Category Archives: Catholic Church

The Catholic Church isn’t hoarding wealth

MYTHBUSTER Vatican isn't rich

It is not true that the Vatican is awash in cash and thus hypocritical for criticizing materialism, unbridled capitalism, and excessive wealth.

Note: When Catholic teaching refers to capitalism, it is NOT referring to the heavily regulated capitalism we have here in the United States.  Pope John Paul II defined “unbridled capitalism” as a system in which freedom in the economic sector is not circumscribed within a strong juridical framework which places it at the service of human freedom in its totality.” Centesimus Annus (full text linked below).

You could put a dollar value on my small, country parish’s church home, but what would that prove?  We built it ourselves, raised the money to pay off the mortgages, continue to contribute with money, time and labor to maintain it, and MOST IMPORTANTLY, we use it every day.   It is just one of more than 17,000 in the U.S. alone.   So yeah … if you added up all the dollar values for these properties, it would make a great big number with lots of zeroes.  But so what?  On paper, my house is worth a lot too …  BUT I LIVE IN IT.

The Vatican City State is “rich” if you put dollar values on the priceless art.  But you can’t sell the buildings, any more than you could sell the White House or the Coliseum.  And they do require upkeep.  Some years ago, the Church paid for a multi-million dollar restoration of the Michaelangelo masterpiece on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.  The Vatican itself occasionally has a lean year when its overall budget runs in the red, but most of the cost of upkeep for the buildings and art treasures is covered by entrance fees paid by the tourists who come to enjoy the history and beauty every year.

Catholicism teaches us to use what we have to sustain our families and seek the good of society with what is left.  The institutional Catholic Church “family” runs more charities and hospitals than any other entity on the planet and often contributes to nations that have suffered disasters.  While there have been isolated cases of financial abuse, they are not common and would appear quite paltry next to the shenanigans of the Clinton Foundation.  Also, the current pope lives in what amounts to a dorm room and recently raffled off a dozen or so items he’d been given, including a car.  The proceeds were given to charity.

Sources:

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Filed under Catholic Church, Mythbusting, Pope Francis

Subsidiarity

This is what subsidiarity looks like.  

2015_04 28 Citizens protecting cops

“One of the key principles of Catholic social thought is known as the principle of subsidiarity. This tenet holds that nothing should be done by a larger and more complex organization which can be done as well by a smaller and simpler organization. In other words, any activity which can be performed by a more decentralized entity should be. This principle is a bulwark of limited government and personal freedom. It conflicts with the passion for centralization and bureaucracy characteristic of the Welfare State.”

Read the rest of The Principle of Subsidiarity by David A. Bosnich @
http://www.acton.org/pub/religion-liberty/volume-6-number-4/principle-subsidiarity

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Filed under Catholic Church, Law Enforcement

Why I am no longer a “seamless garment” Catholic

I saw this in my email today: “The Catholic Church’s position is, of course, that the death penalty is wrong and we should not apply it—that even a rapist or a murderer ought not to have his life taken by force, because he too bears in his body and soul the image of God.”

This is incorrect.

“The Church’s teaching has not changed, nor has the Pope said that it has. The Catechism and the Pope state that the state has the right to exact the death penalty. Nations have the right to just war and individuals have the right to self-defense. ”

Read the rest @ https://www.ewtn.com/expert/answers/capital_punishment.htm

“Seamless garment” is a phrase used to describe the consistent ethic of life ideology, which not only opposes abortion, assisted suicide, and euthanasia, but also capital punishment and war.

I oppose abortion, assisted suicide, euthanasia and UNJUST war, but I stopped opposing capital punishment in all cases after I heard Dennis Prager speak on it. The compelling point he made for me was that a total ban on a death penalty is tantamount to society saying, “Victims are never as valuable as those who kill them.”

Capital Punishment pro

This didn’t turn me into a rabid, “string them all up” person by any means! But it did open my eyes to the idea that the state can have a compelling need for a death penalty option.

  • A society that values life needs to say, “Some crimes are so heinous that they demand death.”
  • Some criminals need to have the threat of death present in order to protect those (police, prison guards) who put themselves in harm’s way to protect the rest of us.
  • If crime dramas are accurate, the option of “taking the needle off the table” appears to be a valuable aid to law enforcement.

Yes, everyone bears in his body and soul the image of God. But since God gave us free will to utterly reject that identity, sometimes to protect life, we must allow the state to take life.

