Lent

It's a bit late for Lent 2007, but good advice for any season of living.

LENT: Fast From; Feast On

  • Fast from judging others; feast on the Christ dwelling in them.
  • Fast from emphasis on differences; feast on the unity of life.
  • Fast from apparent darkness; feast on the reality of light.
  • Fast from thoughts of illness; feast on the healing power of God.
  • Fast from words that pollute; feast on phrases that purify.
  • Fast from discontent; feast on gratitude.
  • Fast from anger; feast on patience.
  • Fast from pessimism; feast on optimism.
  • Fast from worry; feast on divine order.
  • Fast from complaining; feast on appreciation.
  • Fast from negatives; feast on affirmatives.
  • Fast from unrelenting pressures; feast on unceasing prayer.
  • Fast from hostility; feast on non-resistance.
  • Fast from bitterness; feast on forgiveness.
  • Fast from self-concern; feast on compassion for others.
  • Fast from personal anxiety; feast on eternal truth.
  • Fast from discouragements; feast on hope.
  • Fast from facts that depress; feast on verities that uplift.
  • Fast from lethargy; feast on enthusiasm.
  • Fast from thoughts that weaken; feast on promises that inspire.
  • Fast from shadows of sorrow; feast on the sunlight of serenity.
  • Fast from idle gossip; feast on purposeful silence.
  • Fast from problems that overwhelm; feast on prayer that undergirds.

—William Arthur Ward (American author, teacher and pastor, 1921-1994.)

Reflections on the new Saint Patrick's Church

The notion of building a new church began from very practical considerations. The parish had grown so much that the 1956 church really was not serving us well. The Activities Room, originally meant for periodic overflow, was needed all the time and effectively created two congregations at a single Mass. And the growth in Pike County and the Milford area was predicted to continue its increase. I investigated expanding that church, but found that there was really no practical or cost-effective way to do that. I say the notion “began” with practical considerations, because then it took on the whole idea of a vision. I was very much aware of the words that Jesus from the San Damiano cross has said to Saint Francis of Assisi, “Rebuild my church.” From that the vision grew to apply to building a new church but also “rebuilding” the people of the church. The new building was to symbolize a new and vibrant faith for the parish. Practical notions become visions very slowly. But now I can state it fairly certainly that my purpose was to build a new church and answer our present needs and the needs of the future. But even moreso, my goal was to bring back the joy of the Catholic faith. Living the faith is difficult but it is a wonderful adventure in partnership with God. Church scandals and many other things had sucked the joy right out of the faith. We needed to regain our pride in being Catholic and the joy in living it. It is my hope that the beauty of the church will bring beauty to the people; that the joy in seeing it accomplished will inspire hope for the future; and that our rejoicing together will be a cause for lasting joy. Father Mullally

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What an incredible experience it was earlier this year to visit the Guggenheim Museum to view the Russian icons. Standing beneath the largest of the icons, I felt bathed in a supernatural holiness in a way I'd never felt before. I realized that the practically palpable holiness I felt had come not from the image per se nor from the material it was made from but, rather, from the tremendous devotion, faith, hope, and love with which the artists and the centuries of prayerful viewers had imbued it. The icon seemed to be emanating ancient others' spirituality and calling for us modern viewers to join them in a timeless worship of God. That day I truly understood how a thing can be sacred, how an object can be a vessel that contains our human adoration. I felt a communion with those Russian peasants who, so long ago, saw and felt what I saw and felt in 2006. I was, of course, compelled to pray, to reciprocate, to add my morsel of humble adoration of That Which inspired the icon and not just selfishly to absorb holiness from it. Therefore, I was so especially moved by St. Patrick's new building when I finally got to spend an hour at Mass this morning and then again this evening. The new church doesn't have that "new building" feeling I expected. Instead, there is already a store of both homeliness and holiness within it because of all the art objects brought over from old St. Pat's and the other churches. Like the icons at the Guggenheim show, new St. Patrick's old windows, Stations, and some of the statues seem to me to be "imbued" with the devotion and attention that we paid to these objects in their former home(s). What a comfort to have the same old wonderful Stations of the Cross bas reliefs lovingly displayed in their new place of honor. Being able to see them as a panorama demands that we in the pews think about them in a way that their arrangement in old St. P's didn't demand. How happy I was to see the good old real candle stands for non-electric candles! I detest electric candles. On the other hand, it's a little disconcerting to me that both Mary and Joseph have a baby Jesus in their arms (twin Jesuses!) and that they are on the wrong side of the church. Mary has always been on the left in all my former parishes, and Joseph on the right. I also don't like the new bells. From inside the church they sound to me like pan lids dropping onto a tile floor, harsh, not melodious. As an artist, my husband Tom loves the new altar piece. However, I preferred the old crucifix and miss it. To me, Mary looks like a frantic nun rather than a bereft mother, and I wish the other two Marys were there along with her and St. John, since they historically were there till the end. Maybe I'll get used to this new altar scene, but I doubt it. De gustibus non disputandum. And, as I said, the artist in the family approves. I heard recently that there are two kinds of priests and you can tell them apart by which cross they prefer over the altar -- the Christ Crucifed or the Christ Ascended (the Christus Rex). Note that we have both! Despite my not favoring the new painted Christ Crucified, I am nuts about the window of the Ascension that rises above it. I think it's the most magnificent work of art in Milford. Tom and I agree that St. Patrick never looked better, now that he is in his rightful place to greet and "supervise" (in the Latin root sense) everyone. I think St. Patrick's Church now should be included in Milford/Pike's lists of places for tourists to see. It has achieved something miraculous -- a feeling of home, though brand new; a repository of great art; and instant holiness. What a beautiful respect has been shown for those who came before us! How reassuring that the sacrifices we made to build this church will probably be similarly respected in the future. I think Father Mullally was inspired and wise. He did a courageous and important job in building this church. Although I am now one of many who are proud of both him and our new church, I wish I had had faith in his vision from the start. However, I was definitely one of the skeptics until I realized the NECESSITY of this parish's building "to the greater glory of God." God bless our church, our pastor, our parishoners, and our neighbors. In a world full of destruction and evil, something very good and creative has come about in Milford. Hallelujah, indeed! Elizabeth Murphy

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I love our new church. It is still warm and inviting which is the one thing I worried about when we were building a new church. It is a loving tribute to God . It shows we are a great faith community that honors the glory of God, and cares and prays for each other. I love that it easier for Cliff, our loving and dedicated Deacon. I love the natural light and the beauty of the stained glass windows all around the altar. I love the alter. It is a tribute to the beauty God our creator has given us so freely to use and enjoy, The marble, the stone, the wood ceiling. I love the 11 am mass because the church is full. I love that we know and care about each other. I tell everyone to come to our church because there is so much love there. I will be bringing 2 guests by the end of the month because I talk so much about St Patrick's! Diana Healey

