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CATHOLICS MUST STAND UP FOR THE MOST VULNERABLE AMONG US

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June 12, 2013
As Belgium and other countries embrace euthanasia for children, Catholics must stand up for the most vulnerable among us.

Belgium is a troubled country on any number of levels. Its unity has been tenuous for decades, it is increasingly challenged by an Islamic immigrant community that rejects European virtues, and just like its neighbor, Holland, it is clumsily eager to embrace the latest in eugenics and social engineering. Only last month the Belgian Federal Parliament seriously considered legalizing euthanasia for children and it now appears it is “about to expand its controversial ‘right to die’ policies to include access to euthanasia for some gravely ill children.”Don’t be shocked. I have debated “assisted suicide” zealots who believe that if depressed teenagers want to take their own lives—and, tragically, many teens travel that bumpy road of despair at some troubled point—they should be empowered by the state to do so. Poor old Belgium, once so faithful and brave.

I mention this because I have, I suppose, a particular insight into how terrifying euthanasia can be and into the vulnerability of those who it especially horrifies.

Let me introduce you to Katie, who is what society describes as “handicapped”. She was born several months premature and spent a long time in hospital. She came home accompanied by a nursing team, to a house wired for oxygen. It’s ironic, in that the same hospital advised Katie’s mother to abort her because there were likely, they said, to be “complications.”

I know all this because her mother is my sister, and Katie is my niece.

Katie had two strokes when she was tiny and is now classified as being autistic. Which means many things to different people. I’ll offer one example. My dad lies in bed, in a large hospital in England, having also suffered a serious stroke, but he is at the other end of life. We all sit around and do the usual hospital things: make jokes that aren’t funny, pretend that everything is okay, be abnormally normal. Katie walks in. No inhibitions, none of our silly preconceptions and prejudices. She climbs on the bed, gets under the blanket, puts her arms around her grandpa and cuddles up to him. And for the very first time since he was hit by fate’s cruelty, my father shows emotion. Emotion as wide and grand as the world itself.

Katie achieved that, because that is what Katies do. What the physically and mentally challenged do every day. They cut through the nonsense and the fear. They are in the frontline of the battle for civilization, teaching those of us who are without disability what honesty and simplicity are all about. They are also pretty much the last people who still have to fight for their civil rights. As much as we congratulate ourselves on our liberal attitude towards those who are different, we regularly discriminate against the Katies of the world. Goodness me, her mum and dad have witnessed it for years. They even had to change churches because their daughter was not accepted. “Of course you are welcome here, as long as you don’t get in the way, speak too loudly or make any of us, the lucky ones, feel in any way uncomfortable. There’s a ramp out there so you can get in, but once inside you better conform and shut up. We’ll fine people if they leave their cars in handicapped parking spots but won’t turn a hair if they talk to handicapped people as if they were dumb animals.”

Katie can do jigsaws like Super Girl. She starts not from the outside but from the middle. The complex shapes that so baffle us take form in her beautiful mind. Wonderful pictures come alive and speak; they speak in a way Katie cannot. No, not like Super Girl. She is Super Girl. She doesn’t have an extensive vocabulary, even though her parents have added speech therapist to their many other roles. But sometimes words aren’t so important. When I arrived in England from Canada not so long ago she walked straight up to me, grabbed my hand and took me to a chair. She crawled all over me, showing me total and unconditional trust and love. It’s as though I’d never left the country, but I emigrated before Katie was born!

It’s true that she doesn’t always look you in the eye and that her attention seems to wander and that she appears to be distracted. Unlike, of course, those people who always look you straight in the eye and seem to take in every word you say. And then forget your name and care not a fig for your life and anything in it.

I sat down and chatted to my sister. Has it been difficult? “Yes, but also joyous beyond belief. A new adventure every day and a new path of discovery. Wouldn’t change it for the world. Katie has made us all grow so much, taught us things we didn’t know about ourselves, about what it really means to be human. Yes, we cry, but yes we laugh. Actually being a mum to Katie is about saying ‘yes’ to things. Yes to life, yes to love. Yes.”

At which point Katie trots her way into our conversation, into our world. She wants to watch the DVD of The Jungle Book. She’s seen it hundreds of times but that doesn’t matter. It pleases her and she learns from it. Katie doesn’t need expensive toys or fashionable luxuries. She’s so much more than that. Perhaps so much more than us.

I increasingly believe that the handicapped are God’s gift to us, to act as a catalyst to produce and provoke love in hearts that are sometimes hard and cold. I know Katie is that, along with so many other holy and godly things. But Katie and so many others just liker her are under such threat. They are already slaughtered in the womb to a genocidal level, and now euthanasia seeks to have its gruesome way with them. All in the name of progress and putting them out of their misery.

No, not out their misery but out of yours. To make you feel easier about life, to satisfy your perverse perception of what normal and healthy and meaningful are now supposed to mean.

An unborn baby with the gene indicating the likelihood of Down Syndrome, for example, has around a 15% chance of being allowed to be born, and once alive is treated with a discrimination that if applied to a fashionable sexual minority group would lead to a criminal persecution. The handicapped have so few champions other than their parents and family, and they are usually so busy being mums and dads and brothers and sisters that they have no time for politics or pressure. It’s up to the rest of us, and up to the Catholic Church, to fight this crusade for goodness and kindness.

Fly Super Girl, fly Katie; fly you who are mocked and marginalized, those who are singled out by the abortion obsessives and the euthanasia monomaniacs for death. Fly as high as you want, and never care about those who would clip your wings.

About the Author
Michael CorenMichael Coren is the host of The Arena, a nightly television show broadcast on the Canadian network Sun News, and a columnist whose work appears in numerous publications across Canada. He is the author of 14 books, the most recent of which is Heresy: Ten Lies They Spread About Christianity. His website is www.michaelcoren.com, where his books can be purchased and he can be booked for speeches.

BRAVO GOVERNOR RICK PERRY, LT. GOV. DEWHURST, SENATOR HEGAR AND REPRESENTATIVE LALUBENBERG

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Houston abortionist Doctor Douglas Karpen

On Tuesday, June 11, Governor Rick Perry announced plans to expand the call for the special session of the 83rd Legislature to include Pro-Life “legislation relating to the regulation of abortion procedures, providers and facilities” that would not only protect the unborn, but address health and safety issues recently exposed at a Houston abortion clinic chain. He made the following statement:

“The horrors of the national late-term abortion industry are continuing to come to light, one atrocity at a time. Sadly, some of those same atrocities happen in our own state. In Texas, we value all life, and we’ve worked to cultivate a culture that supports the birth of every child.  We have an obligation to protect unborn children, and to hold those who peddle these abortions to standards that would minimize the death, disease and pain they cause.”

All the major Pro-Life organizations across Texas have been working on a coalition-supported bill.  State Senator Glenn Hegar (R-Katy) filed SB 5, a bill that improves safety standards at abortion facilities and establishes the state’s interest in protecting the lives of preborn children who feel pain.  Representative Jodie Laubenberg (R-Rockwall) is the House sponsor and has filed the House companion, HB 60.

Elizabeth Graham of Texas Right to Life said, “Governor Perry has been a faithful champion for the rights of the most vulnerable in our state, and he has always welcomed and sought opportunities to protect life.  We laud his efforts and the constant commitment of Lieutenant Governor Dewhurst to safeguard pregnant women and their unborn children while holding abortion clinics accountable.”

Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst expressed his complete support for the Pro-Life measures in the special session agenda:

“Until Americans are willing to overturn Roe vs. Wade, Texas should at least outlaw abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy, regulate abortion clinics to the safety standards governing ambulatory and outpatient surgical centers, and ensure that abortion clinics have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles.”

In light of Houston abortionist, Douglas Karpen, who has been accused of committing infanticide on fully-birthed newborns, Perry and Dewhurst want to prevent Gosnell-like abortion centers in Texas.  The Pro-Life community is optimistic about this unprecedented opportunity to pass a new law that would strengthen Texas families, protect the health and safety of women, and foster a culture of Life while saving thousands of unborn baby Texans annually.

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Douglas Karpen Snipped Babies’ Necks Worse Than Gosnell, Is Anyone Noticing?

by Kristi Burton Brown | Houston, TX | LifeNews.com | 5/30/13 1:37 PM

Houston, TX (LiveActionNews) — If Americans found the Gosnell trial disturbing, there can be no words to describe Douglas Karpen’s abortion clinic in Houston, Texas. Operation Rescue has been on the scene for years, working to stop Karpen. Thanks to Operation Rescue’s Abortion Whistleblowers Program, four women who previously worked for Karpen at the Aaron Women’s Clinic have come forward to describe their horrific experiences.

Like many abortionists, Karpen has had a string of problems at his clinics. A young teenager died from a botched performed on her by Karpen. He has been called before the Texas Medical Board to answer allegations. In one of the most horrifying accusations, “waste” from Karpen’s clinic began leaking into a neighboring parking lot:

[O]n February 6, 2005…a sewer broke at Karpen’s Texas Ambulatory Surgical Center, located at 2421 N. Shepherd in Houston, causing sewage to spill into the parking lot of a neighboring car dealership. Maribeth Smith, an employee of the car dealership said she is convinced she saw human body parts mixed in with the sewage. She took photographs, believing the human tissue came from the clinic.

