Posted on 10/06/2009 6:17:53 AM PDT by marshmallow
Vatican City, Oct 6, 2009 / 03:16 am (CNA).- The Italian daily Il Foglio published today an article entitled "L'ascia del vescovo pellerossa - Charles j. Chaput contro Notre Dame e l'illustre cardinale sedotto dall'abortista Obama" ("The ax of the Red Skin Bishop - Charles J. Chaput against Notre Dame and the illustrious cardinal seduced by the pro abortion Obama") in which the Archbishop of Denver contests some of the strongly pro-Obama assertions made by Cardinal Georges Cottier last July in the International Catholic Magazine 30 Days.
Il Foglio is one of the most influential intellectual dailies in Italy, dedicated more at analyzing than covering the news. Its director is one of the most famous Italian contemporary thinkers, Giuliano Ferrara.
Despite being an agnostic, Ferrara is a long time admirer of the though of Joseph Ratzinger.
On its Tuesday edition, Il Foglio publishes a front page interview to Cardinal Francis George, and devotes the full third page to Archbishop Chaputs comments to the original Cottiers essay.
The Archbishop article, originally submitted under the more modest title of Politics, Morality and a President: an American View, focuses on what it meant to the Church in the US Presidents Obama speech at the University of Notre Dame, which Cardinal Cottier, Theologian Emeritus of the Pontifical Household, described in 30 Days in a very positive light.
Here is the full text in English of Archbishop Chaputs article published today in Il Foglio, exclusive from Catholic News Agency.
Politics, Morality and a President: an American View
One of the strengths of the Church is her global perspective. In that light, Cardinal Georges Cottiers recent essay on President Barack Obama (Politics, morality and original sin, 30 Days, No. 5), made a valuable contribution to Catholic discussion of the new American president. Our faith connects us across borders. What happens in one nation may have an impact on many others. World opinion about Americas leaders is not only appropriate; it should be welcomed.
And yet, the world does not live and vote in the United States. Americans do. The pastoral realities of any country are best known by the local bishops who shepherd their people. Thus, on the subject of Americas leaders, the thoughts of an American bishop may have some value. They may augment the Cardinals good views by offering a different perspective.
Note that I speak here only for myself. I do not speak for the bishops of the United States as a body, nor for any other individual bishop. Nor will I address President Obamas speech to the Islamic world, which Cardinal Cottier mentions in his own essay. That would require a separate discussion.
I will focus instead on the Presidents graduation appearance at the University of Notre Dame, and Cardinal Cottiers comments on the Presidents thinking. I have two motives in doing so.
First, men and women from my own diocese belong to the national Notre Dame community as students, graduates and parents. Every bishop has a stake in the faith of the people in his care, and Notre Dame has never merely been a local Catholic university. It is an icon of the American Catholic experience. Second, when Notre Dames local bishop vigorously disagrees with the appearance of any speaker, and some 80 other bishops and 300,000 laypeople around the country publicly support the local bishop, then reasonable people must infer that a real problem exists with the speaker or at least with his appearance at the disputed event. Reasonable people might further choose to defer to the judgment of those Catholic pastors closest to the controversy.
Regrettably and unintentionally, Cardinal Cottiers articulate essay undervalues the gravity of what happened at Notre Dame. It also overvalues the consonance of President Obamas thinking with Catholic teaching.
There are several key points to remember here.
First, resistance to President Obamas appearance at Notre Dame had nothing to do with whether he is a good or bad man. He is obviously a gifted man. He has many good moral and political instincts, and an admirable devotion to his family. These things matter. But unfortunately, so does this: The Presidents views on vital bioethical issues, including but not limited to abortion, differ sharply from Catholic teaching. This is why he has enjoyed the strong support of major abortion rights groups for many years. Much is made, in some religious circles, of the Presidents sympathy for Catholic social teaching. But defense of the unborn child is a demand of social justice. There is no social justice if the youngest and weakest among us can be legally killed. Good programs for the poor are vital, but they can never excuse this fundamental violation of human rights.
Second, at a different moment and under different circumstances, the conflict at Notre Dame might have faded away if the university had simply asked the President to give a lecture or public address. But at a time when the American bishops as a body had already voiced strong concern about the new administrations abortion policies, Notre Dame not only made the President the centerpiece of its graduation events, but also granted him an honorary doctorate of laws this, despite his deeply troubling views on abortion law and related social issues.
The real source of Catholic frustration with President Obamas appearance at Notre Dame was his overt, negative public voting and speaking record on abortion and other problematic issues. By its actions, Notre Dame ignored and violated the guidance of Americas bishops in their 2004 document, Catholics in Political Life. In that text, the bishops urged Catholic institutions to refrain from honoring public officials who disagreed with Church teaching on grave matters.
Thus, the fierce debate in American Catholic circles this spring over the Notre Dame honor for Mr. Obama was not finally about partisan politics. It was about serious issues of Catholic belief, identity and witness triggered by Mr. Obamas views -- which Cardinal Cottier, writing from outside the American context, may have misunderstood.