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To the Parishioners of St. Patrick's Church: Thank you for your hard work and dedication and all of your time, talent and treasure to build this new church, a beacon of faith for all of us in the Tri-State Area. Your hard work and faith has blessed me throughout my life: The sisters who taught me kindergarten and prayed for me, the parishioners who loved and walked with me and the pastors who gently guided me in the way of the Gospel. I grew up in Milford and even though at that time I was not Catholic, St. Patrick's influenced my life. The parishioners who then, and still, welcome me are examples of the proclaiming Gospel "often without using words." I remember clearly observing classmates and their families who were Catholic, and being somehow drawn to their faith, some names familiar to you still: Kiley, McKittrick, Fean, Hinkle, Fleming, Hoffman, Lovett, VanLierde, McCarthy. Over the years, more and more of these living stones were added to my life. I was overwhelmed with emotion at the Celebration at Evening Prayer. A beautiful church, a sign that there still is a life in Christ here in my hometown, built on the very site the sisters taught me and gave me my very first glimpse of Catholicism. Again, thank you all. I am proud to call you my friends in Christ. Peace and all good, Norma Prigge

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I just wanted to say that the New St. Patrick's is absolutely beautiful. I looked through all the photos and I must say it is exquisite. There is a lot of symbolism and the stained glass windows and the crucifix behind the altar are incredible!!!! I can't wait to be able to say Mass someday at that altar! It must feel good to have the building behind you now. I am sure that that is very stressful. The event of having a new St. Patrick's must have been such an incredible accomplishment for everyone. I am sure the people of St. Patrick's are thrilled and feel a great sense of pride and joy! You would have to, a small community to create something so beautiful. I have been keeping St. Patrick's in my prayers this whole month in a special way for the new Church. Congratulations!!! Philip-Michael Tangorra (Seminarian, North American College, Rome)

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As I told many on the day of Dedication... I was worried when I was there for the retreat .... BUT when I saw what happened in those two weeks! WoW! I love the cross above the altar...and so happy you duplicated it for people like me...It brings the whole church together, and the colors meld with the stained glass windows from the old church... I was thrilled to see the beautiful white marble sanctuary, the altar and the altar of reposition. Can't wait to celebrate the Eucharist there and to preach. Finally a pulpit to fit all my NOTES on!!! God Bless all whole envisioned this beautiful temple of the Lord, and who worked so hard to make it happen! Cosmic blessings for a beautiful future! Your friend and good friar, fr.Kevin Cronin, ofm

CHURCH DEDICATION AND POLITICS

We are only three days past the Dedication of our new church. The entire day was a wonderful affirmation and celebration of our shared Catholic faith. Surrounded by the awesome beauty of the new church, our senses overwhelmed with the smell of incense, the pealing of bells and well-prepared music, we joined our brothers and sisters, led by our bishop, in the Eucharistic sacrifice of the Mass. Things, religiously speaking, simply could not have been better. Then, when the lengthy ceremony was almost over, the bishop spoiled it for some members of the congregation. All would have gone perfectly, if only he had exercised appropriate restraint and avoided any mention of the Catholic duty to live the faith even when we enter the voting booth. Can’t we have at least one nice day when the very politically incorrect issue of abortion doesn’t have to mentioned? And what of the “separation of church and state?”

Now, you are wondering if I am being serious at all or if this is entirely “tongue in cheek.” Well, the part about the beauty of the day is true. Only the most miserable people took the time to search for something to find wrong and complain. I don’t have to tell you that there are always some of those. But the part about the inappropriateness of the bishop’s closing remarks? I am not making that up. Some people opined that it was entirely “inappropriate” for him to use such an occasion to speak about how our Catholic faith must influence our politics. Imagine that some Catholics would consider the Dedication of a new church an inappropriate occasion for their bishop to teach the truth of the Gospel as it must be reflected in their lives and on which they will be judged!

What is really “inappropriate” is the attitude that allows any Catholic to make themselves the judge of the appropriateness of their bishop’s preaching. The sheep, in effect, telling the shepherd, were he ought to lead them and how they should get there. If the bishop had taken a deep breath and decided to avoid upsetting anyone, he would have left Saint Patrick’s having been unfaithful to the ministry entrusted to him. Had he satisfied himself with wishing everyone a nice day rather than mentioning the hard truth that abortion kills a developing human life, he would have been politically correct at the risk of his own salvation.

Our bishop, thanks be to God, was courageous in speaking the truth regardless of whether some found it unsettling or inappropriate. Congratulations Bishop Martino for reminding us that, above all, Jesus calls us to faithfulness. Thank you, dear Bishop, for offering us the opportunity to live in the grace we experienced in the Mass and for challenging us to make our lives and our souls as beautiful and pleasing to God as our new church. Many off us are grateful that you led us out of our newly consecrated church to live consecrated lives. We only pray that we have the courage and the grace to follow.

Chestlessnes

COMMENTARY
August 30, 2006

Chestlessness

The case of the two Fox News journalists, held hostage in Gaza, is worth dwelling upon. They were released after their captors had made tapes of them dressed as Arabs and announcing they had changed their names and converted to Islam.

Lately I have been looking at the large -- at how the West is proving unable to cope with a threat from a fanatical Islamic movement, that it ought to be able to snuff out with fair ease. (See my column last Sunday.) But the large is often most visible in the small.

The degree to which our starch is awash is exhibited in the behaviour of so many of our captives, but especially in these two. They were told to convert to Islam under implicit threat (blindfolded and hand-tied, they could not judge what threat), and agreed to make the propaganda broadcasts to guarantee their own safety. That much we can understand, as conventional cowardice. (Understand; not forgive.) But it is obvious from their later statements that they never thought twice; that they could see nothing wrong in serving the enemy, so long as it meant they’d be safe.

I assume they are not Christians (few journalists are), but had they ever been instructed in that faith, they might have grasped that conversion to Islam means denial of Christ, and that is something many millions of Christians (few of them intellectuals) have refused to do, even at the cost of excruciating deaths. Christianity still lives, because of such martyrs. Not suicide bombers: but truly defenceless martyrs.

You don’t necessarily have to be a Christian, to be Western. Two years ago, an heroic Italian captive, Fabrizio Quattrocchi, asked to make whimpering statements as part of the video of his execution in Iraq, ripped at his hood and instead declared, “This is how an Italian dies!” to his contemptible captors. He must have upset them: for they shot him instead of sawing off his head. In making his stand for human dignity, he also turned one of their propaganda videos, into one of ours.