‘Whether it’s legal or not, it’s not right,’ Smith said. ‘This whole area is nothing but raw sewage and bloody pieces. There were little legs coming out from one side.’

Three of the four whistleblowers from Karpen’s clinic – Deborah Edge, Gigi Aguliar, and Krystal Rodriguez – allowed Life Dynamics to film them telling about their unimaginable experiences while working for Karpen. The video, below, is a must-see for any American. If Americans are willing to support abortion, they must ask themselves if they are truly willing to accept the inhuman horrors that come along with it.

Operation Rescue reports that the women from Karpen’s clinic brought evidence with them when they left. They took photos on their cell phones of illegally murdered babies.

In both cases, the babies’ skin is pink, noting a lack of masceration, an early form of decomposition that happens in babies that die in the womb. Massive bruising on the extremities of one of the babies indicates the baby’s heart was pulsing with life when the trauma was inflicted likely when grasping instruments latched on to bring the baby down into the birth canal. The eyes of the other child are open in a nightmarish expression of pain, revealing development greater than 26-28 weeks. Both sets of photos were taken sometime in 2011.

Deborah Edge, who worked as a surgical assistant, explicitly described how – and how often – Karpen would kill newborn babies:

When he did an abortion, especially an over 20 week abortion, most of the time the fetus would come completely out before he cut the spinal cord or he introduced one of the instruments into the soft spot of the fetus, in order to kill the fetus. …

I think every morning I saw several, on several occasions. … If we had 20-something patients, of course ten, or twelve, or fifteen patients would be large procedures, and out of those large procedures, I’m pretty sure that I was seeing at least three or four fetuses that were completely delivered in some way or another.

Edge continued to reveal even more mind-blowing information about Karpen’s actions:

She described how some babies would emerge too soon and would be alive, moving, and breathing. She also told of how Karpen would sometimes deliver the babies feet first with the toes wiggling until he stabbed them with a surgical implement. At the moment the toes would suddenly splay out before going limp. Sometimes he would kill the babies by ‘twisting the head off the neck,’ according to Edge.

But not all the babies came out intact. When there was difficulty, Karpen would dismember them, a process that was, according to the surgical assistant Deborah Edge, a bloody mess.

‘Sometimes he couldn’t get the fetus out,’ she explained. ‘He would yank pieces – piece by piece – when they were oversize. And I’m talking about the whole floor dirty. I’m talking about me drenched in blood.’

The U.K.’s Daily Mail describes the women’s tragic account of one baby who attempted to hold on for dear life at Karpen’s clinic, and failed.

The women described one occasion where a fetus that Karpen thought was dead suddenly ‘opened its eyes and grabbed (the doctor’s) finger’ after he wrenched it from the womb. However, it met a similar fate to the other fetuses at the clinic, the women said.

Breitbart also reported on the video expose of Karpen’s clinic which demonstrated that Karpen purposely risked the lives of women who came to him for abortions.

Rodriguez also accused the abortionist of showing disregard for the safety of his patients. She indicated that he would sometimes insert the instruments through the woman’s stomach if it was the easiest way to kill the baby.

Edge also claimed that she routinely observed Karpen ‘hurting patients on the table’ and not telling victims of botched abortions that he had lacerated their cervix or uterus.

A third former employee, Gigi Aguilar, alleged, ‘If he had a patient that asked a lot of questions, he would prefer for them to be put to sleep.’

‘The women who go there had no idea what they were getting themselves into,’ Edge said.

The numbingly ugly truth about Douglas Karpen’s clinic demonstrates that, despite claims from Planned Parenthood, NARAL, and other abortion supporters, Kermit Gosnell was not alone. He was not an aberration. When women, doctors, and clinic workers are sucked into the lie that abortion is just a matter of simple “choice,” they are all too often blinded to the fact that it never ends there. Gosnell, Karpen, Nicola Riley, LeRoy Carhartand others – demonstrate that abortion is nothing but the horrific taking of innocent children’s lives. Such a “choice” should never be allowed in a civilized society.

Two weeks ago, after intense pressure from pro-life activists and a demand from Lt. Governor David Dewhurst, the Harris County District Attorney’s Office announced that it would look into the former workers’ claims against Karpen. The Texas Department of State Health Services also claims to be investigating the facts.

Pro-lifers ought to keep the pressure on and ensure that a full investigation is truly performed so that Karpen can be brought to justice. You can contact the following Texas government officials to ask that the investigation continue in an appropriate and thorough way. You can also get updated about Karpen and participate in action items by visiting the Texas Gosnell website.

Mike Anderson, District Attorney Harris County, Texas

1201 Franklin Street, Suite 600, Houston, Texas 77002-1923

Voice: (713)-755-5800

E-Mail: Armand_Stephanie@dao.hctx.net

Greg Abbott, Attorney General of Texas

Office of the Attorney General

PO Box 12548

Austin, TX 78711-2548

Voice: (512) 463-2050

E-Mail: robert.allen@texasattorneygeneral.gov

Texas Medical Board

333 Guadalupe

Tower 3, Suite 610

Austin, TX 78701

Voice: (512) 305-7010

E-Mail: verifcic@tmb.state.tx.us

LifeNews Note:  Kristi Burton Brown is a pro-life activist in her home state of Colorado, a pro-bono attorney for Life Legal Defense Fund, and a stay-at-home mom. This column originally appeared at Live Action News and is reprinted with permission.

HERE ARE SOME CLUES TO SOLVING THE MYSTERY OF WHAT IS HAPPENING TO THE CHURCH IN IRELAND

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St Patrick’s Cathedral, Armagh, County Armagh was founded on Saint Patrick’s Day, 1840.

The truth on abortion history in Ireland

 “Amongst the ‘purists,’ the troublesome pro-lifers with the ‘fundamentalist view’ that Austin derides, we have the Holy Father and the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.”

 “Lord save us from the Purists” – A Reply to Austin Ruse and the Irish Referendum on Abortion

Protection for the unborn in Ireland has remained strong since the defeat of a divisive referendum in 2002 that would have allowed abortion until implantation. The pro-life forces defeated what would have been legalization of abortion for the first time in Ireland. In recent months, some of the Irish groups involved in the current abortion debate have been promoting the idea among American pro-lifers that somehow the current crisis and near legalization of abortion in Ireland today is to be blamed on the pro-lifers who, alongside the majority of the Irish people, defeated the insidious 2002 referendum.

This is pertinent at the moment, because the groups that have led in this retelling of history to American pro-life supporters are unwilling to tell the truth about the matter. And it is important for America’s pro-life organizations to be aware of the facts.

Prominent among these unreliable groups is the Pro Life Campaign (PLC). This group was instrumental in secretly negotiating with the government in 2002 and then campaigned for the 2002 bill that would have not only allowed abortion for the first time in Ireland, but also repealed the law that until then had criminalized abortion: the Offences Against the Person Act of 1861. This law has been enormously helpful in keeping Ireland abortion-free. Also adding its voice to the chorus telling the fictitious story that authentic pro-life organizations are to blame for today’s push by the abortion industry is the Iona Institute.

This is all crucial to the current struggle in Ireland. For this month, Mr. Enda Kenny (the Irish prime minister) made public his legislation to introduce abortion in Ireland. As expected, once again, the center of the pro-abortion campaign is the repeal of the law that criminalizes abortion in Ireland: the Offences Against the Person Act of 1861. Kenny’s proposed legislation not only violates fundamental human rights, international guarantees given to Ireland in the European Union, and the Constitution of Ireland, but also would allow abortion up to nine months under certain circumstances. The government is holding hearings and attempting to co-opt Catholics to bless the proposal.

I state from the outset that the facts about the 2002 referendum need to be told, because the two groups rewriting history about that battle 11 years ago – the PLC and the Iona Institute – are doctrinally and politically unreliable. The PLC are mostly paid lobbyists, who have proven completely ineffective (and expensive) in swaying any of their political friends to defend the culture of life.

In their efforts to promote themselves and retell the facts, these groups unfortunately enlisted Mr. Austin Ruse, of the New York City-based Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute (CFAM). Ruse’s assigned role, it seems, has been to simply regurgitate the false claims of the Iona Institute and the PLC regarding the 2002 referendum. He did this in the pages of Crisis magazine on March 1, 2013. His article, “Lord, Save Us From the Purists,” was factually incorrect, irresponsible, and damaging to the people who are really doing the pro-life work in Ireland. In it, Ruse attempts to blame the current crisis in Ireland on the pro-life groups that defeated the 2002 attempt to legalize abortion in Ireland.

Austin Ruse Acted Irresponsibly

As to the facts of the matter: I talked to Austin on the phone just weeks ahead of his foray into the Irish abortion question. When we spoke, he told me he did not know the ins and outs of the abortion situation in Ireland. With this I fully agree.