Third, the Cardinal wisely notes points of contact between President Obamas frequently stated search for political common ground and the Catholic emphasis on pursing the common good. These goals seeking common ground and pursuing the common good can often coincide. But they are not the same thing. They can sharply diverge in practice. So-called common ground abortion policies may actually attack the common good because they imply a false unity; they create a ledge of shared public agreement too narrow and too weak to sustain the weight of a real moral consensus. The common good is never served by tolerance for killing the weak beginning with the unborn.
Fourth, Cardinal Cottier rightly reminds his readers of the mutual respect and cooperative spirit required by citizenship in a pluralist democracy. But pluralism is never an end in itself. It is never an excuse for inaction. As President Obama himself acknowledged at Notre Dame, democracy depends for its health on people of conviction fighting hard in the public square for what they believe peacefully, legally but vigorously and without apologies.
Unfortunately, the President also added the curious remark that . . . the ultimate irony of faith is that it necessarily admits doubt . . . This doubt should not push us away from our faith. But it should humble us. In a sense, of course, this is true: On this side of eternity, doubt is part of the human predicament. But doubt is the absence of something; it is not a positive value. Insofar as it inoculates believers from acting on the demands of faith, doubt is a fatal weakness.
The habit of doubt fits much too comfortably with a kind of baptized unbelief; a Christianity that is little more than a vague tribal loyalty and a convenient spiritual vocabulary. Too often in recent American experience, pluralism and doubt have become alibis for Catholic moral and political lethargy. Perhaps Europe is different. But I would suggest that our current historical moment -- which both European and American Catholics share -- is very far from the social circumstances facing the early Christian legislators mentioned by the Cardinal. They had faith, and they also had the zeal tempered by patience and intelligence to incarnate the moral content of their faith explicitly in culture. In other words, they were building a civilization shaped by Christian belief. Something very different is happening now.
Cardinal Cottiers essay gives witness to his own generous spirit. I was struck in particular by his praise for President Obamas humble realism. I hope hes right. American Catholics want him to be right. Humility and realism are the soil where a commonsense, modest, human-scaled and moral politics can grow. Whether President Obama can provide this kind of leadership remains to be seen. We have a duty to pray for him -- so that he can, and does.
1. He's a lightweight and nobody listens to him.
2. He's making trouble for the entire Church.
Help me out here.
Should the Church not be involved with the abortion issue at all, in your view?
“Should the Church not be involved with the abortion issue at all, in your view?”
Politically? No. Should The Church properly catechize its people on what The Faith says about abortion? Yes.
So no Catholic involvement in the March for Life?
Based on the status of Catholicism in most European countries, one would think that their prelates would be the *last* ones anyone would listen to on such issues. When it comes to moral gravitas, they are almost completely exhausted. Rome will have to bring in the SSPX eventually because no one else will even claim to be Catholic by the time the liberal European bishops are done.
“I’m picking up mixed messages here, Kolo.
1. He’s a lightweight and nobody listens to him.
2. He’s making trouble for the entire Church.
Help me out here.”
1. He is a theological lightweight, a joke frankly, among theologians. That’s simply a fact, though he may be an effective shill for American rightist politics.
2. He is listened to by American Catholics, mostly lay people but also a handful of equally politicized hierarchs, who measure the orthodoxy of theology by a secular, American political standard. That causes trouble for the whole Church.
“So no Catholic involvement in the March for Life?”
Of your hierarchs, or ours for that matter? No, despite what the Metropolitan of the OCA might think, but I say that only because the pro life movement has been highjacked by the political right.
“Thus says the Dukakis voter... Sigh.”
Exactly...and my vote for Dukakis was motivated by ethnic interests, not religious. Had I measured Dukakis by an Orthodox standard, I wouldn’t have voted for him. Similarly, I didn’t measure the “orthodoxy” of my Orthodoxy by what a person like Dukakis stood for.
“Sorry, brother. But I’m afraid your opinions have lost almost all of their authority with me. And they used to have a lot.”
I’m sure we will both survive. The next time you hear someone trumpeting a reunion with the Orthodox Church, remember this discussion and what it says about an Orthodox mindset.
Considered by whom?
“I pray that the insanity of that position is someday made manifest to you.”
There were family reasons too, having to do with his mother mostly, but I doubt that will make any difference to you.
“No doubt Our Lord weeps as well. National pride. Ethnic pride. Cultural pride. Over Christian love, forgiveness, and unity. Pathetic.”
Please do us all a favor and tell every Latin you know, hierarch, clergy or laity, what truly awful people we are. That, if you can influence enough people, might actually make a difference and Rome will stop lusting after the Orthodox Church. We’ll make it alone, we always have. Let’s face it, A, Rome needs us a lot more than we need Rome.
You know this, of course, because _________________ (fill in the blank). The real theologians, Latin and Eastern, who have made this comment are: ______________, ___________, _______________, (feel free to add more lines).
Thank you!!! My thought exactly.
Rome doesn't "need" you at all.
What both Rome and Constantinople "need" is to obey the Lord's clear command in John 17:20-23. No amount of pride can justify doing otherwise.
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