But Quattrocchi had three friends, who all successfully begged for their lives. And the two Fox journalists, whom I will not stoop to name, begged for their lives even though, in retrospect, their lives probably weren’t in danger.

Why did Fatah bother to make the video? Didn’t they realize conversion under duress means nothing? That no one, East or West, would take it at face value?

They didn’t make it for face value. They made it to show the whole Muslim world, via satellite television, what wimps these Westerners are. That they’ll do anything at all to save their lives, that they don’t think twice about it. That is the substance of most Islamo-fascist propaganda: that the West consists of straw men, of men without chests, of men easily pushed over.

These two journalists were captured and held under nasty conditions by a branch of Fatah: the Palestinian party associated not with the “radical” Hamas, but with the supposedly “moderate” party of Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian National Authority. They were for use as chips in prisoner exchanges. They could be sold, or exchanged for other prisoners.

President Abbas could have had them sprung at a word, but did not do so at first, for he had nothing to lose by “playing with the crisis”. At no point, for instance, was he told he could either release the prisoners, or have his compound at Ramallah levelled. We don’t “overreact” in the West, the way we used to do -- we don’t like to put out little fires, we prefer to wait until they are big ones. And we prefer blaming ourselves to blaming the enemy, when the enemy lights the fire. We assume they only do it because we must have done something to annoy them.

Jean-François Revel: “Democratic civilization is the first in history to blame itself because another power is trying to destroy it.”

At the time Revel said this, the enemy power was Soviet Communism. The intellectuals, the smart journalists, the fashionable academics, the smug urbane of all descriptions, were hardly pro-Communist. They were more ironical than that, they were “anti-anti-Communist”. Today they are anti-anti-Islamo-fascist.

I created a scene with a column, many years ago, when I wrote about the young men in the corridors of the University of Montreal, who stood by and watched while Gamil Garbi (alias Marc Lépine) shot fourteen women to death. To a man (if you could call them men), they explained afterwards, “We couldn’t do anything, he had a gun.” As I pointed out at the time, we have bred young men who will stand by and watch a psychopath shoot defenceless women, so long as he assures them he will not shoot them. And we have bred the young women these young men deserve.

Men without chests, men without character, men who don’t think twice.

David Warren

© Ottawa Citizen

Truth is Stranger than Fiction

I have no trouble identifying the various disguises that the “classic” anxiety dream can present itself in. The human mind is an amazing thing. It has been no surprise to me that the latest way anxiety is expressed in my dreams has everything to do with construction. So, while it was bit different from the others, I paid little attention to the last dream before waking on Tuesday morning.

            The alarm went off and I woke at the end…well it had to be the end since I was awake…of yet another construction dream. I had dreamt that the crew working in front of the new church had unearthed some bones. The idea that they might be human had them pretty spooked. I went to see and pulled something that looked like a shoulder out of a pile of dirt. But when I examined it more closely, while still looking like a bone, it had tree bark on it. It was not a bone. And I explained that “The ‘old cemetery’ has not been there” but rather back toward the corner of the building on the alley side. I knew this absolutely, of course, like you often know things in dreams. Right then, the workers off to the side dug up an intact coffin. It was sitting on top of the ground partially open. When I got closer, I saw that inside there was he body of a woman. Then the alarm ended the dream.

            I did not give the dream another thought as the day began.

            That afternoon Father Gus and I traveled to

Forest

City

to express our sympathy to Father John Polednak on the death of his mother. The going and the coming occupied the entire afternoon and I did not get back to

Milford

until after quitting time for the construction workers.

            On Wednesday afternoon about

2:30

I left the office and headed toward the rectory. On the way, I met Harold, the construction supervisor. After a bit of business, he said that I had “missed all the excitement on Tuesday afternoon.”

            Apparently, Gary Williams, the chief of police, and Chris Brighton, the assistant coroner, has been called to the site. Work had come to a grinding halt because while digging some men had unearthed what appeared to be bones! They needed to verify that they were not human bones before any work could continue.

            Obviously it was decided the bones were not human. But they were near the area that I was so sure was the site of the “old cemetery” in my dream.

Gay "Marriage": Freedom For Who?

By Douglas W. Kmiec, a professor of constitutional law at Pepperdine University School of Law
Published May 26, 2006

After an acrimonious session in which Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) stomped out and Committee Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) bid him "good riddance," the Senate Judiciary Committee approved sending the federal marriage amendment to the full Senate.

The Feingold-Specter tiff illustrates the intensity of feeling about adding to the text of the Constitution what the founders surely thought was obvious: "Marriage in the United States shall consist only of the union of a man and a woman." The need to reaffirm the self-evident was prompted by Massachusetts' judicial recognition of same-sex marriage, which motivated more than a dozen states to overwhelmingly proclaim otherwise.

With the states being so vigilant in defense of traditional marriage, is there really a need for the people to act? Yes. Activists are deployed across the country challenging traditional marriage, and it is more than likely that some additional judges will compound the Massachusetts mistake. This increased judicial approval of same-sex marriage will metastasize into the larger culture. Indeed, an insidious, but less recognized, consequence will be a push to demonize--and then punish--faith communities that refuse to bless homosexual unions.

While it may be inconceivable for many to imagine America treating churches that oppose gay marriage the same as racists who opposed interracial marriage in the 1960s, just consider the fate of the Boy Scouts. The Scouts have paid dearly for asserting their 1st Amendment right not to be forced to accept gay scoutmasters. In retaliation, the Scouts have been denied access to public parks and boat slips, charitable donation campaigns and other government benefits. The endgame of gay activists is to strip the Boy Scouts (and by extension, any other organization that morally opposes gay marriage) of its tax-exempt status under both federal and state law.

For technical legal reasons, it is difficult to challenge a religious group's non-profit status in federal court, but state court is more open. There, judicial decisions approving same-sex marriage or even state laws barring discrimination can be used to pronounce any opposing moral or religious doctrine to be "contrary to public policy." So declared, it would be short work for a state attorney general's opinion to deny the tax-exempt status of charities and most orthodox Jewish, Christian and Islamic religious bodies. If enough state lawyers do this, expect the IRS to chime in.

Punishing religious organizations for their moral beliefs might be thought contrary to the protections of the Constitution. Unfortunately, the Boy Scouts have had little success defending these bedrock precepts. Penalizing the Scouts for observing their own handbook, say lower courts, merely avoids the immediate harm of discrimination, even as the bald-faced assertion that moral belief is a "harm" is anomalous.