The first line of his article exhibits a tremendous lack of balance and objectivity: Ireland is on the verge of making abortion legal in some circumstances and the fault can be laid on the doorstep of a tiny handful of misguided pro-lifers ten years ago.” What a remarkable accusation. In fact, the pro-life groups he blames – the so-called purists – have been tirelessly working to keep Ireland abortion-free.

As is obvious to anyone with common sense, the drive for legalized abortion continues to be a problem in Ireland, because the pro-abortion forces will not relent. Austin claims that ultimately allowing the pre-implanted human being (as the 2002 referendum required) to be sacrificed was necessary, and was the correct pro-life position, in order to prevent the greater evil of more abortions down the line. This theory is philosophically and theologically incorrect and opposed to reason and the Catholic faith. The easy deal Austin proposes is the precise reason why pro-life benefactors in America ought to closely watch the Iona Institute and the PLC for doctrinally erroneous and politically unreliable activity.

Austin argues vigorously that the “no” vote against the 2002 referendum is the cause of the current crisis. His forceful attack on the pro-life forces for defeating the abortion referendum is at best misleading. He fails to tell the reader that he was among the seven international pro-life leaders that at the time of the referendum (2002) who signed a scathing letter claiming that it was immoral to vote for the referendum. Now, he adamantly supports it.

The PLC and their newfound friends in the U.S. have been approaching benefactors, telling false stories about the work that they do and the problem of the “purists,” who are to blame for the abortion crisis in Ireland. Scorched-earth tactics such as these are not how we in America raise funds. Austin needs to cease lobbying for these groups and be honest.

Ruse’s incredible attack on the “purists” who voted “no” on the 2002 referendum is deceptive. In February of 2002, a group of international pro-life leaders wrote a scathing letter objecting to Cardinal Connell’s decision to agree to the “yes” vote in the 2002 referendum, and it accused the referendum of opening the door to abortion on demand. The letter stated, contrary to Ruse’s most recent claims, that “Catholics informed of the bishops’ views on the issue were free in conscience to vote differently[.]” Ruse’s letter at the time also stated that the Irish bishops were wrong on the referendum. It stated, “We believe that Christians cannot in good conscience support either the Bill’s specific proposals or the bill as a whole.”

Amongst the signatories of the very direct and “purist” letter was Mr. Austin Ruse himself.

Austin has accomplished a 180-degree flip-flop. Please note that the interpretation of Evangelium Vitae No. 73, which Ruse now uses to attack the pro-life movement, is the same exact argument he used in 2002 to attack the “yes” vote on the referendum. His attack on pro-lifers today in Ireland is incredible when in 2002 he was writing to support the “no” vote. Notice another irony: the man he attacks in his recent Crisis article, John Smeaton, is the name on the 2002 letter right below Austin’s own signature as the president of Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute (C-FAM). (Readers may review the full text of the letter, posted at the website of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, here.)

More ironic, Crisis also signed the letter for a “no” vote in 2002.

I believe that Austin should consider apologizing publicly and retract what he said in his Crisis article. What he wrote, in my view, is unbalanced, factually incorrect, and completely unnecessary. His present position is quite contrary to his own “purist” position at the time of the referendum.

The Facts About the 2002 Referendum

But Austin is also completely misinformed about the 2002 referendum on abortion and how it relates to the present debate. He writes today, “The last national referendum happened in 2002 that would have put unambiguous protection for unborn children in the Irish Constitution.” He further claims that “… all mainstreams pro-life groups enthusiastically supported the referendum.” Facts matter, and Ruse ignores what actually took place.

Ruse had not read the 2002 referendum bill in question when we spoke recently. The bill was intended to amend the Irish Constitution, which according to Irish law can be done only by national referendum. The “yes” vote, which Ruse laments did not take place, would have for the first time introduced abortion into Ireland as a constitutional right. The referendum wording states this plainly (emphasis added): “1.–(1) In this Act, ‘abortion’ means the intentional destruction by any means of unborn life after implantation in the womb of a woman.”

This past May 13, at the Pro-Life March in Rome, Ireland’s delegation from the Life Institute addressed the crowd on the current crisis and the fight to defend both woman and child from the moment of conception to natural death. This “purist” position that Austin Ruse scorns in his article was ratified that same day, when Pope Francis made a surprise visit among the pro-life “purists” to urge them to stay focused on the protection of life. His words in part, earlier that day from St. Peter’s square, should leave no doubt that Austin Ruse’s position (today) in the Crisis article is doctrinally incorrect. Ruse claims that voting to permit the death of the embryo in its first days was philosophically and theologically the correct “deal” for the Irish people in 2002. Yet Pope Francis’s words yesterday were quite unequivocal (emphasis added): “I greet the participants of the March for Life which took place this morning in Rome and invite everyone to stay focused on the important issue of respect for human life, from the moment of conception…I am pleased to recall the petition that today takes place in many Italian parishes, in order to support the initiative European ‘One of Us’ to ensure legal protection to the embryo, protecting every human being from the first moment of its existence.”

Austin recommends the Iona Institute and the PLC, but the latter was singlehandedly the most vociferous force trying to put pressure on pro-lifers in Ireland to vote “yes” on the 2002 referendum abortion bill. For years, these two organizations have been blaming the pro-lifers for the current crisis and their refusal to concede on abortion if even at the expense of human life in its most early stages. Now, Austin seems to agree with them.

The referendum was not enthusiastically supported, as Austin claims, by, “all mainstream pro-life groups[.]” In fact, only one group was chosen by the Fianna Fail government as a negotiating partner at that time: the PLC. This was undoubtedly because the PLC, known as a lobby group, has at its head a paid politician who, at the time, was a member of the same political party that was introducing abortion into Ireland. Undoubtedly, Austin realizes that moral freedom to defend life gets blurry when political ambitions come into play. The government knew that the PLC was quite malleable. The majority of the pro-life groups opposed the referendum had in fact met with PLC leadership ahead of the referendum, to make clear that in no way was the PLC speaking on behalf of the pro-life community in Ireland. A member of the PLC executive board resigned as soon as he understood the “deal” the PLC was prepared to make on life issues.

The current legislation requires a sound rejection by the Irish people, not another negotiation about who will be sacrificed and up to what time period.

Austin also fails to mention that even the pastoral letter of the Irish bishops at the time was not designed to trade lives in an easy “deal,” as he claims. Doing what Austin and the PLC wanted, a deal that would allow the killing of some in the hope that more lives would be preserved, was not the intention of the Irish bishops.

This facile “deal,” and the trivialization of the issue by Austin, is astonishing. In fact, the bishops’ letter at the time stated (emphasis added), “But even if the proposal is enacted, outstanding issues remain…in particular we are concerned that adequate and clear legal protection be offered to the unborn prior to implantation. This is urgent in view of what is happening and what is likely to happen in the area of cloning and research on human embryos, and also in the area of assisted reproduction where particular problems arise regarding the storage and disposal of human embryos. It is of vital importance that embryos are never treated other than as human persons whose inherent dignity are valued and vindicated.”

The great divergence was not on the fact that the Church in Ireland was willing to trade some lives for others. The Irish government had given guarantees that would be made explicit after the referendum regarding destructive embryo research. The pro-life community felt this was not enough, and that the government, with all the European pressures, would eventually collapse and not protect the pre-implanted embryo. The Church never affirmed, as Ruse, claims, that the “deal” was morally acceptable to the bishops.

Much information and the true intentions of the government became clearer as events unfolded. Even at the time of their letter, the bishops stated, “In this regard, we are about to make a substantial submission to the Government Commission on assisted Human Reproduction, setting out in detail our moral concerns in this area.” Years after the referendum, the above commission produced its results, and it was then clear that the bishops’ substantial moral concerns had indeed (as the pro-life community had predicted) been ignored.

The pro-life community ran out of time because, by the time the PLC revealed the wording of the amendment offered in the referendum, the deal was non-negotiable. It is largely believed that had the PLC worked on the side of the pro-life community, the changes in the constitutional amendment wording could have been accomplished. But they did not. The PLC refused to make the wording of the referendum available to the rest of the pro-life community and even to a member of the European Parliament, pro-life leader Dana Scallon. This until it was too late.

The Iona Institute and the PLC have repeatedly peddled the false “purist” narrative that had they won the referendum, all would be swell in Ireland. They have to this day been blaming the majority of Irish people and the pro-life community for the problem of abortion. This is a fantasy to justify their poor rationale for pushing the “yes” vote.

The Church Did Not Back the “Yes” Vote

Mr. Ruse falsely states that the whole Catholic Church was enthusiastically for the “yes” vote. The pastoral letter of the bishops of Ireland, as well as individual bishops, gave assurances that Catholics could in good conscience vote “no.” The bishops wrote (emphasis added), “We share the concern of many groups and individuals, (hardly the “tiny minority” Ruse describes as purists), that the new proposal strengthens legal protection for the unborn only after implantation in the womb. We understand the reluctance… to vote for a measure which does not seem to vindicate the right to life of the unborn from the moment of conception.” In fact, the papal nuncio at the time, Archbishop Lazzarotto, also stated that a “no” vote was in no way contrary to Catholic doctrine.

