families in Harlem (New York, 25 September 2015)
  • 25 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Interreligious encounter at the Ground Zero memorial (New York, 25 September 2015)
  • 25 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United Nations: Meeting with the members of the General Assembly of the United Nations Organization (New York, 25 September 2015)
  • 25 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United Nations: Greeting to the personnel of the United Nations
  • 26 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Prayer vigil for the Festival of families at the B. Franklin Parkway (Philadelphia, 26 September 2015)
  • 26 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Meeting for Religious Liberty with the Hispanic community and other immigrants at the Independence Mall (Philadelphia, 26 September 2015)
  • 27 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Greeting to the organizing committee, volunteers and benefactors at the International Airport of Philadelphia
  • 27 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Visit to detainees at Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility (Philadelphia, 27 September 2015)
  • 27 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Meeting with bishops taking part in the World Meeting of Families gathered at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary (Philadelphia, 27 September 2015)
  • 27 September 2015 – Apostolic Journey – United States of America: Meeting with victims of sexual abuse (St. Charles Borromeo Seminary – Philadelphia, 27 September 2015)

Papal Tweets

  • “In spite of injustices and sufferings, the Lord’s victory is certain.” @Pontifex 17 September 2015
  • “I ask you to join me in praying for my trip to Cuba and the United States. I need your prayers.” @Pontifex 18 September 2015
  • “Thank you to the Cuban people! Thank you from my heart!” @Pontifex 22 September 2015
  • “With my heartfelt thanks. May the love of Christ always guide the American people! #GodBlessAmerica” @Pontifex 28 September 2015
September 29, 2015 0 comment
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Pope

Wait till your Father gets home!

by Jeffrey Miller September 24, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

There is the semifamous American phrase “Wait til your Father gets home!” This phrase was suppose to be invoked by the mother after a rough day with the kids. Implying that the kids were going to “get it” when the Father found out about what they had been doing during the day.

What reminded me of phrase is the Pope’s visit to the United States. Apparently we think of the Pope in just this light. That when he visits we want him to deliver the comeuppance for all the wrong doing. To be the militant scold like a prophet of old. That he should be grimacing when photographed with politicians who are at odds with the Catholic faith. That whatever are most important topic is should be on the lips on the Pope at every opportunity. We don’t want the Pope to be a diplomat, but somebody as brash as Patton.

I say this especially as I find myself guilty of this. Pouring through his speeches to look to see if his priorities align with my own narrative. Not listening to the Pope, but playing doctrinal bingo trying to fill my card. It is as if I suspect that people have no idea what the Church teaches so if the Pope doesn’t forcefully speak about something no one will know. The problem is not that people don’t know what the Church teaches in general, but the why behind it.

It is oh so easy to be hypercritical regarding the Pope’s visit and to see everything as a series of “might of beens.” If only the Pope had said this. So many Catholics loved when Blessed Mother Teresa was not shy at all on abortion at the National Prayer Breakfast with the Clintons. Yet even a loving rebuke did not affect any change in behavior regarding abortion by Bill or Hillary Clinton. It seems obvious to me that Pope Francis is following St. Francis de Sales when the Saint wrote “You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.”

So I am fighting against my own tendencies in that I want clear forceful rhetoric. A “Wait til your Holy Father gets home.” That politicians get a rhetorical pummeling.

As even the casual reader of this blog might know I have a great fondness for the writings of SF author and convert John C. Wright. For his blog posts excoriating political correctness and progressive ideology. Yet I love him even more for his clear-eyed sanity.

I thought my readers might also be interested, as this Pope seems to have stirred up more controversy among the lazy and chattering crickets of the press corps than any Pope since World War Two.

My reaction is one of delight. I believe the Holy Spirit Himself must have prompted Pope Benedict to retire, something that has not been done in centuries, to make way for this next man.

Now, let me explain one thing: my opinion of Pope Francis is not based on the newspaper reports. I am a newspaperman and newspaper editor from way back, and I know how the press works, and I do not trust them.

The lazy and dishonest mainstream press has decided to portray the Holy Father as some sort of Leftist reformer or Marxist revolutionary, and, to my intense disgust, the lazier elements of the rightwing alternate press has followed suit.