For the moment, same-sex marriage is confined to a single state, but litigation is ongoing in 10 states from New York to California. Three years ago, the Supreme Court came close to endorsing gay and lesbian marriage when it declared that morality alone was no basis for lawmaking. The court is under new management and is acting more restrained. But the political lobbying and litigating are unrelenting, and the targeting of the Scouts reveals that same-sex success can come by indirection.

That churches can be made the collateral casualties of the same-sex marriage campaign is important to grasp. At a minimum it gives partial answer to the view of indifference that asks how gay marriage hurts anyone. When judges treat your religious community, its schools and its charities on par with the purveyors of racial hatred, it will no longer be necessary to ask. But then, it will also be too late.

Many share the view, as I do, that marriage is a moral reality incapable of redefinition by court edict. Others disagree. Sending the federal marriage amendment to the states allows for an honest and civil debate, which is far better than back-door vengeance against moral dissenters--or is it a moral majority?





Cooperating with the Creator: Birth Control and the Church

by Mark Shea

If you had collared me before I was Catholic and asked my opinion of Rome’s teaching on artificial contraception, I would have said something like this:

“I understand and applaud the Magisterium’s opposition to abortion, since abortion kills people. But I’m not comfortable with the Church’s stodgy stand on artificial contraception based on Her opposition to ‘interference with nature.’ After all, we interfere with nature all the time when we dye our hair, pierce our ears, and use sun blockers to avoid the natural process of suntan and skin cancer. So it seems to me that the real question is not ‘Shall we interfere?’ but, ‘At what level are we comfortable interfering?’”

This seemed to me a deft deflection of the Church’s “intrusive” teaching—until I started thinking about the challenge of biotechnology and genetic engineering. I began to recognize that my use of the word “interference” was a lousy blanket term for describing every sort of technological fiddling with nature and (as is especially the case with molecular biology) with persons. Both a gunshot and a penicillin shot “interfere” with human biology. However, such interference springs from markedly different intentions and has markedly different results. Of course, other interference, like piercing ears or dyeing hair, is largely morally neutral. That’s why indiscriminately labeling everything from vaccination to fetal harvesting as “interference” and then appealing to “comfort levels” to determine what shall and shall not be done is—I came to realize—hopelessly inadequate.

The question of how to care for and love human life at its most basic level isn’t a matter of obeying the whims of human comfort, but of obeying the will of the Creator of human life. The more I pondered the momentous dangers posed to the dignity of the human person by biotechnology, the more perilous and premature my ephemeral “comfort” dodge appeared. It became obvious to me that matters pertaining to the most fundamental truths of human existence could not be left merely to one’s sense of comfort, but could only be decided on a much more solid basis: “What is good, and what is evil?”

I began to wonder, “According to revelation, just what is God up to in creating a human being?”

Looking at Scripture, we find that the primary image revealed is of God molding man from the dust of the earth and breathing life into his nostrils. Thus, as Christianity has always taught, a human being is revealed from the very beginning to be (1) a creation of the Love who is God, and (2) a mysterious and fruitful union of spirit (symbolized by breath) and nature (symbolized by dust).

The word “union” is crucial here. The temptation of our culture is always to try to separate and exalt either the spiritual or the physical aspect of the human person. Thus to the gnostic, New Age, “spiritual” type, human beings are all soul, and the body is just a disposable Tupperware container for this “essence.” Yet this is to ignore the fact that we experience and know everything (including God) in a bodily way. We eat, weep, breathe, laugh, pray, sleep, and fight with our bodies. Nowhere is this seen more clearly than in a marriage. Try telling the bride and groom on their wedding night that the “highest” form of love is purely “spiritual” in the sense of disembodiment. And, of course, the seal on the goodness of our physical humanity is the Resurrection of Christ Himself, whose body is not disposed of but transfigured and glorified.

On the other hand, those who exalt the physical side of the human person at the expense of the spiritual are also missing something vital. Human beings are more than unusually clever pieces of meat. Contra Carl Sagan, they’re more than just “star stuff.” They are somehow more than the sum of their material parts. As St. Thomas tells us, the soul is the form of the body, the animating principle made directly by God.

At this point certain Christians may object, “But doesn’t Scripture divide us into body, soul, and spirit? And isn’t the spirit what matters to God?” Well, yes and no. For the purpose of making rational, descriptive distinctions within the human person, the three are indeed distinguished (1 Thes 4:23). But Scripture also makes clear that to really divide these aspects of the human being from one another is not the intention of God. Why? Because the technical term for the division of body and soul is not “purity” but “death” (yielding a corpse and a ghost). And as the whole New Testament bears witness, it’s precisely this terrible division of body and soul that the risen incarnate Lord came to heal.

By biblical lights, human beings are best described as ensouled bodies or embodied souls. Accordingly, the creation of human life is best described as the raising of nature to personhood by the creative act of the Love who is God. In this, there’s a sort of shadow of the Incarnation of Love Himself. For just as the Incarnation proceeds—as the Athanasian creed states—“not by the conversion of the Godhead into flesh, but by the taking up of the manhood into God,” so in the creation of every human life, subhuman nature (“dust” in Old Testament–speak) is “taken up” to participate in personhood.

The key idea here is the old Thomist maxim, “Grace does not destroy nature but perfects it.” Thus in the creation of every person, atoms are raised to participate in molecular existence, yet remain atoms. Molecules are raised to participate in organic chemistry, yet remain molecules. Organic chemicals are raised to participate in biological processes, yet remain organic chemicals. And so on as single-celled life is raised to participate in multi-cellular life, and multi-cellular life is raised to participate in the life of a human being. Grace does not spiritualize nature into the ether, but rather perfects and elevates nature while leaving it fully natural. We are dust. Yet this dust is—not merely contains—a person.

Given that, the question, “What is God up to in creating human beings?” can be answered this way: He is raising nature to human personhood with the ultimate aim (in Christ) of raising human persons toward supernatural union with Himself and with other glorified creatures. We are intended to participate—neither as mere animals nor as mere “spiritual” wraiths but as fully human beings—in the dynamic life of the Blessed Trinity, wherein the love between the Father and the Son eternally bears fruit in the Person of the Holy Spirit. In short, we are made for love and fruitfulness. That is the scriptural witness. And by a strange coincidence, it’s also the teaching of the Magisterium.

The process of raising creation to personhood happens not by the waving of magic wands, according to Scripture, but through created agents (particularly human beings) so that all creation may be completed and healed. That’s the meaning of all that business in Paul’s epistles about being “co-laborers with Christ.” Thus, our actions assume a lawful place in the creative will of God if, in whatever great or small way, they cooperate in this creative process of love and fruitfulness according to God’s order.