Roderick J. O’Hanlon, as former High Court judge in Ireland and president of the Law Reform Commission, described the proposal at the time as “intrinsically evil,” adding that the “yes” vote would have “definitely liberalized Irish abortion law[.]” Mr. John Rogers, who was attorney general in Ireland from 1984-1987, wrote a 2002 open letter to caution Cardinal Desmond Connell that his belief that pre-implanted embryos would be protected was not solid in law. He wrote, “Would the protection extend to the unborn prior to implantation in the womb as Cardinal Connell contends?” (Note that the cardinal was not striking deals of lesser evils, or voting for laws that would sacrifice the unborn before implantation to secure further prohibitions on abortion down the line. This may be Austin Ruse’s position and that of his friends, but it is an error in fact and a falsification of the Church’s position at the time. The cardinal agreed that the non-protection of the pre-implanted embryo was unacceptable but believed that perhaps this would not come to pass.)

Experience in the pro-life movement teaches that strict wording is essential to prevent abortion on demand from infiltrating a nation. Attorney General Rogers, along with many in the pro-life community and the majority of the Irish people, did not buy the government’s assurances. Ruse’s position is not Catholic doctrine – not by a long shot. In the 2002 open letter to Cardinal Connell, Rogers continues, “… it cannot be stated with any confidence that the Constitution, as amended by the addition of article 40.3.4 will protect ‘the life of the unborn in the womb’ before implantation, which is what Cardinal Connell contends to be the case…Accordingly, I feel I must say that the Cardinal’s assurance to those opposed to abortion on this issue is unconvincing and one which it would be unwise for them to rely.”

The support for the 2002 referendum was anything but an “enthusiastic” majority. In fact, most Irish citizens did not even vote. Ruse paints what I can describe only as a fictitious picture of what took place. The medical and political community were also completely divided. Moreover, Professor Charles Rice of Notre Dame University also warned against the proposal.

By February of 2002, plans for the referendum to take place in March 2002 already had produced signs of the ominous dangers that were coming to Ireland. One month before the vote, the government had assigned 30 hospitals where the “procedures” would be taking place. The “procedures” would require the “reasonable opinion” of one practitioner, and furthermore, medical records of the “procedure” would not be subject to any sort of scrutiny. It would be helpful to recall that in the U.K., two signatures were required, but none of that prevented what is today virtually abortion on demand in England. It is utterly naive of Ruse to believe that once abortion has its foot in the door, it can be halted forever. Where has he been all these years? Please.

Battle against Destructive Embryonic Research

Austin Ruse also fails to understand the other complications attached to the bill. Besides introducing abortion in the early stages as a constitutional right and decriminalizing the practice of abortion in Ireland, the other big battle that was being fought was against the IVF industry and the embryonic destructive research lobby, which were seeking access to pre-implanted embryos. The European position allowed destructive research of the human embryo up to 14 days (that is, before implantation). Mr. Ruse is surely unaware that the European Parliament had voted the use of $17.5 billion of taxpayers’ funds (this despite it being illegal not only in Ireland, but also in other member-states) for embryonic stem cell research. Of this colossal amount, $300 million was to be dedicated, in a budget line item, to destructive embryo research. Ireland’s legal protection had always been interpreted as protecting life from conception, and in this regard, it stood incompatible with the European Union’s policy for the destructive embryo research industry to have access to human life in the first 14 days.

At the time of the 2002 referendum, lobby groups had also tried to pass an amendment for “therapeutic cloning.” The European Union was also pushing to decriminalize the use of “supernumerary” embryos. This was illegal in countries such as Germany, Austria, and Italy, who were asking the Irish to support blocking the legislation. Clearly, failing in Ireland to protect the pre-implanted embryo would have had greater consequences than Austin’s shallow commentary explains. The Irish government, which was pushing the referendum with the help of the PLC, did not join the coalition to block funding for destructive embryonic research, and clearly the stakes at the referendum were getting even higher.

Three days before the referendum, it was reported that one of the major hospitals in Ireland would have access to EU funding for human embryo research if the referendum were to pass. Congressmen in the United States were fully aware of the push for a “yes” vote from the embryo research industry. All that Ruse needs to do is ask people such as Congressman Chris Smith (R-NJ), who was working with Dana Scallon and others to stop the mad rush to destroy human life in Ireland and in Europe. The bishops’ position was never the position that Austin Ruse proclaims: to do evil that greater evils may be avoided.

Instruction from Dignitas Personae

Doctrinally, amongst the “purists,” the troublesome pro-lifers with the “fundamentalist view” which Austin derides, we have the Holy Father and the Magisterium of the Catholic Church.

In the instruction Dignitas Personae from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the pesky “purists” again rear their ugly heads for Ruse & Company. States Dignitas Personae (emphasis added): “It is appropriate to recall the fundamental ethical criterion… in order to evaluate all moral questions which relate to procedures involving the human embryo: Thus the fruit of human generation, from the first moment of its existence… from the moment the zygote has formed, demands unconditional respect that is morally due to the human being…the human being is to be respected and treated as a person from the moment of conception; and therefore from that same moment his rights as a person must be recognized…” (no.6) Furthermore, Dignitas Personae states, “… This ethical principle, which reason is capable of recognizing as true and in conformity with the natural law, should be the basis for all legislation in this area.”(No.7).

It seems the Irish majority is indeed quite “purist.” The new papal nuncio in Ireland, Archbishop Charles Brown, stated recently that “2013 is an incredibly important one for the sanctity of human life in Ireland… Peoples of conscience from all religions and no religion need to work vigorously and courageously to protect and nurture human life from conception to natural death.” The four Catholic Archbishops of Ireland had this to say: “The dignity of the human person and the common good of humanity depend on our respect for the right to life of every person from the moment of conception to natural death.”

A few years after the referendum, pro-life leader Dana Scallon (whom Austin scorns in his article) would receive the prestigious San Benedetto award for her pro-life work in Europe. The following year, the award was given to Cardinal Ratzinger. Why Austin is taking aim at Mrs. Scallon at this late hour is beyond me.

Decriminalizing Abortion via Repeal of the 1861 Act

But there are more, and more important, particulars about the 2002 referendum that must be understood. The referendum, which Ruse praises, would have also repealed a crucial item of Irish law: the Offences Against the Person Act of 1861. This statute forbids abortion, making abortion a criminal offense. This 1861 law has been ridiculed by some of the groups which lobbied to vote “yes” on the referendum – principally the Pro Life Campaign, which derides it as Victorian and outdated.

The particular articles in the 1861 Act that would have been repealed by the 2002 referendum are exactly what Prime Minister Enda Kenny wants repealed in his current abortion legislation. Included for the present legislation is the repeal of the same articles that would have been abolished in 2002. This includes Article #58, which reads: “Every woman being with child, who with intent to procure her own miscarriage (abortion) shall unlawfully administer to herself any poison or other noxious thing or shall unlawfully use any instrument or other means whatsoever with the like intent, and whomsoever, with intent to procure the miscarriage of any woman…shall administer to her or cause to be taken by her any poison or other noxious thing, or shall unlawfully use any instrument…shall be guilty of felony.”

Article #59 of the 1861 Act was intended to punish not only the person procuring an abortion and those who perform abortions, but also those who supply the means for an abortion. These persons, according to the 1861 Act, “…shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” Ruse fails to see what he saw clearly in 2002: that voting to decriminalize abortion is not the proper application of voting for an imperfect law, and the claim to prevent the greater evil by voting for a lesser evil does not apply when voting to decriminalize abortion.

Dana Scallon, who is one of the targets of Austin’s scathing criticism, was at the time of Austin’s article unveiling a new coalition between North and South, Protestants and Catholics, united in the defense of life from the moment of conception and the 1861 Law. The impressive coalition had letters of support from Lord David Alton, Lord Nicholas Windsor (member of the Pontifical Academy for Life), the government of Malta (the only other nation in Europe where abortion is criminal from the moment of conception), and Mr. Luca Volentè, one of the champions in Europe of the pro-life cause. These “purists,” who Ruse claims are causing a crisis in Ireland, are known to those of us who work for the pro-life cause in Europe as unimpeachable defenders of life in the international public square and leaders who have stood squarely against the onslaught of the pro-abortion lobby.

It should be telling for Mr. Ruse to know that recently in Knock, Ireland, a majority of pro-life groups met under the leadership of an Irish bishop to affirm the defense of the 1861 Act and the protection of life from the moment of conception.

It should also give Mr. Ruse pause to consider two things. The repeal of the 1861 Act, which would have happened ten years ago if Ruse (by his thinking today) and some of the groups he recommends would have had their way, would have been in clear contradiction to the intervention of Pope Benedict XVI, one day before the parliamentary hearings in Dublin this year. I was in Dublin at the time. From Rome, the pope stated his “… dismay that, in various countries, even those of Christian tradition, efforts are being made to introduce or expand legislation which decriminalizes abortion.” The pontiff’s message was unmistakable: voting or legislating to decriminalize abortion is contrary to Catholic doctrine. The papal intervention made front-page news in Ireland. It is high time for Ruse and his friends to stop rewriting history.

