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Sunday, September 22, 2013

Conservatives 'Disturbed' By Pope's Remarks

In the video clip that accompanies the following article, Bill Donahue argues that widespread priestly pedophilia in the Catholic Church is a homosexual issue and that it has nothing to do with pedophilia. I have not the slightest clue what Donahue means by flatly denying the very definition of pedophilia. 
Here's the interview:
 http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2013/09/20/conservatives-disturbed-by-popes-new-course/comment-page-25/  
And here's the definition of pedophilia: 
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2013/09/20/conservatives-disturbed-by-popes-new-course/comment-page-25/
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Excerpt: "Under previous popes, liberal Catholic nuns, politicians and theologians were castigated by church leaders, said John Gehring, a writer and advocate at the group Faith in Public Life. Now “the air is starting to clear,” he said.  “Pope Francis is rescuing the Catholic Church from those grim-faced watchdogs of orthodoxy who in windowless rooms reduce Catholicism to a laundry list of nos,” Gehring said."

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By Daniel Burke, CNN Belief Blog Co-editor
(CNN) – “Rain on parched land.”
“A bold new course.”
“Revolutionary.”
That’s how liberal Catholics responded to the stunning interview published Thursday in which Pope Francis bluntly said the church shouldn’t be “obsessed” with culture war issues like abortion and gay marriage.
“It is not necessary to talk about these issues all the time,” the pope said, warning that the church's moral foundations will fall "like a house of cards" unless it strikes a "new balance" between preaching the gospel and taking stands on divisive issues.
How did conservative Catholics, the church’s most ardent culture warriors, react?
“I’ll be honest; I was disturbed,” writes Matthew Archbold in the conservative National Catholic Register.
“While it's clear that the pope is not changing church teaching, he is clearly changing the emphasis. The pope with a few words has unsettled so much.”
Archbold said that he’s concerned that the pope's words will be used against anti-abortion activists and opponents of gay marriage in the United States.
But after thinking and praying about the pope's remarks, Archbold said, he decided that being unsettled may not be "such a terrible thing."
"I think the pope was reminding us that we're a religion of 'yes.'"
Before the release of Thursday’s interview, Bishop Thomas Tobin of Rhode Island said he was “disappointed” that Francis had not spoken much about abortion. On Friday, Tobin welcomed the pope’s comments, but said it won’t change his focus.
“I have spoken out clearly about the dignity of all human life and the nature of holy matrimony as designed by God and will continue to do so whenever the situation warrants,” Tobin said. “It is a demand of the Gospel.”
The bishop also said, however, that he appreciates the new pope’s “balanced and inclusive” approach.
Other conservative Catholics said the media and liberals had misconstrued the pope’s remarks, made in a 12,000-word interview published Thursday in 16 Jesuit journals around the world.
“The pope is a reformer, but not a revolutionary,” Bill Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Civil and Religious Rights, told CNN’s Chris Cuomo.
“This is the problem with the left," Dohonue continued, "they are trying to take what the pope said and then run with it.”
Donohue, a caustic and sometimes controversial critic of people he perceives as anti-Catholic, said the pope’s remarks won’t silence him.
“There’s nothing the pope said that should give relief to people who say all of a sudden now that conservatives should shut up,” Donahue said. “We’re not going to shut up because we’re in consonant compliance with what the pope said. “
After all, conservatives say, it’s not like the pope changed Catholic doctrine in Thursday’s interview.
To underscore that point, the conservative blog Rorate Caeli posted a lengthy quote from the pope’s meeting with Catholic gynecologists on Friday in which he strongly denounced abortion.
“Each child who is unborn, but is unjustly condemned to be aborted, bears the face of Jesus Christ, bears the face of the Lord,” the pope said, according to Rorate Caeli’s translation. “They cannot be discarded, as the `culture of waste’ proposes.”
Father John Zuhlsdorf, a conservative Catholic blogger, said the pope urged Catholics to find a “new balance” between their moral and political missions. He didn’t say they should surrender the culture wars.
“I think that Francis thinks that constant correction and condemnation does more harm than good,” Zuhlsdorf wrote on his blog. (Alan: NSS)
“Francis said `all the time," Zuhlsdorf said."He did not say `we should not talk about these things.’"
Other conservatives said the pope's remarks are “nothing new.” (Alan: I think calling "money" "dung of the devil" is "something new." http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/09/pope-francis-rumors-of-pending.html)
"The pope is not in any way proposing that the church should abandon important moral and social teachings,” said Ashley McGuire of the Catholic Association.
"Rather, the pope is reaffirming a longstanding teaching that reaches all the way back to the founding of Christianity: love your neighbor.”
And while most liberals praised the pope’s bold new vision, some took issue with his remarks about women’s role in the church.
“We have to work harder to develop a theology of women in the church,” Francis said in Thursday's interview.
“Breaking news, Pope Francis: There is already a profound theology of women," said Sister Maureen Fielder, a Catholic nun and longtime advocate of women’s ordination in the Catholic Church.
“There are libraries of feminist theology just waiting for you, and others, to dive in.”
Fielder said she likes the new pope, but she thinks he “sorely needs a course in feminist theology.”
For the most part, however, liberals praised Francis.
Under previous popes, liberal Catholic nuns, politicians and theologians were castigated by church leaders, said John Gehring, a writer and advocate at the group Faith in Public Life. Now “the air is starting to clear,” he said.
“Pope Francis is rescuing the Catholic Church from those grim-faced watchdogs of orthodoxy who in windowless rooms reduce Catholicism to a laundry list of nos,” Gehring said.
 - CNN Belief Blog Co-Editor

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