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Filed under Catholic Church, Life Issues

If you’ve got an hour …

… this is a very interesting video. It’s just talking heads, so you can listen while you get something boring done. Dr. Robin Pierucci was brought up in a Jewish home. In the 1980s, she danced with the Joseph Holmes Dance Theatre in Chicago, after which she entered Loyola University with the intention of becoming a Medical Doctor. She is now a Neonatologist in Kalamazoo, Michigan, and a devout Catholic. This video is an episode of EWTN’s “Journey Home” show, where she tells about her spiritual journey.

The Journey Home – Feb 2, 2015 – Dr. Robin Pierucci

Robin Pierucci w Joseph Holmes Dance Company

Oh Mary Don’t You WeepI’m not sure if she’s one of these dancers or not
Rare performance footage from the Joseph Holmes Dance Theatre, 1980’s

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CNN’s Carol Costello is no longer a lapsed Catholic

2015_02 15 Pope Francis and new Cardinal LaCroix

Excerpt from http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/10/living/carol-francis-effect/index.html

There is something about Francis that’s reawakened my faith. And it’s not because he opened the floodgates to allow sin in the eyes of the church. He still argues against things I passionately support, but I find myself — like many other lapsed Catholics — enthralled.

Recently I had the pleasure of meeting one of the Pope’s newly appointed cardinals. His name is Cardinal Gerald LaCroix. The 57-year-old presides at the Basilica Cathedral of Notre Dame in Quebec City.

One of my first questions: What is it about Pope Francis?

“Every person is a mystery you know. … But what’s evident is this man is living with such freedom, such inner freedom. He’s himself. He’s in tune with the Lord,” LaCroix told me.

“Those close to him say he’s up close to 4 in the morning to prepare his daily Mass, which is at 7 in the morning on the weekdays. So that’s almost three hours of prayer, preparation and silence before the Lord and the word of God. Wow, that really fine-tunes you to start off a day.”

Perhaps that’s how the Pope stays humble. Why he defies tradition and washes the feet of the disabled, women and those of other faiths. Why he ordered showers to be built for the poor in St. Peter’s Square.

All of this is appealing, but it’s more than that. In my mind, it’s his tone. When Pope Francis said, “If a person is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?”  The comment took me aback.

Homosexuality has long been a taboo subject for the Vatican, yet Pope Francis uttered those welcoming words.
LaCroix likened the Pope’s approach to Jesus. “Jesus didn’t judge. Jesus did not come as a judge. He came as someone who preached and talked about the love of God.”

But isn’t homosexuality a sin in the eyes of the church?

“There is room for everyone. The door is open,” Cardinal Lacroix insisted. “Of course you know that the Catholic Church will never promote same sex marriage, but do we respect homosexual persons? Do we welcome them? Do we accompany them? Of course. But to respect the Church and its teaching, which is based on a long tradition and also the word of God, we will not go so far as to bless. But that doesn’t mean we reject.”

The Cardinal’s last words to me: “I’m trying to do my best on (the) local level — to have an open ear to what the church and world are experiencing. To see how we can today respond to those needs. I want people to see me, and the church, as an open heart to grow together. Not a church that’s imposing — we have nothing to impose — we have someone to propose: the Lord Jesus and his Gospel.”

I can’t wait to go church next Sunday.

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Filed under Catholic Church, Christianity, Pope Francis

Pope Francis Wins Papal Miracle Olympics; Predecessors Hit Hardest

Popes1j
On Saturday, Pope Francis was in the Italian city of Naples. Observing tradition, he also stopped by the Cathedral to visit the 1700 year old relics of St. Januarius (Gennaro in Italian), the patron saint of the city.

The relics are the subject of a world-famous recurring miracle that has been happening more or less every year since 1389 when it was noticed that a glass ampule containing the dried blood of the martyr saint had become liquid during a procession, so that it could be clearly seen sloshing around in the container. Since then, the people of the city have considered it a miraculous event showing favor on the city and on visitors when it occurs. It appears to occur with some frequency, though not entirely predictably, for the last 600 years, usually on feast days associated with the saint. It has happened in the presence of many notable people and common folk alike, including Americans.