Austin’s trusted advisor on all things Irish, Mr. David Quinn (Iona Institute), would have no problem with much of this doctrinal divergence from Catholicism. Quinn is on record as having no issue with contraception and a host of other things. Quinn has been evolving doctrinally (I admit), but I submit he is still unreliable. Writes Quinn (emphasis added), “O’Toole’s problem is with pro-life Catholics, or ‘fundamentalists[.]’ … About some such Catholics he is right, but they are a dwindling minority. I am an orthodox Christian and Catholic, but I supported the decriminalization of homosexuality. I was for divorce…I believe if people want to use contraception, that is their right. More recently I opposed those who were against the provision of a vasectomy service in Donegal hospital I also supported removing churches form state-funded schools[.]”

Why is Mr. Ruse recommending these individuals to the American pro-life community? I certainly do not. I respectfully disagree, and I think the American pro-life community needs to be aware. I hold for the reasons stated in this article and others that these groups, although well-connected in politics and the Church, are in fact doctrinally and in action not reliable.

Real Pro-life Leaders in Ireland

The national campaign being waged against the Irish government’s efforts to legalize abortion has been led by two other groups which opposed the 2002 referendum. The January 20, 2013 rally that took place in Dublin was organized and led by Youth Defence and the Life Institute, more “purists” by Ruse’s calculation. These groups are holding weekly town hall meetings to defeat candidates who are willing to vote for abortion. They have funded a media campaign in newspapers and direct mail appeals to the Irish nation, asking citizens to oppose abortion on grounds of suicidal ideation in pregnant women.

This coalition is now in the process of collecting 100,000 pledges of Irish citizens who vow never to vote for the majority party, Fine Gael, if it brings abortion legislation forward.

Church Teaching on Imperfect Laws

Mr. Ruse, ten years after the referendum he writes about, still fails to grasp the teaching of the Church regarding the doctrine on imperfect laws, explained in Evangelium Vitae No. 73. On September 18, 2002, just months after the 2002 referendum in Ireland, the official Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, provided the needed clarification. Their coverage was intended for theologians, so that they could help people understand correctly the Holy Father’s view on why the support for imperfect laws on abortion is possible. The task of explaining this was assigned to Professor Angel Luño of the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross. L’Osservatore Romano carried Luño’s argument in full.

When explaining what is unjust about pro-abortion laws, Professor Luño stated (emphasis added), “ Not only are those laws seriously unjust which allow the state to attack a human right, but also those through which the state fails in its duty to prohibit and punish…the violation of fundamental human rights by others…” The evil is not merely in the promotion of abortion but in the decriminalization of abortion in law, “…there is a moral obligation not to follow the provisions, to oppose them civilly… But there is, above all, the duty of doing everything legitimately possible to repeal such laws.”

Defeating the 2002 Referendum in Ireland, which was trying to enshrine abortion as a constitutional right in Ireland, was the existing moral duty at the time.

Only after repeal of an unjust law has failed can one consider lessening the impact of the “law” by voting for imperfect legislation, and this only under certain conditions. States Luño in L’Osservatore Romano, in explaining the doctrine, two key principles need to be maintained (emphasis added): “The first states, that “although it is true that it is at times lawful to tolerate a lesser moral evil in order to avoid a greater… it is never lawful, even for the greatest of reasons, to do evil that good may come of it… even though the intention is to promote the welfare of an individual, of a family or of a society in general” (emphasis added) (Humanae Vitae, no. 14). Writes Luño: “No one may licitly carry out the command to kill ten innocent people in order to prevent the killing of thirty. What is intrinsically evil cannot be the direct object of the will, no matter what the cost.”

But there was another prohibition which the Irish people were able to understand, thanks to the “purists” whom Austin derides. Writes Luño: “The second principle concerns cooperation: ‘it is never licit to cooperate formally in evil.’ This is defined as, ‘… a direct participation in an act against innocent human life, of a sharing in the moral intention of the person committing it’ (John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, n. 74).” Explains Luño, “It is not morally possible to collaborate in the creation or application of a seriously unjust law, for example, those which permit abortion or promote abortion (cf., John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, nn. 72-74).”

You cannot vote to introduce abortion, hoping to avoid further problems in the future. It’s that simple.

Professor Luño then presents a discussion by Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican’s current secretary of state, of three scenarios to aid in understanding the issue of support for morally imperfect legislation and guide in a proper application of Evangelium Vitae, No. 73. Cardinal Bertone’s presentation was titled “Catholics and pluralist society: ‘imperfect laws’ and the responsibility of legislators.” Bertone’s third scenario was the Irish case. The cardinal defines this third scenario as follows: “Third scenario: This is the situation of a country where abortion is illegal. Changes in public opinion, the position of political groups, and other factors make it reasonably certain that within a short period of time it will be impossible to prevent the approval of a very permissive law on abortion. The following problem then arises: would it be morally licit to take the initiative, with the intention of forestalling a further worsening of the situation, by promoting a law which depenalizes abortion in just a few cases  -  rigorously defined  -  and which would also contain serious provisions aimed at preventing abortion?”

Luño explains why the answer to this question should also be negative, and why it does not meet the requirements of proper philosophical and Catholic doctrine: “The fundamental reason is that, in this case, the backers of the law would be morally responsible for a seriously unjust law and one which also represents a worsening of the prior legal situation, even if it might be relatively positive in comparison with a possible or probable future legal situation. One should not take the initiative of making oneself responsible for something in itself morally wrong in order that others do not do something worse. (This is required by the moral principle presented in Humanae Vitae, N. 14.) Furthermore, he wrote, “…Public statements by persons who in some way represent the Church, call for particular prudence, so that certain criteria or prudential positions are not interpreted erroneously as doctrinal positions in favor of laws which do not guarantee complete protection for human life.”

Austin Ruse, a respected person in the pro-life movement and a friend, lamentably paints a distorted picture of the 2002 referendum. It is also quite unclear why Austin is trying to litigate after ten years these issues, at this critical hour.

Everyone can judge for him- or herself. But we do our duty to correct Mr. Ruse’s misleading and aggressive article in Crisis magazine, as it is factually incorrect not only about the 2002 referendum in Ireland, but also about the current situation and who the players working to keep abortion out of Ireland really are. It conceals the facts of his own position on the 2002 referendum.

One hates to publicly contradict a friend who normally is more accurate and careful on pro-life matters. But on the Irish question, Austin proves to be an unreliable guide.

STORED UMBILICAL CORD BLOOD STEM CELLS CAN SAVE THE BABY’S LIFE AS WELL AS THE LIVES OF RELATIVES

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BABY SAVED BY GIVING IT BACK SOME OF ITS OWN UMBILICAL CORD STEM CELLS

by Wesley J. Smith

  • Thu Jun 06, 2013 18:18 EST

Wow. A child with cerebral palsy who suffered a cardiac arrest and became – they thought – permanently unconscious, appears to have been successfully treated with his own stored umbilical cord blood stem cells [https://alphacord.com/videos2.htm].

From the Science Daily story:

Bochum’s medics have succeeded in treating cerebral palsy with autologous cord blood. Following a cardiac arrest with severe brain damage, a 2.5 year old boy had been in a persistent vegetative state — with minimal chances of survival. Just two months after treatment with the cord blood containing stem cells, the symptoms improved significantly; over the following months, the child learned to speak simple sentences and to move.

We should be careful not to assume this means a cure, but look at this progress!

After the cord blood therapy, the patient, however, recovered relatively quickly. Within two months, the spasticity decreased significantly. He was able to see, sit, smile, and to speak simple words again. Forty months after treatment, the child was able to eat independently, walk with assistance, and form four-word sentences. “Of course, on the basis of these results, we cannot clearly say what the cause of the recovery is,” Jensen says. “It is, however, very difficult to explain these remarkable effects by purely symptomatic treatment during active rehabilitation.”

This heartening story raises several issues, among which are: First, ethical stem cell research offers tremendous hope. Second, unconcious child patients are sometimes dehydrated to death based on the belief they can never recover. If that doesn’t give you pause…

 ……………………………………………………………………………………..

Science News

… from universities, journals, and other research organizations

First Successful Treatment of Pediatric Cerebral Palsy With Autologous Cord Blood: Awoken from a Persistent Vegetative State

May 23, 2013 — Bochum’s medics have succeeded in treating cerebral palsy with autologous cord blood. Following a cardiac arrest with severe brain damage, a 2.5 year old boy had been in a persistent vegetative state — with minimal chances of survival. Just two months after treatment with the cord blood containing stem cells, the symptoms improved significantly; over the following months, the child learned to speak simple sentences and to move.


