Posted on 06/04/2003 7:26:11 AM PDT by RAT Patrol
townhall.com
Like It or Not: Cardinal Arinze at Georgetown
Chuck Colson (back to web version)
June 4, 2003
Parents and students attending this years commencement at Georgetown University, a Catholic school, would surely expect to hear a commencement address that took Catholic teaching seriously. And thats what they got. But many in the crowd were offended, even outraged.
The commencement speaker was Francis Cardinal Arinze, the head of the Vaticans Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue. The dean who invited Arinze expected him to speak about the relationship between Christianity and Islam, especially in places like the Cardinals native Nigeria.
Instead, Cardinal Arinze told Georgetowns class of 2003 that "happiness is found not in the pursuit of material wealth or pleasures of the flesh, but by fervently adhering to religious beliefs." Warming to his task, he then told graduates and guests about the importance of the family in Christian faith and life.
He said that "in many parts of the world, the family is under siege" as a result of what he called "an anti-life mentality [that can be seen] in contraception, abortion, infanticide, and euthanasia." Instead of being honored, the family is "scorned and banalized by pornography, desecrated by fornication and adultery, mocked by homosexuality, sabotaged by irregular unions, and cut in two by divorce."
Well, thats a very Catholic message one might expect from a Catholic cardinal. But it proved too much for many in the audience. Teresa Sanders, a professor of theology, left the stage during Arinzes remarks. Seventy other faculty members signed a letter to the dean protesting what one of them called Arinzes "wildly inappropriate" remarks. Really? As a result, the dean apologized for the Cardinals remarks and the "hurt" they caused.
This incident speaks volumes about the spiritual and moral condition of the West. As historian Philip Jenkins has written, the numerical and geographical heart of Christianity has shifted from the West to the developing world. One result of this shift is that, as was predicted, Christians from Africa are now evangelizing Europe and America, instead of the other way around.
Thus, we see Anglican bishops from Africa standing against Western apostasy by ordaining American clergy who will uphold historic Christian teaching on faith and morals. And we see Cardinal Arinze pointing out the damage being wrought by the Wests forsaking of these teachings.
The response to the Cardinal shows just how phony all the rhetoric about "tolerance" really is. Tolerance originally meant allowing people whom you believed to be wrong to live according to their beliefs without fear of reprisal.
It then mutated into the idea that all beliefs are equally valid. While this was mistaken, at least it allowed for the possibility that Christians might publicly express their beliefs. Now "tolerance" means that no oneother than Christiansshould ever hear anything that contradicts what they think, or otherwise upsets them. This is especially true if the subject is human sexuality.
This bogus definition of tolerance is why the dean felt the need to apologize for what the Cardinal said. Fortunately, our African brethren think otherwise. They take their faith seriouslyseriously enough to tell the truth about the state of our souls, whether we like it or not.
There is hope in Africa, if not in Georgetown.
For further reading:
Read the text of Cardinal Arinzes speech (scroll down to "Francis Cardinal Arinze: Arise, Rejoice, God Is Calling You").
Julia Duin, "Criticism of gays riles Georgetown," Washington Times, May 30, 2003.
Al Dobras, "Will the Real Bigots Please Stand Up?" BreakPoint Online, May 9, 2003
Chuck Colson is founder and chairman of BreakPoint Online, a TownHall.com member group.
©2003 BreakPoint Online
townhall.com
I love your post but I'm having difficulty being that optimistic, to tell you the truth. What I see up close and personal is a sharp left turn, especially on moral issues. More and more people are buying into the relativity mindset.
I think that Africa is the focus of Christianity these next few decades, and having an African in the Holy See will be a profound statement. The focus of the poverty, disease, and chaos that runs rampant through Africa will be able to be brought into sharp focus by a Nigerian Pope the same way that the despair and oppression of Communism was revealed by a Polish Pope.
Islam and Christianity will be engaged in a mighty struggle if Arinze ascends to the Seat of Peter, and it will be in West Africa that the conflict will be the sharpest, not Jerusalem.
On the surface this is what we see.
But as we look deeper the trends are mostly unnoticed by the general public. I think here of FR we have the roots of a different possibility.
THE NEW FAITHFUL: WHY YOUNG ADULTS ARE EMBRACING CHRISTIAN ORTHODOXY
Vatican to reinforce Catholic orthodoxy, Pope's advisors say traditional values have weakened
Keeping faith: Catholic college, students reject mainstream America - and the mainstream church
Generation X and the Return to Christian Orthodoxy [A Surprise Trend]
If I were to ask you if Elijha were in heaven, would you say no?
If I were to ask you if therefore could someone get to heaven without accepting Jesus, how would respond?
Context is everything.
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