We see this creative cooperation with God’s love and fruitfulness aimed at completion in many ways. For example, as an Evangelical I was taught to recognize it when natural human life is raised to union with God through faith in Jesus Christ. Here, I understood clearly, is grace raising nature par excellence. But I came to see that the same principle holds in all areas of human life as well.

For example: We fall in love, but instead of simply scarfing up sex and moving on to greener pastures in unreflective bovine detachment, we raise sexuality to a higher level by willingly binding ourselves in committed, covenantal love with wife or husband. In so doing, we cooperate with grace in completing ourselves and our spouse according to God’s word that says, “It is not good for man to be alone.” Likewise, the completion of this union of love typically results in our cooperation with God’s ordained method for raising created sub-personal nature (sperm and egg) to personhood (at conception). After this, we assist in the sustenance, nurturing, beautifying, and fulfillment of human nature. This is the reason we “interfere” with human life by giving Junior food, lullabies, education, and a warm bed instead of leaving him to the elements.

Moreover, the fruitfulness that issues in completion extends even further. Our love of fruitfulness is also why we dye hair, pierce ears, put on makeup, do scientific research, sculpt works of art, and compose poetry. It is why we assist in the perfection of non-human nature by “tending the Garden” as our First Parents were commissioned to do. It is why we trim the hedges, breed hardier dogs, plant petunias, design comfortable furniture, and create the wheel. All these and a billion others are acts of cooperative completion through which God makes us loving and fruitful stewards of the earth, including that bit of earth called our neighbor.

The second way we help grace perfect nature is by cooperating with God in healing the effects of the Fall of both humans and superhuman created spirits. This is why we put surgeons’ scalpels and milk of magnesia into human bodies, practice prudence by putting on sunblock, and take antibiotics. It is also why we take dogs to the vet, pick up litter, clean Lake Erie, send aid to Katrina victims, protest genocide in Darfur, repent our sins, forgive our enemies, pray “lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil,” and write peevish letters to our senator about the deficit.

Roughly speaking, then, our role as human beings is—in big and small ways—to be about the business of perfecting, nurturing, and enhancing by grace a creation intended for beatitude. Such “interference” on our part isn’t interference at all, but the right and proper cooperative office of human beings as children of God and high priests and stewards of creation. “For the creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed...in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God” (Rom 8:19-21).

So the scriptural witness is this: Whatever helps nature (especially human nature) achieve the end for which it is created (namely bounty, beauty, love, and beatitude) and cooperates with God by raising nature to personhood and union with Him (prudently and within the natural bounds of God’s twin purposes of love and fruitfulness) is the very definition of “good.”

Conversely, a strong working definition of sin is this: The heart of sin is to treat persons like things and things like persons. To act thus is to run the film of creation backwards, to wrench the universe hard astern. We treat persons like things through sins like pride, lust, slavery, and murder; we treat things like persons through sins like idolatry, greed, gluttony, and avarice.

Such things truly are interference. For their purpose, in one way or another, is to thwart and defeat God’s will for love and fruitfulness while attempting to wring the juice out of creation and consume it for our own pleasure and power. Such an action constitutes a fundamentally selfish refusal to cooperate with God and a determination to exploit or destroy His creation if it bars our will to pleasure and power. Such a choice is, by its very nature, a denial of love and fruitfulness.

So how does all this affect real life? Well, if we really believe that we live in an incarnational, created universe, we know as a matter of first principles that since nature isn’t meant to be subject to the mere whim of man irrespective of God’s purpose, still less is human nature. Thus, any medical fidgeting with human life must be done (insofar as we wish to avoid evil) not on the basis of our “comfort” but on the basis of finding the way by which our science (like everything else we do) is ordered to cooperate with God’s call to raise nature to personhood according to His terms of love and fruitfulness. Such a criterion has the very practical effect of saving molecular biology from the Luddites and allowing it to pursue its promise of doing some very beautiful works of both completion (by gaining knowledge of the creation) and healing of people who suffer from various genetic lesions. As long as it does its work without causing the death or exploitation of persons, it’s in accord with the Good.

But molecular biology (galvanized by the modern spirit of “We can, therefore we will”) not only promises, it threatens. So, for instance, there’s enormous pressure to create disposable embryos artificially conceived solely for the purpose of research. In the not-so-distant future, we will learn how to initiate conception in any nucleic tissue sample handy, not just egg and sperm. Once this becomes a reality, it would enable the creation of virtually limitless numbers of test-tube embryos for research use as “fetal harvesting material.” Here the standard of “comfort” is woefully inadequate to the challenge of deciding what’s good and evil.

But revelation gives us very clear grounds to condemn and forbid this satanic parody of anti-creation. For it’s nothing other than the grave sin of reducing persons to cash-crop things in the very act of raising cellular nature to personhood via artificial conception. It would be to enact what T. S. Eliot calls the “greatest treason” by doing the right thing (raising nature to personhood) for the profoundly wrong reason of wrenching human life out of the divine context of love and fruitfulness and making a person into a consumable commodity.

A worldview rooted in the recognition of creation and incarnation can, therefore, speak with great strength. It can not only bless the right use of technology (when it’s used to cooperate with love and fruitfulness), but it can also condemn it with authority should it abusively and violently interfere with the most primal human forms of love and fruitfulness (between husband and wife, mother and child, healer and patient, powerful and powerless, Creator and creature) in order to subject the natural processes of human reproduction to our will. It can see such abuse for what it is: a twisted parody of God’s loving creative will, since the sole purpose of this interference is to discard love (by deftly cutting the embryo away from all such relationships) and twist fruitfulness into the harvesting of a ripening human life for consumption as a “tissue source.” Such a sin is to divorce nature from grace, to thwart the purposes of God in creation, to treat persons like things, and to exalt the things of power and money over persons.

So far, so good. I had been able to come up with some biblically sound “rules of thumb” for discerning how to navigate the morality of biotechnology. But in so doing I had to face the disastrous failure of my own opinions on contraception. For there’s no way to justify artificial contraception that doesn’t also justify destroying the ancient Christian sacramental linkage of sex to love and fruitfulness, which undergirds any sane ethic toward human life.