 

“Our findings, along with those from a Korean study, dispel the long-held doubts about the effectiveness of the new therapy,” says Dr. Arne Jensen of the Campus Clinic Gynaecology. Together with his colleague Prof. Dr. Eckard Hamelmann of the Department of Paediatrics at the Catholic Hospital Bochum (University Clinic of the RUB), he reports in the journal Case Reports in Transplantation.

The parents searched the literature for treatment options

At the end of November 2008, the child suffered from cardiac arrest with severe brain damage and was subsequently in a persistent vegetative state with his body paralysed. Up to now, there has been no treatment for the cause of what is known as infantile cerebral palsy. “In their desperate situation, the parents searched the literature for alternative therapies,” Arne Jensen explains. “They contacted us and asked about the possibilities of using their son’s cord blood, frozen at his birth.”

“Threatening, if not hopeless prognosis”

Nine weeks after the brain damage, on 27 January 2009, the doctors administered the prepared blood intravenously. They studied the progress of recovery at 2, 5, 12, 24, 30, and 40 months after the insult. Usually, the chances of survival after such a severe brain damage and more than 25 minutes duration of resuscitation are six per cent. Months after the severe brain damage, the surviving children usually only exhibit minimal signs of consciousness. “The prognosis for the little patient was threatening if not hopeless,” the Bochum medics say.

Rapid recovery after cord blood therapy

After the cord blood therapy, the patient, however, recovered relatively quickly. Within two months, the spasticity decreased significantly. He was able to see, sit, smile, and to speak simple words again. Forty months after treatment, the child was able to eat independently, walk with assistance, and form four-word sentences. “Of course, on the basis of these results, we cannot clearly say what the cause of the recovery is,” Jensen says. “It is, however, very difficult to explain these remarkable effects by purely symptomatic treatment during active rehabilitation.”

In animal studies, stem cells migrate to damaged brain tissue

In animal studies, scientists have been researching the therapeutic potential of cord blood for some time. In a previous study with rats, RUB researchers revealed that cord blood cells migrate to the damaged area of ​​the brain in large numbers within 24 hours of administration. In March 2013, in a controlled study of one hundred children, Korean doctors reported for the first time that they had successfully treated cerebral palsy with allogeneic cord blood.

 

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ruhr-Universitaet-Bochum.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. A. Jensen, E. Hamelmann. First Autologous Cell Therapy of Cerebral Palsy Caused by Hypoxic-Ischemic Brain Damage in a Child after Cardiac Arrest—Individual Treatment with Cord Blood. Case Reports in Transplantation, 2013; 2013: 1 DOI: 10.1155/2013/951827
Need to cite this story in your essay, paper, or report? Use one of the following formats:

APAMLA
Ruhr-Universitaet-Bochum (2013, May 23). First successful treatment of pediatric cerebral palsy with autologous cord blood: Awoken from a persistent vegetative state. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 7, 2013, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2013/05/130523101822.htm

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

 


BRAVO BISHOP THOMAS PAPROCKI FOR TELLING IT AS IT IS TO A JESUIT PRO-GAY MARRIAGE CROWD

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Bishop tells hostile crowd at gay marriage debate: my secretary was murdered by a gay activist

by John-Henry Westen

  • Wed Jun 05, 2013 17:43 EST

PHOENIX, June 5, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) – In what is being acknowledged even by liberal Catholics as a courageous move, Springfield, IL Bishop Thomas Paprocki debated dissident nun Sr. Jeannine Gramick on the topic of gay “marriage” before a decidedly gay-friendly crowd on Friday. In a shocking revelation in his opening remarks, the bishop told the crowd that his former secretary was brutally murdered by a gay activist simply for suggesting that he change his lifestyle.

Heckling and insults from the crowd and were expected and received as the bishop laid out the argument in favor of traditional marriage, after which he concluded, “some of you may be sneering, and I might be lucky if you said you were willing to hear me again on this topic some other time… In the end, I hope that at least a few of you will agree with my remarks.”

Bishop Thomas Paprocki

Moderated by journalist Robert Blair Kaiser, the event was held at Shadow Rock United Church of Christ Church.

The Jesuit alumni of Arizona, which organized the event, called it “Two Catholic Views on Marriage,” but in his remarks Bishop Paprocki was quick to point out that was a misnomer. “I corrected that, since there is only one authentic Catholic view,” said the bishop. “There are two views being presented here tonight by two people who are baptized Catholics, but only one of those views, the one I will present, is consistent with Catholic teaching, while the other view clearly dissents from Catholic teaching.”

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Bishop Paprocki began his address to the crowd powerfully noting the media discrepancy in covering the Matthew Shepard murder and that of his own former secretary, a mother of four, who was killed by a homosexual man for urging him to change his gay lifestyle.

“A Google search on the Internet for the name ‘Matthew Shepard’ at one time produced 11,900,000 results,” said the bishop. “Matthew Shepard was a 21-year-old college student who was savagely beaten to death in 1998 in Wyoming. His murder has been called a hate crime because Shepard was gay.”

He continued:

A similar search on the Internet for the name “Mary Stachowicz” yielded 26,800 results.  In 2002, Mary Stachowicz was also brutally murdered, but the circumstances were quite different.

Mary, the gentle, devout 51-year-old Catholic mother of four urged her co-worker, Nicholas Gutierrez, 19, to change his gay lifestyle. Infuriated by this, as he later told police, he allegedly beat, stabbed and strangled her to death and then stuffed her mangled body in a crawl space in his apartment, located above a Chicago funeral home, where they both worked.

I know about Mary Stachowicz, not from the Internet, but personally, because Mary was my secretary at the parish where I was pastor before I was named a Bishop.

She worked part time at the funeral home and part time at the parish. One afternoon, she didn’t show up at her usual starting time. This was unusual because she was always on time. A call to the funeral home disclosed that her car was still in their parking lot and her purse with her car keys was still at her desk, but there was no sign of Mary.

As Mary’s family and friends prayed and worried about her disappearance, Gutierrez prayed with them. Three days later, her mutilated body was discovered in a crawl space in his apartment.

Both murders were senseless and brutal, and I condemn them both unequivocally. However, the fact that there are over eleven and a half million more Internet stories about Matthew Shepard than Mary Stachowicz indicates where popular sentiment lies today on the question of same-sex relationships. Shepard’s story has received such widespread attention because his homosexuality was the chief motive for his murder.

Mary’s murder was widely ignored by the media, despite the fact that she died as a martyr for her faith.

Bishop Paprocki was unabashed in saying, “the Church’s teaching on homosexuality and marriage is Catholic because it is true, not true because it is Catholic. “

He said: “In other words, the conclusion that same-sex relationships should not be afforded legal status is because it is based on the truth, not just on Catholic teaching. Yet, saying that makes this conclusion all the more controversial. If it were based simply on Catholic teaching, opponents could say in our pluralistic context, ‘You Catholics are entitled to your opinion, but that is not binding on others.’ Instead, saying that truth is the reason that same-sex relationships should not be afforded legal status is offensive to those who deny the existence of truth, who prefer to live in a world dominated by what Pope Benedict XVI termed a ‘dictatorship of relativism.’”

Bishop Paprocki’s full address is available here.

THE BISHOP IS NOT A FUNCTIONARY, A TEMP, A TRANSITIONAL BUREAUCRAT PREPARING FOR OTHER MORE PRESTIGIOUS POSITIONS

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Vatican Diary / The scourge of divorce between bishop and diocese

Pope Francis blasts career ambitions. Including that of wanting to go from one episcopal see to another and then to another still. But the proposal to bind a bishop indissolubly to his diocese has so far fallen into the void. The résumés of the cardinals are proof of this

by SANDRO MAGISTER

VATICAN CITY, June 6, 2013 – One of the recurrent themes in the preaching of pope Jorge Mario Bergoglio is the warning against ecclesiastical careerism. Over and over, both in the homilies at the morning Masses at Saint Martha’s and in those delivered on solemn occasions, the pontiff who has come “from the ends of the earth” denounces an ancient temptation, which in effect dates back to the times of Jesus, when the apostles, as the Gospels recount, battled among themselves over who was the greatest.

The denunciation of ecclesiastical careerism is not, however – except for the more frequent reiteration – something exclusive to the current papal season.

This year will be the fifth anniversary of the death of Cardinal Bernardin Gantin, who in the century now just gone by launched a memorable “j’accuse” against clerical careerism. And he did so after having been for 14 years, from 1984 to 1998, prefect of the congregation for bishops, the Vatican dicastery that most closely collaborates with the pope in the appointment of pastors for the majority of the Catholic orb.

It was 1999, when on March 27 “L’Osservatore Romano” published an article initialed by the now deceased Cardinal Vincenzo Fagiolo, an illustrious canonist of the Roman curia, entitled: “How to judge the ‘things arranged’ by the Holy See.”

In it, the cardinal took as his point of departure a 1928 letter that Bishop Angelo Roncalli, when he was apostolic delegate in Bulgaria, sent to Alfonso Maria De Sanctis, the pastor of St. John the Baptist of the Florentines in Rome, who had been appointed bishop of Segni.