The first dozen or so times the press quoted something that sounded extraordinary, and I took the time to trace the comment back to its original source, I found that, in context, the Holy Father’s comment was entirely orthodox, and entirely in keeping with the traditional teaching of the Mother Church since time immemorial.

It happened over and over again. Reading about the support of His Holiness for the Global Warming fraud, or his Marxist disdain for capitalism, I looked up the original document or original report, only to see some utterly orthodox Christian teaching on stewardship of God’s gift of the Earth to Man, or Christian warnings against wealth and worldliness as old as Moses.

And after a dozen times, my openmindedness creaked shut: I now simply dismiss, sight unseen, any such extraordinary quotes. Perhaps the Pope in his private opinions leans more to the Left than the average American. I care not. The Church has, in history, blossomed under the Emperors of Rome and Byzantium, who were elected by the army; under sacred kingship, under parliaments, under republics, and even under the tyranny of the Turks. The Church has also opposed all these things because She opposes the world. The Church will be here long after America sinks under the weight of our own corruption, long after the collapse of the North American Federation which comes next, or the Co-Dominium World-State, or the Long Night, or the Instrumentality of Man or the whatever comes after that.

I dare say that the Church will still be here, and her teaching will be remembered, unchanged, as a magician once said of the unicorn, “she will remember them all when men are fairy tales in books written by rabbits.”

Therefore I dismiss and despise the press-created image of the Pope as an illusion, as gossip, as nonsense. Why the Good Lord has decided to arrange to have the press, our natural enemy and the enemy of the faith, be charmed and pleased by this Pope, I have no idea. God’s ways are not our ways. What shall come of it, not even the wise can foresee.

To that I say amen.

In a related post today he wrote:

The Pope, as all Popes and bishops before him since the time out of mind, repeats the Christian teachings on mercy, eschewing greed, and being proper stewards of the Earth. The Catholic social teaching has been explicit for a century, and implicit from eternity.

If Francis gives greater emphasis to what seem to American conservatives to what are typically Leftwing topics, this is a call to stir you out of your self regard, and to realize that the socialists stole and perverted the concepts of altruism and service to the poor, not to mention stewardship of the environment. The Dark Lord does not create, he only corrupts.

September 24, 2015 2 comments
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Saints

Dolls from Heaven

by Jeffrey Miller September 21, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

Via my email a family business called Dolls from Heaven.

Dolls from heaven are 18 inch Saint Dolls. They come with an outfit based on what the Saint wore during their life. They also come with a book that will inspire children to become saints. Our first Doll is Saint Therese of Lisieux. Saint Therese is one of our favorite saints. She has not only inspired our family but millions of people with “her little way”. We hope that our Therese doll will encourage young children to make Jesus the focus of their lives.

We also made an additional outfit , her second dress is Therese’s Sunday best; this outfit was inspired by her childhood and her love for going to church. Our hope is to have her debut before Christmas 2015.

September 21, 2015 0 comment
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Movies

Flannery and Longmire

by Jeffrey Miller September 21, 2015
written by Jeffrey Miller

So I was watching Season 4, Episode 4 of Longmire and heard this being said:

“My brother would have been a good man if there was somebody there to shoot him every moment of his life.”

So either that line was a homage to Flannery O’Connor or just a blatant rip off.

In her story “A Good Man is Hard to Find” at the end of the story is the semi-famous line:

“She would of been a good woman,” The Misfit said, “if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.”

Either way certainly Flannery O’Connor influenced.

As for the show Longmire itself. It is one of those shows I found interesting, but one that also slowly developed. The story arc has spanned the four seasons so far and with a plot arc pay off early in season 4. This show is very character driven where dialog does not fill all screen time. Slowly developing camera shots and seeing the wheels of the mind think on the problem to be solved. No doubt not for everyone, but I like long story arcs and solid season ending cliffhangers. I also like the misdirection where the seeming suspect is almost always not the actual wrongdoer. Even when you have gotten the flow of this device as used in the show I found myself falling for it most times. So either this is craftily done or I am just easily duped.

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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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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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  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
  • The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer

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