It has never – or nearly ever – occurred in the presence of a visiting pope. The previous two pontiffs, Pope John Paul II and Benedict XVI, both visited the relics, but each time the blood stayed stubbornly solid, dry and motionless.
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That all changed on Saturday, according to a number of news sources, including Breitbart. When the ampule was taken out of the vault by the Archbishop of Naples, he proclaimed that it was already halfway liquified. Soon after, when reverenced by the pope, it appeared to have fully liquified, drawing astonishment from the priests and congregation. As you can see from the two images above and below, the level of the red liquid maintained a horizontal aspect regardless of how the case was oriented by either the archbishop or the pope.
CAp0Tc-UsAAVG_A.jpg-large
Some scientific analyses have been performed on the blood relic over the years, mainly spectroscopy through the glass indicating results consistent with human hemoglobin. Skeptics have theorized that the occurrence is an elaborate ruse perpetrated in the middle ages using a self-liquifying substance sensitive to heat or motion, but no explanation has satisfactorily explained the variability of it. In any case, Pope Franko has received a dramatic boost in his status, at least among Napolitanos, who now talk about him cracking jokes during miracles and quite possibly being the first pope to return to the Vatican where a pope-emeritus is now obligated to buy him a victory beer at the Vatican Pub.

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Filed under Catholic Church, Pope Benedict, Pope Francis, Pope John Paul II

Pope Francis announces a Holy Year of Mercy

Pope Francis has declared an Extraordinary Jubilee Year for the Church, calling it a “Holy Year of Mercy.”

Jubilee of Mercy Announcement from Pope Francis

The year will begin on December 8 2015, the 50th anniversary of the end of the Second Vatican Council, and conclude on November 20 2016, the Feast of Christ the King.

The Pope told the faithful at St Peter’s Basilica:

“Dear brothers and sisters, I have thought about how the Church can make clear its mission of being a witness of mercy.

“It is a journey that starts with a spiritual conversion. For this reason I have decided to declare an Extraordinary Jubilee that has the mercy of God at its center. It will be a Holy Year of Mercy.”

“I am convinced that the whole Church will be able to find in this jubilee the joy of rediscovering and making fruitful the mercy of God, with which we are all called to give consolation to every man and every woman of our time,” Francis added, entrusting the Holy Year to Mary, Mother of Mercy.

I have added the Year of Mercy to my Speculative End Times Calendar.  Today, March 14, 2015, is Adar 23, 5775, on the Hebrew calendar.  The solar eclipse that bisects the Blood Moon Tetrad will be Adar 29 to Nisan 1 … next Friday to Saturday.  Nisan 1 is the first day of the Jewish ecclesiastical year, the church new year.  (The civil new year is Tishri 1, Rosh Hashanah.)  Click on the graphic to embiggen.  It is legible if printed on 8-1/2″ x 11″ paper.

Watching the Signs - Spec calendar with Holy Year of Mercy added
Our Lady’s Medjugorje message from February 25, 2015:

“Dear children! In this time of grace I call all of you: pray more and speak less. In prayer seek the will of God and live it according to the commandments to which God calls you. I am with you and am praying with you. Thank you for having responded to my call.”

Sources:
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2015/03/13/pope-announces-extraordinary-jubilee-year/
http://www.medjugorje.hr/en/

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Redeemed By Grace

Redeemed by Grace

At age eight, Ramona Trevino climbed to the top of a roof and begged God to let her know he was real. After receiving a sign, she made a pact with herself to follow him always. But family difficulties and growing pains made it hard for her to continue on that path.

Pregnant at 16, she dropped out of high school and entered an abusive marriage, which ended in divorce. Wanting to make a difference and to help girls in similar tough situations, she accepted a job as the manager of a Planned Parenthood facility in Sherman, Texas. Over time, however, Trevino began to grapple with whether she was doing women more harm than good, setting her on a path to seek the truth, no matter where it might lead.

Realizing she could no longer refer women for abortions or provide them with false assurances of risk-free sex, Trevino took a leap of faith and left the financial security of her job. Her ultimate conversion involved a full return to the Catholic faith of her childhood and a new role as a pro-life advocate and speaker.

Trevino is one of hundreds of former abortion practitioners and abortion center staffers who are now pro-life and she will stare her story in a webcast on Monday, February 16 at 9 p.m. ET @ http://redeemedbygracewebcast.com/

Read the rest @ http://www.lifenews.com/2015/02/13/she-ran-a-planned-parenthood-abortion-referral-clinic-but-something-made-her-quit-her-job/

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Filed under Catholic Church, Christianity, Life Issues, Planned Parenthood

My so-called “white” privilege

White privilege myth

I’m a third-generation American across the board. Far from being “white privileged”, my immigrant ancestors were Irish and German laborers and English farmers who came here because there wasn’t much future for them in Europe.  And they were Catholics, which if you know anything about immigrant history meant they were discriminated against when they got here.