After all, if it’s wrong to interfere with nature by exalting fat research endowments and “harvest” profits over cooperation with God, how was it right to exalt my own pleasure and autonomy over it? I didn’t, of course, ask this question out of a sudden puritanical fear of sexual pleasure. Rather, I did so out of a newfound realization of sex as a sacramental participation in the creative, loving, and fruitful life of the Blessed Trinity (a notion strangely anticipated by that dusty old Humanae Vitae). With my eye on Paul’s comment that I had been “bought with a price” (1 Cor 6:19-20), and my mind filled with the colossal Catholic picture of the call to love with total abandon (like Christ), I felt a growing uneasiness with the standard modern bafflegab that My Body Is My Own. For it suddenly became very difficult to see such chatter as referring to anything other than separating the human person from communion with God and neighbor. I came to the awareness that, in translation, My Body Is My Own usually meant, “There’s no difference whatsoever between how we ought to address the police and how we ought to address our lover.”

For love (like sex) is almost private, and very rightly so. Yet if we tell our lover My Body Is My Own, in the sense that we mean it in modern political discourse addressed to the state, we have shot love dead. As a barrier against abuse, rape, and unjust laws against interracial or interreligious marriages, such a slogan is perfectly valid. But when it comes to talking about love (the real self-surrendering love of both partners to each other and to God), talk of rights no longer holds absolute sway. A bond of union and a willingness to bow to the other in mutual submission and self-sacrifice must be there for love to exist in the fullest Christian sense.

And this is precisely what artificial contraception belies. It is fingers crossed behind the back, an escape clause from the promise of full commitment. It is autonomy (from the other), power (over our child-free future), and a demand that our right to pleasure remain unencumbered by any “extraneous” business about love and fruitfulness. Its purpose is to separate man and woman, parents and children, God’s will and our will. Its goal is to strip-mine the gold of pleasure from the sacramental union of love and fruitfulness, enthrone autonomy and pleasure as the main thing sex is about, and declare love and fruitfulness “optional” rather than that which revelation declares them to be: the very heart of reality.

And quite successfully, too. For the vast majority of our culture is still quite prepared to intone—as I once did—the tired old singsong that the Church “thinks sex is dirty” and fears the very idea of sexual pleasure is too wicked for words. “That’s why the Church hates birth control,” says our culture, “It wants people to pay for a tumble under the sheets and not just get away with all that fun scot-free.” Yet, ironically, those who say this simply prove the Church’s critique of our culture. For to assert that commitment and parenthood are “payment” is to assert one’s own deeply held belief that love and fruitfulness are a ball and chain, and the real point of life is autonomy and pleasure. It is precisely this fundamental assumption (an assumption in direct antithesis to the heart of revelation) that the modern mind cannot even bring itself to question.

Yet such an assumption must be questioned sooner or later, since the whole purpose of a life absorbed in the pursuit of autonomy and pleasure is to move precisely in the direction that reality does not go. For instead of cooperating with the Creator in the perfection of nature and the raising of nature to personhood, the whole goal of artificial contraception and the autonomous, pleasure-centered mindset behind it is simply to treat nature as if it were ours (thus reducing nature’s Blessed Creator to the status of “thinghood”) and to treat human beings like things by reducing them to a set of biological processes. And, as history bears abundant testimony, this decision to subject persons to My Pleasure and Autonomy doesn’t stop with mere contraception. It inexorably (and swiftly) leads to an abortion mentality in which the child is reduced to a thing called a fetus, and the fetus is reduced to a disposable commodity. In our country, this precipitous slide took only eight years, from Griswold to Roe.

At this point, the Zeitgeist replies, “So! You think women should do nothing but breed, do you?” Well, no, not really. It simply doesn’t follow that because we are obliged to cooperate with God that we’re therefore obliged to have as many children as possible, regardless of the consequences. Cooperating with God means “cooperating with God,” not “bearing 26 children in a row.” It means openness to His love and fruitfulness. It means not crossing our fingers behind our backs when we say, “I give all of myself to you” (which is what the act of sex intrinsically means). It means honoring the created nature God has made, not only with respect to natural fertility, but with respect to natural infertility as well. For it’s perfectly legitimate (if one has, for instance, a limited income) to chart a woman’s natural periods of infertility and (if one wishes to avoid pregnancy) restrain one’s sexual appetite for a day or two till this God-created, God-given infertility begins.

Why is that different from artificial contraception? Because it’s cooperation, not interference. That is, it isn’t an attempt to thwart God’s creative purposes in order to wrench sexual pleasure and personal autonomy out of the sacramental context in which God created it. It is instead an attempt to say yes to God’s gift of sex and power in the context which He has given (including the natural cycles of fertility and infertility).

My mind, therefore, has changed concerning the Church’s sexual ethic. More and more, I find it as difficult to separate Her sacramental view of the universe from my so-called private life as it is to separate my “private life” from my family and my God. And as I look at the wasteland of millennial American culture, it becomes increasingly clear to me that the modern technological impulse that created the idol of “reproductive rights” has taken a profoundly disastrous turn in its unshakable faith that the fundamental human problems are technological, not moral and spiritual. To treat the enormous sacramental mystery of sexuality like a plumbing problem is preposterously simple-minded. To fail to see the immensity of sex as one of our deepest participations in the creative work of God is myopic in the extreme.

Yet the unalterable fact remains (according to revelation) that the goal of the universe is love and fruitfulness “in accordance with nature and grace” (since God is the Maker of both). It is not to skim off pleasure and autonomy and dispose of love and fruitfulness as troublesome and useless dross. We are far too important, and our life and love far too precious a sacrament, to be taken so lightly and treated so disposably. That is why my wife and I, as partners in the sacrament of marriage, have chosen to remain open to the love and fruitfulness of God here, as we have sought to do in all the other areas of our lives. That is also why I now pray that God will grant us all a deeper vision of His calling and show us again the depth of His love and fruitfulness in every aspect of our lives. May He teach us anew the dance of humility, joy, and creativity in the land of the Trinity, where all our loves reside. And may we, who have traded our dignity for pride and our joy for pleasure, return in humility, love, and fruitfulness to the steps of that Great Dance.

Intelligent Design

With some courts deciding that ID cannot be taught in public schools, a gross misconception has been absorbed by the public. The courts have not determined that ID is wrong. Our courts do not adjudicate the truthfulness or falseness of theories, be they scientific, philosophic or theologic. What has been decided is that, correct or incorrect, true or false, teaching ID as a purely scientific theory is unconstitutional. The debate over the validity of ID is still very much alive.

For clarity, we'd best define the claims of ID. The soft version of ID avers that the hand of a designer can be seen in the complexity of life and in the laws of nature that are so perfect for nurturing it.

The more strict version of ID claims that there are processes active in our lives woven of such intricately interlocking steps that they could not have evolved sequentially. They must have been fabricated as a unit by an intelligent designer since the elimination of any one step would render the entire process ineffective and possibly deadly.