In the missive, the future John XXIII congratulated him for the appointment and criticized the comments that this had prompted in Rome: “Poor Monsignor De Sanctis! They’re sending him as bishop to Segni. He could have done worse!”; or: “They are sending him there for just a short time, and in view of a better place.”

This was Cardinal Fagiolo’s comment on the episode in question:

“The dignity of the episcopate lies in the ‘munus’ that it involves and is such that of itself it stands apart from any hypothesis of promotion and transfer, which should be, if not eliminated, at least made rare. The bishop is not a functionary, a temp, a transitional bureaucrat preparing for other more prestigious positions.”

It was precisely onto this passage that Cardinal Gantin seized – when he was dean of the college of cardinals and the first African to occupy a top-level position in the curia – to launch his invective against ecclesiastical careerism.

For the sake of advancing a possible solution, or at least halting the phenomenon, Gantin proposed prohibiting the transfer from one diocese to another, restoring the praxis of stability that was in effect during the first centuries of Christian history.

He did so in April of 1999 with an interview in the international magazine “30 Days,” the periodical directed at the time by Giulio Andreotti, the Catholic statesman who passed away recently and was among other things a childhood friend of Cardinal Fagiolo:

> “Un vescovo deve rimanere lì per sempre”

Gantin said:

“On his appointment, the bishop must be a father and a pastor for the people of God. One is always a father. Once a bishop is appointed to a particular see, he must generally and in principle stay there for ever. Let that be clear. The relationship between a bishop and a diocese is also depicted as a marriage and a marriage, according to the spirit of the Gospel, is indissoluble. The new bishop must not make other personal plans. There may well be serious reasons, very serious reasons for a decision by the authorities that the bishop go from one family, so to speak, to another. In making this decision, the authorities take numerous factors into consideration. They do not include an eventual desire by a bishop to change see.”

The cardinal from Benin – after whom a professorship was named this year at the Pontifical Lateran University – also demolished the concept of “cardinalate sees,” traditionally much sought-after destinations of transfer.

Gantin said, prefiguring what might happen under Pope Francis:

“The notion of the so-called cardinalate dioceses needs to be made very relative. The cardinalate is a service asked of a bishop or a priest taking many circumstances into account. Today in recently evangelized countries, in Asia and in him and him and Africa for instance, there are no so-called cardinalates, in that the purple is conferred on the person. That should be the case everywhere, even in the West. “

For Cardinal Gantin, therefore, there must be a return to the ancient praxis and a reduction almost to zero of the practice of transferring a bishop from one see to another more prestigious one:

“In the past, when the number of dioceses increased, it was understandable that transfers were made. In countries in Europe, where the Catholic hierarchy is by now established, the need no longer exists, whereas a need of the kind may still exist in the mission countries. But in the latter case transfers should be to less developed, more difficult sees rather than to more comfortable and prestigious ones.”

The African cardinal, who passed away in 2008 and was to the very end a supporter of the theses of this interview, even came to the point of expressing the hope for a codification of the prohibition of transfer:

“It wouldn’t be a bad idea if some procedure were devised for introducing the rule into Canon Law. Of course there can be exceptions owing to serious circumstances. But the rule should establish the fixed nature so as to avoid social climbing and careerism.”

Gantin’s interview made a substantial stir in the sacred edifices and in the media. Among the churchmen who espoused its contents was then-cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who had received the scarlet together with Gantin from Paul VI in 1977.

Also in the magazine “30 Days,” in the June issue of that same year of 1999, the then-prefect of the congregation for the doctrine of the faith and vice-dean of the college of cardinals said he was “completely in agreement with Cardinal Gantin”:

> Il mistero e l’operazione della grazia

And he added:

“Above all in the Church there should be no sense whatsoever of careerism. Being a bishop must not be considered a career with different stages, from one see to another, but a very humble service. I think that the discussion about access to the ministry would also be much more serene if the episcopate were seen not as a career but as a service. Even a humble see, with few faithful, is an important service in the Church of God. Of course, there can be exceptional cases: a very large see in which it is necessary to have experience of the episcopal ministry; in this case it could be. . . . But it should not be a normal praxis; only  in very exceptional cases.”

Ratzinger declared himself to be skeptical only about the immediate possibility of codifying a norm that would prevent transfer from one diocese to another:

“It is thinkable, but difficult. It would be difficult to change the code just sixteen years after its publication [in 1983]. In the future I too could easily see that a phrase might be added on this uniqueness and fidelity of a diocesan commitment.”

In reality, nonetheless, neither during the final phase of the pontificate of John Paul II nor during that of Benedict XVI was anything at all done to seek to diminish the phenomenon of episcopal transfers, which up until the fourth century were strictly prohibited, later being admitted during the Carolingian age and finally practiced extensively beginning in the late Middle Ages, as documented by Fr. Lorenzo Cappelletti in that same issue of “30 Days”:

> Nessun vescovo passi da una diocesi all’altra

In recent decades, in fact, transfers of diocese have been very frequent. It should suffice to consider, for example, that among the cardinals currently with the right to vote in conclave no fewer than 28 have in their own “cursus honorum” three dioceses of which they have been bishop.

These include the Italians Ennio Antonelli, Angelo Bagnasco, Angelo Scola, Dionigi Tettamanzi, and Agostino Vallini. The Brazilians Geraldo Maiella Agnelo, Joao Braz de Aviz, and Claudio Hummes. The Americans Timothy Dolan, Francis George, William Levada, Roger Mahony, Edwin O’Brien, Donald Wuerl. The Spaniards Antonio Cañizares and Lluis Martinez Sistach. The Germans Reinhard Marx and Joachim Meisner. The Latin Americans José Francisco Robles Ortega, Ruben Salazar Gomez, and Julio Terrazas Sandoval.

The American Sean Patrick O’Malley and the Ecuadorian Raul Eduardo Vela Chiriboga have even been bishop in four different dioceses. While Meisner, Tettamanzi, Scola, and the Mexican Robles Ortega were already cardinals when they changed sees.

On the other hand, only ten cardinals have carried out their episcopal mission exclusively in a single diocese.

These are Sean Brady of Ireland, the Hungarian Peter Erdö, the German Karl Lehmann, Keith O’Brien of Scotland, the Portuguese José da Cruz Policarpo, the Croatian Vinko Pulijc, Oscar Andres Rodríguez Maradiaga of Honduras, the Brazilian Odilo Scherer, the Austrian Christoph Schönborn, John Tong Hon of China, and the Canadian Jean-Claude Turcotte.

Cardinal Bergoglio, before being elected bishop of Rome, also had as his only episcopal “bride” the archdiocese of Buenos Aires.

Who knows if now he will dust off the idea launched 14 years ago by Cardinal Gantin and if, eventually, he will have more luck than Ratzinger in seeing it applied.

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Recently Fr. Timothy Radcliffe, a former superior general of the Dominicans and of unquestioned progressive credentials – unlike cardinals Fagiolo, Gantin, and Ratzinger – also criticized the praxis of transfer of diocese:

Fr. Radcliffe said in a May 24 interview on the theological blog of the publisher Queriniana:

“I also wonder if it is a good thing for bishops to be moved from one diocese to another. They put on a ring that is a sign of their being ‘married’ to the diocese, but they are often separated from their original dioceses and married to other dioceses. If they were to know, instead, that they were to remain in their diocese, then they could give it their undivided attention. It is truly strange that bishops are allowed to divorce their dioceses, but not persons united in matrimony!”

See the whole interview here:

> Oltre una visione eurocentrica della Chiesa

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In the illustration, bishop’s crosier of Egmont, Haarlem, Holland.

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English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

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IN CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS THEY ELEVATE DIVERSITY AS SOMETHING SACRED. WHAT’S NEXT, INVITING SATAN TO GIVE THE HOMILY AT MASS?

!!!!

Rosalinda Celentano as Satan

Satan in “The Passion of Christ”

May 31, 2013

Sympathy for the Devil

By Robert Barron

http://www.realclearreligion.org/articles/2013/05/31/sympathy_for_the_devil.html#.UazB0NWaxHg.facebook

Some years ago, The New Yorker ran a cartoon that perfectly lampooned the loopy ideology of “inclusion” that has come to characterize so much of the Christian world. It showed a neat and tidy church, filled with an attentive congregation. The pastor was at the podium, introducing a guest speaker. “In accordance with our policy of equal time,” he said, “I would like now to give our friend the opportunity to present an alternative point of view.”

Sitting next to him, about to rise to speak, was the devil, dressed perfectly and tapping the pages of his prepared text on his knee.

 I was put in mind of that cartoon when I read a sermon delivered recently by Katharine Jefferts Schori, the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in America. Addressing a congregation in Curaçao, Venezuela, Bishop Jefferts Schori praised the beauty of (what else?) diversity, but lamented the fact that so many people are still frightened by what is other or different: “Human beings have a long history of discounting and devaluing difference, finding it offensive or even evil.” Now I suppose that if one were to make the right distinctions — differentiating between that which is simply unusual and that which is intrinsically bad — one might be able coherently to make this point.