One of my grandfathers left home before he was 16 and spent his working life as a laborer. The other grandfather had to drop out of high school and get a job, because his father had been unemployed so long, the family was about to lose their home.

It was a big deal for that generation to get their kids through high school. My mom was the first in her family to do it. It wasn’t an easy life, especially when her dad’s business went under during the Depression. I remember my mom telling me she lied to a date about a bad light bulb on the porch, because she was ashamed to admit their electric had been turned off for non-payment.

When she graduated Valedictorian ca 1932, she got a scholarship to college. Her father refused to allow her to go, because he wanted her to get a job so she could help support the family. Her senior year, she babysat many hours to save up for a class ring. When her father found out about the money, he took it from her without any thanks or apology.

My father, the eldest of four, dropped out of high school and got a job digging ditches. One day, the ditch he was in collapsed, nearly suffocating him. The minute he was dug out, his boss demanded he start digging again. He said that was when he decided a diploma was a good idea. He went back to high school and eventually earned a Master’s degree. He and my mom were absolutely no nonsense about all 6 of us going to college. It wasn’t a “what do you want to do after high school”, but “when are we going to look at colleges” thing.

My father’s teaching salary didn’t pay enough for their large family, so my folks started a side business in the spare bedroom.  With hard work and scholarships, we six kids earned 12 degrees … 6 Bachelors, 5 Masters and a Doctorate. I’m the wastrel of the family, because I dropped out of grad school without completing my degree.

So yeah … I benefited from privilege in so far as I grew up in a stable, two-parent home where education and hard work were highly valued.  But it had more to do with my parents being devout Catholics who believed that we are all going to be accountable to God after we die than it did with the amount of melanin in our skin.

I was raised with such non-prejudice that when a neighbor remarked about my black play mate, I remember thinking she was an idiot.  I was five.  What mattered to me was whether a person was nice and fun to be with and, given our ages, lived where we didn’t have to cross the street to play together. But skin color?  Pshaw.

I asked my mom once if Catholic prejudice had ever affected them personally. She said, “Yes, there was a job your father didn’t get once because he was Catholic. But then he got the next one because he was Catholic. We didn’t worry about it.”

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Filed under Catholic Church, Family & Friends, Immigration

The Crusades: History vs. Obama’s High Horse Pucky

2015_02 Obama names Christianity but not Islam

As we have seen many times, there is no moment so grave that our current president will not to use it to get up on his high horse, take a shot at Western civilization, and emphasize his own moral superiority. … No littler man has ever been president.” – David Gelernter

  • On Tuesday, ISIS posted a video of themselves burning a Jordanian pilot alive in a steel cage.
  • On Tuesday, President Obama condemned the murder and said it “just indicates the degree to which, whatever ideology they’re operating off of, it’s bankrupt.”
  • On Wednesday, the United Nations issued a report detailing ISIS crimes including “mass executions of boys, as well as reports of beheadings, crucifixions of children, and burying children alive.”
  • On Thursday, President Obama used his time at the National Prayer Breakfast to criticize the “terrible deeds” committed “in the name of Christ.”

Fox News: Kelly Files clip – Obama has never once condemned crimes committed “in the name of Mohammed”

Bernard Lewis, the greatest living English-language historian of Islam said, “The Crusades could more accurately be described as a limited, belated and, in the last analysis, ineffectual response to the jihad — a failed attempt to recover by a Christian holy war what had been lost to a Muslim holy war.”

Crusades Muslim vs Christian

“In his ignorant and bigoted remarks to religious leaders this week, President Obama parroted the jihadi propaganda [that blames] the cultural incompetence, practical indolence, and spiritual decay of the entire Middle East [on] Richard Coeur de Lion’s twelfth-century swordplay.” – Ralph Peters

PIG Islam

We are all descended from cavemen who broke the skulls of their enemies with rocks for fun or profit. But that hardly mitigates the crimes of a man who does the same thing today. I see no problem judging the behavior of the Islamic State and its apologists from the vantage point of the West’s high horse, because we’ve earned the right to sit in that saddle.” – Jonah Goldberg

Sources:

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Filed under Barack Obama, Catholic Church, Christianity, History, ISIS, Islam, Megyn Kelly, Middle East, United Nations