Irreducibly complex is the term applied to such processes. The clotting of blood is a classic example brought by ID'ers. However, as with most of these procedures, examples can be found in nature where only part of the weave is present and still the function is effective. For example, dolphins' blood clots even though dolphins lack one of the factors active in human blood clotting (Robinson et al, Science 166 : 1420, 1969; Davidson et al , J. of Thrombosis and Heamostasis 1 , 1487, 2003).

Apparently blood clotting as found in humans is not irreducibly complex. Dolphins have reduced the complexity.

The soft version of ID is more robust.
The complexity of life and the beautifully balanced laws of nature that allow for such variety to flourish call out for an explanation of their origins. And by demanding an explanation, ID has performed a great service. Aspects of existence that had been taken for granted by the populace are now being seen as wonders. Scientific discoveries of the past hundred years have explained the mechanisms behind many of these wonders of nature. But the explanation in no way diminishes the marvel of their and our existence. Science has filled in many of the gaps formerly explained by 'the God of the gaps.' But those scientifically discovered bridges, more often than not, lead to more marvel and mystery.

Though ID cannot be taught in public schools, the wonders of the world can and should be taught. Unfortunately, these wonders are often ignored.

Let's start at the beginning of the evolutionary process. We would do well to ponder in our schools the puzzle of why there is existence. We just take the fact of existence for granted. But think about it. Why is there anything, why is there a universe within which life may or may not have evolved, developed, rather than nothing? Why was there a big bang, a creation of the universe?

With that conundrum in place, we can address the next stage. Just what did the big bang produce? We know science thinks it was the beginning of time and space. But what about matter? The answer to that is considerably more enlightening, literally.

The big bang did not produce matter as we know it, not any of the 92 elements such as carbon and oxygen, and not the protons, neutrons or electrons that would eventually combine to make the 92 elements. The only material product of the big bang was exquisitely intense energy, something akin to super powerful light beams. Over eons of time, thanks to a transition discovered by Albert Einstein (that famous equation E = mc2 ), those light beams changed form, metamorphosed, and became solid matter and finally life itself.

Now that is a cause for wonder. It is science that discovered this reality, so we can teach it in the classroom. Light beams became alive, and not only became alive, but learned to feel joy, love, and self awareness. Of that fact there is no debate in science.

To elucidate the awesome and humbling implications of this incredible transition, consider the following, better understood, transition. In one hand I hold a clear glass jar containing oxygen gas. In my other hand I hold a jar of hydrogen gas.
I study the chemistry of these two gases and discover that under the correct conditions, they can combine to make water, H2O. Water looks nothing like oxygen and hydrogen, but it is. In parallel, we humans and all the matter we see about us may not look like light beams, but we are. We are made of the energy, the light beams, of the big bang creation, and no scientist will argue against this. It's not new age flaky talk, or guru wishing. It's established scientific reality. We are the condensed energy of the big bang creation. We witnessed that creation.

Our cosmic genesis began billions of years ago, first as beams of energy, then as parts of stars and the star dust of supernovae, then as the rocks and water and a few simple molecules on the surface of the earth, which in a geological blink of the eye became alive. We were not just observers to this fantastic flow toward life—we were part of it! And unlike the formerly accepted catechism that billions of years passed between the formation of the earth and the origin of life on earth, billions of years during which random reactions in fertile pools of water brimming with energy might have allowed life to evolve, the discoveries of Elso Barghoorn of Harvard University demonstrated that the oldest rocks that can bear fossils already have fossils of microbes, some caught in the act of mitosis. Life was invented in a snap.

We have been intimately within this magnificent universe since its inception. That is a fact worth pondering.

The wonder of life doesn't start with how a fish may or may not have become a frog. The wonder of life starts long before that, with the forming of a finely tuned stage on which life might play out its role.

The error of ID is that it limits the way a metaphysical reality, call it God, might interact with the physical. All our thoughts are couched within the box of the physical aspects of time space matter. There is no way we can think outside that box. The greatest of poets, philosophers, scientists all face this same limitation. How the metaphysical might or might not interact with the physical universe is not limited to the mechanisms we can conceive from within the box of our existence. Let's not confine God's power to what we can imagine.

The great value of the ID controversy is that it has forced upon the public an awareness of the magnificent wonder of life. The National Academy of Sciences recently referred to evolution as the best theory to explain how life developed. Since it is a theory, it would be best taught as such and not, as is so often the case, presented in the classroom as if it were a proven fact.

Teach evolution? No problem, just give all the facts. Including those for which there are no facile explanations. These might include discussions as to why there is existence rather than nothing at all, or, how could life filled with consciousness and the ability to feel love, joy, wonder arise from non-living matter and even more alarmingly from the energy of the big bang creation. The basic problem in teaching evolution is that we get so involved with the minutiae, how a fish may or may not have become a frog, that we neglect the really crucial questions. Students aren't dumb. When all the facts are given, especially those for which there are no facile explanations, the students, and perhaps even teachers, will ask the questions for which there are no facile answers.

(tothesource.  info@tothesource.org )

Remade in Our Image

by Wesley J. Smith

"By the end of the 21st Century," Reason magazine science editor Ronald Bailey predicts in Liberation Biology, "the typical American may attend a family reunion in which five generations are playing together. And great-great-great grandma, at 150 years old, will be as vital... as her thirty-year old great-great-grandson with whom she's playing touch football."

Others recoil at the unnaturalness of it all and worry, as Edwin Black does in War Against the Weak, a history of American eugenics, that science's increasing ability to control life at the molecular level could lead to the creation of "a superior race or species" that would dominate the genetically unenhanced "inferior subset of humanity."

Look out America: The trajectory of science is coming into conflict with venerable human values and even our self-definition as a species, raising urgent ethical issues that will have to be answered before it is too late:

  • Does human life have intrinsic value simply because it is human? The "sanctity/equality of life ethic" holds that all human beings have equal moral worth, regardless of their abilities or capacities. This objective standard is now threatened by "personhood theory," which holds that rights only belong to "persons," a status earned by possessing minimal cognitive capacities. If personhood theory supplants sanctity of life as the governing ethic of society, it would open the door to harvesting organs from people like Terri Schiavo or permitting biotechnologists to "farm" cloned fetuses for use in drug testing or experiments in genetic engineering.
  • How much human DNA in animals is too much human DNA in animals? Human/animal hybrids, called chimeras, already exist. Promoters of this research note that inserting human DNA into animals could result in great human good. For example, human proteins could be obtained from the milk of these altered animals for use in pharmaceuticals, a process known as "pharming." Others, however, may be planning a far more radical course. For example, futurist author James Hughes advocates "uplifting" chimpanzees genetically to "have human intellectual capacities" as a way of proving that "personhood, not humanness" should "be the ticket to citizenship." Whether and where to draw lines on creating animal/human chimeras is becoming an increasingly urgent question.
  • Should any animal DNA ever be permitted to be engineered into human embryos? If scientists can insert human DNA into animal embryos, then animal DNA could just as easily be inserted into human embryos. Such experiments are far from unthinkable. A new social movement called "transhumanism" advocates the creation of a "post human species," which would include using animal genes in progeny to increase strength or make senses more acute.
  • Is there an absolute right to procreate? Once upon a time, having children was generally conducted in an orderly way: Men and women got married, made love, and had babies--although not always in that order. But now, innovative fertility treatments and the prospect of human cloning raise several urgent ethical issues: Should a 65 year-old woman be allowed to receive technological assistance giving birth? How about an 80 year-old? Should a man be allowed a uterus transplant so he can become a mother, as bioethicist Joseph Fletcher once suggested? Will it be acceptable for a career woman to use animal or artificial wombs to gestate her baby so as not have her professional life inconvenienced by a wanted pregnancy?
  • Is there a right to have genetically related offspring? Reproductive cloning is off the table for now because cloning isn't safe. But what if it were? Some bioethicists already assert that outlawing reproductive cloning, at least for gay or infertile couples, would be unconstitutional because "procreative liberty" includes the right to have biologically-related offspring.
  • Is there a right to genetically engineer offspring? Eradicating genetic disease is one thing. But there is a chorus of advocates who want to "improve" our children through germ line genetic manipulations. Some go so far as to assert that the right to procreate includes engineering the type of child that is desired. Thus, bioethicist Gregory E. Pence suggested in Who's Afraid of Human Cloning?, that parents be allowed to "aim for a certain type" of child "in the same way that great breeders... try to match a breed of dog to the needs of a family."
  • Is there a constitutional right to conduct scientific research? This may prove to be the mother of all biotechnological controversies. Some scientists, angered at attempts to outlaw human cloning, are already contemplating seeking a court-declared constitutional right to conduct research. In this view, scientific experimentation is analogous to a reporter's right to research a story. Opponents counter that finding such a right in the constitution would be akin to a reporter setting fire to a building so he could report on the arson. This much is clear: If a right to research is found in the Constitution, society will be stripped of the ability to meaningfully regulate science except in furtherance of a compelling state interest--such as preventing a deadly plague.

When considering these and other controversies, it is important to remember that they are not about science so much as about values, ethics, and morality. For as Leon Kass, the former chairman of the President's Council on Bioethics, has said: "All of the natural boundaries are up for grabs. All of the boundaries that have defined us as human beings, boundaries between a human being and an animal on one side and between a human being and a super human being or a god on the other. The boundaries of life, the boundaries of death. These are the questions of the Twenty-First Century and nothing could be more important."

First published by SFGate.com

On the Ordination of Women

What about Women’s Ordination?
By Mercedes W. Gutierrez *

A few months ago, during the election of Pope Benedict XVI, I came across a disturbing political cartoon in a local newspaper.  The sketch depicted the dome of St. Peter’s Basilica with a tall smoke stack standing atop.  Smoke emerged from the stack and spelled out “No Women Need Apply.” 

This cartoonist wasn’t the first to question the Church about the all-male priesthood, and he probably won’t be the last because the media, along with many Catholics, don’t understand the nature of priesthood, itself.  The priesthood is an office entrusted by Christ to His Apostles for teaching, sanctifying, governing, and fathering the faithful.  Fatherhood is essential to the priestly vocation. 

Unfortunately, there is a tendency to view the Church as a large corporation operated by men seeking to oppress women.  In fact, I recently attended a catechesis seminar where a young man addressed a European Cardinal with the question, “Your Eminence, don’t you think the Church is limiting women from climbing the hierarchal ladder by not allowing their ordination to the priesthood?”  The allusion to this Catholic corporate ladder is dangerous and misleading.  Moreover, this secular train of thought is exactly where society struggles to understand the role of women in the Church without female priesthood. 

The Church is not a corporation, but rather a divinely inspired family.  In understanding this concept, it is helpful to look at basic family dynamics.  Within my own family, my father doesn’t feel discriminated against because he isn’t my mother.  Actually, he is quite aware and relieved that he cannot biologically act as my mother!  Similarly, my mother doesn’t feel robbed of some right to be my father.  They share mutual understanding that each has their own role in service to one another and in raising their family.  Also engrained within their understanding is the knowledge that they share equal dignity as persons. 

This analogy directly relates to the life of the Church.  Just as men cannot be biological mothers and vice versa, men cannot be spiritual mothers and women cannot be spiritual fathers.  This reality is stamped within our nature.  We are made differently, yet created with equal dignity. 

Through Apostolic Tradition, the Magisterium is safeguarding this tenet of faith that was instituted by Christ.  Once ordained, a priest acts In Personae Christi (in the person of Christ) and assumes the role of father and bridegroom to his bride, the Church.  Therefore, he must be a man. 

In Inter Insigniores, the declaration addressing women’s admission to ministerial priesthood, the Church “intends to remain faithful to the type of ordained ministry willed by the Lord Jesus Christ and carefully maintained by the Apostles.” Christ, while choosing His twelve apostles, was deliberate in His choice of men. Some remark that he was merely acting in accordance to the customs of His time.  However, through examination of the Gospels, it is obvious that Jesus broke away from the prejudices of His time regarding women.  For example, Jesus converses publicly with the Samaritan woman (Jn 4:27), assists the hemorrhaging woman who was deemed legally impure (Mt 9:20), pardons the woman taken in adultery (Jn 8:11), and affirms the equality of the rights and duties of men and women with regard to the marriage bond (Mk 10:2, 19:3).  These accounts testify to Christ’s counter-cultural attit! ude towards women.

Moreover, no where in His charity, acceptance, and ministry to women does Christ call them to become one of the Twelve, not even his Mother nor the numerous women who faithfully accompanied Him during His public ministry.

Priesthood is a prominent vocation and notably the most visible vocation associated with the Church.  However, it is not the most important.  Our call as Catholics is to aspire to sainthood: the holiest of all vocations for men and women.  We must confront the societal misnomer that equates women’s rights with women’s sameness to men…and then, after realizing that equality is not sameness, we must apply it to our understanding of priestly ordination.

* Mercedes W. Gutierrez sits on the Board of Directors for ENDOW (Educating on the Nature and Dignity of Women,) a non-profit, grassroots organization that promotes the New Feminism as proposed by Pope John Paul II. Mercedes and her husband Sergio live in Denver, Colorado.

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