But the Bishop moved, instead, in an astonishing direction, finding an example of the lamentable exclusivity she is talking about in the behavior of the Apostle Paul himself. In the 16th chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, we find the story of Paul’s first visit to the Greek town of Philippi. We are told that one day, while on his way to prayer, Paul was accosted by a slave girl “who had a spirit of divination and brought her owners a great deal of money by fortune-telling” (Acts. 16:16). This demon-possessed child followed Paul and his companions up and down for several days, shouting, “These men are slaves of the Most High God, who proclaim to you a way of salvation.” Having finally had enough of her, Paul turned to the young woman and addressed the wicked spirit within her, “I order you in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her” (Acts. 16:18). And the demon, we are told, came out of her instantly.

Up until last month in Curaçao, the entire Christian interpretive tradition read that passage as an account of deliverance, as the story of the liberation of a young woman who had been enslaved both to dark spiritual powers and to the nefarious human beings who had exploited her.

But Bishop Jefferts Schori reads it as a tale of patriarchal oppression and intolerance. She preaches, “But Paul is annoyed, perhaps, for being put in his place, and he responds by depriving her of her gift of spiritual awareness. Paul can’t abide something he won’t see as beautiful or holy, so he tries to destroy it.” The Bishop correctly points out that the girl was saying true things about Paul and his friends, but demons say true things all the time in the New Testament. Think of the dark spirits who consistently confess that Jesus is the Holy One of God. That a Christian bishop would characterize the demonic possession of a young girl as something “beautiful and holy” simply beggars belief.

But things get even more bizarre. We are told in Acts that the girl’s owners are furious that Paul has effectively robbed them of their principal source of income and that they therefore stir up controversy and get him thrown in prison. But on the Bishop’s reading, Paul is just getting what he deserved: “That’s pretty much where he put himself by his own refusal to recognize that she too shares in God’s nature, just as much as he does — maybe more so!” She seems to rejoice that a mid-first-century Philippian version of the liberal thought police had the good sense to imprison the patriarchal Paul for his deep intolerance of fallen spirits! You see why this sermon reminded me of that New Yorker cartoon.

That night in prison, we are told, Paul and Silas sang hymns of praise to God and preached the Gospel to their jailors. Jefferts Schori reads this, strangely, as Paul coming to his senses at last, remembering God, dropping the annoyance he felt toward the girl, and embracing the spirit of compassion. Wouldn’t it be a lot simpler and clearer to say that Paul, who had never “forgotten God,” quite consistently showed compassion both toward the possessed girl and the unevangelized jailor, delivering the former and preaching the Gospel to the latter?

What is at the root of this deeply wrong-headed homily is a conflation of early 21st century values of inclusion and toleration with the great Biblical value of love. To love is to will the good of the other as other. As such, love can involve — indeed, must involve — a deep intolerance toward wickedness and a clear willingness to exclude certain forms of life, behavior, and thought. When inclusivity and toleration emerge as the supreme goods — as they have in much of our society today — then love devolves into something vague, sentimental and finally dangerous.

How dangerous? Well, we might begin to see the devil himself as beautiful and holy.

Father Robert Barron is the founder of the global ministry, Word on Fire, and the Rector/President of Mundelein Seminary.

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The Parochialism of ‘Diversity’

Explaining the naiveté and hypocrisy of multiculturalism.

The Wall Street Journal Online

By JAMES TARANTO

Boston Marathon bombing defendant Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and his deceased brother, Tamerlan, lived in Cambridge, Mass., a famously liberal college town. To many of their erstwhile neighbors, that is a disturbing irony.

Consider this arresting quote from The Wall Street Journal‘s April 20 story about the brothers: “Attorney Andrea Kramer said Friday her sons played on the [Cambridge Rindge and Latin School] varsity soccer team while Dzhokhar played on the junior-varsity squad. Dzhokhar ‘wasn’t “them.” He was “us,” ’ Ms. Kramer said. ‘He was Cambridge’ and part of a community whose ‘strength and beauty’ is its diversity.”

Today’s New York Times features a whole story on the same theme, under the headline “Link to Marathon Bombing Rattles City Known for Its Tolerance.” “Cantabrigians,” as they portentously call themselves, are confused, although they have not lost their capacity for self-congratulation:

Jeff Young, the superintendent of Cambridge Public Schools, said the experience had been disorienting for the district. “How is it,” he asked, “that a person who grew up in a place like this ends up in a place like that?” . . .

“In another school, a kid like that could have felt really alienated, but that’s really not the case at that high school,” said Nancy Alach, a parent of one of Mr. Tsarnaev’s classmates. “It’s hard to figure out how he felt so angry or alienated, that he was able to get to the point of doing something like that.”

Bob Binstock, a 55-year-old writer who has lived here for more than 35 years, found himself looking repeatedly at a photograph of one of his daughters and Mr. Tsarnaev, who graduated alongside her.

“I think that Cambridge is like a paradise of some kind,” Mr. Binstock said. “The fact that you can say about Dzhokhar, for instance, is that he was probably more welcomed and more easily incorporated into the environment at C.R.L.S. than he would have been at almost every other high school in the country, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t big gaps.”

Mr. Binstock’s daughter, Rae, said she and her classmates found themselves defending a hometown that many of them, now in college, are trying to move beyond. “Respect is a big part of it, and it’s a very big part of Cambridge,” said Ms. Binstock, 19, who is studying playwriting and anthropology at Columbia University. “Other communities don’t have to deal with the idea that lots of communities of different people have to coexist.”

Her father continued, “Maybe this is something we can learn from this.” He added: “Cambridge is very welcoming, and it’s very diverse. Maybe the acceptance to that blinds us to the fact that there may be more difficulty than people realize.”

Cambridge, it is clear, is a town full of communal narcissists. What’s striking about this passage is that while the Cantabridgians quoted are quite articulate in describing their own professed virtues, when the subject turns to the cognitive dissonance caused by Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s alleged crimes, they are reduced to blather: “That doesn’t mean there aren’t big gaps.” “There may be more difficulty than people realize.” What does any of that even mean?

One is tempted to chuckle at their naiveté and leave it at that. But it’s important to understand the way these people think, because their way of thinking has wide cultural influence. And naiveté isn’t the only problem with the ideologues of “diversity” or “multiculturalism.” They’re also quite frequently hypocritical, which is to say that they are selectively and sometimes harshly intolerant even as they extol tolerance. Anyone who’s spent time on an American college campus in the past 30 years–and that includes a large proportion of Cambridge residents–is familiar with that phenomenon.

The naiveté and the hypocrisy both are the result of a parochialism that is at the heart of this supposedly cosmopolitan ideology.

[image] WNEM-TVWould Cambridge tolerate this?

To illustrate the point, let’s try a thought experiment based on a local news story from 750 miles away. WNEM-TV in Saginaw, Mich., reports that in nearby Bay City, an unidentified man “is stirring controversy in his neighborhood after hanging flags that many find racially insensitive.” The banner is the Confederate Battle Flag, also known as the Stars and Bars. “The worst part, [a neighbor] says, is the confederate flag recently replaced a flag with a swastika on it.”

“I was driving by one day last week and saw it and I thought, Wow,” Darold Newton of the local NAACP chapter tells the station. “Newton admits flying the flag is protected under the first amendment. Little can be done to get the neighbor to remove it. But he says he’s still shocked that someone would put it in their window in such a diverse community.”

Let us pause to note that Newton is a model of true tolerance. The flag shocks and offends him, but he understands that in a free country, its owner has the right to display it on his own property. Other neighbors, according to the station, “say the flag must go,” but apparently they haven’t sought to have it removed by force. The Bay City police “say they haven’t received any complaints about the flags.”

Now for the thought experiment. Suppose the Bay City Confederate picked up stakes, moved to Cambridge, Mass., and put the Stars and Bars in the window of his new house there so that it was visible from the street. How would our tolerant Cantabridgians react?

Perhaps with the same restraint Darold Newton and the other Bay City people have shown, though you’d have to give us pretty good odds to get us to bet on that outcome. It seems safe to surmise, however, that their attitude would not be welcoming–that, to borrow Andrea Kramer’s terms, they would view their new neighbors as one of “them” rather than “us.”

Multiculturalists are no less prone than other human beings to be hostile to out-groups. It’s just that they are willing to accept almost anyone foreign, or otherwise identifiably different, into their in-group. The only out-groups they readily recognize are familiar, domestic ones, like the “other communities” that, according to Rae Binstock, “don’t have to deal with the idea that lots of communities of different people have to coexist.” It all goes back to oikophobia.

A more abstract form of this parochialism is the multiculturalists’ frequent insistence that “only white people can be racist.” In this view, racism is perhaps the greatest moral failing of which human beings are capable–but nonwhites are absolved of moral responsibility for their racial prejudices.

But moral responsibility is the essence of humanity. It is what sets Homo sapiens apart from other animals. Assigning moral responsibility to whites while denying it to nonwhites is therefore a way of dehumanizing the latter. Multiculturalism turns out to be a disguised form of white supremacy.

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