Posted on 04/18/2014 2:32:24 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
When Jeb Bush stepped up this month to declare illegal immigration an act of love, he provoked precisely the conservative pile-on youd expect. The rights favorite crabby uncle, Charles Krauthammer, dourly pronounced the comments bizarre.. Rep. Raul Labrador accused Jebbie of pandering. Noted intellectual Donald Trump declared Bushs thinking ridiculous and dangerous. And God help anyone who ventured onto sites like RedState.com. Most perfectly, fake-winger Stephen Colbert eulogized, He will be missed.
In the midst of all the huffing and grumping, it was easy to miss the smaller, quieter sounds of satisfaction emanating from some of Bushs fellow Catholics, particularly those on the social-justice-minded end of the spectrum. For these faithful, the governors assertionwith its decidedly biblical ringwas yet another sign of the change in conversation being driven, even within the fetid swamps of U.S. politics, by the wildly popular Pope Francis.
A little over a year into Franciss tenure, debate continues to rage throughout the church over the question of just how radical this pope really is, and the degree to which he might shift the Catholic spotlight from issues of sexual morality onto those such as poverty, immigration, torture, and even the environment....
(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
Think I’ll move to Vatican city. I’m sure they will welcome me with loving arms.
Would these be those pro abortion Catholics, the CINO's?
I've always thought the Church should "shine its spotlight" on scripture. A Christian can't properly select a few passages to follow or to emphasize. Rather, the Bible should be taken as a whole, where we do our best to follow scripture, tradition, reason, and the guidance we receive through prayer.
It would not be enough to "take up serpents" and ignore the rest of the Bible, nor is it enough to feed the sick and the hungry if we are self-righteously violating other parts of God's Word. We will all fall short of the goal that is set for us, but we should all hold that as a goal and strive to do our best. Celebrating rebellion against God is not acceptable, not even if we give generously (and for conservative Christians generously with our own money) to help the poor. This is no different from the obvious fact that it is not okay to ignore the poor, the sick, and the hungry merely because we follow scriptural guidance on sexual conduct.
Well look at this way. The Pope gave a blessed rosary to Obama and Obama gave it to Nancy Pelosi. Maybe Pelosi will now give it to Kathleen Sebelius and so one.
Bet Pelosi took the rosary to the Episcopal church when she washed feet.
Even some of the Dummies think Colbert plays into the hands of conservatives on immigration.
” I never ceases to amaze me how clueless and tone-deaf progressives are on this issue. Oddly enough - “Americans are a bunch of lazy slobs who shun hard work” - isn’t a persuasive talking point. Who knew?”
“Colbert’s mockery was reserved for ordinary American workers and consumers. Based on what I saw, his young audience won’t be taking away the message that we must improve working conditions on American farms. They’re learning that we must increase the number of visas for migrant farm workers (who are a small percentage of the undocumented workforce) because working class Americans are lazy slobs. “
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x9194043
‘I’ve always thought the Church should “shine its spotlight” on scripture. A Christian can’t properly select a few passages to follow or to emphasize. Rather, the Bible should be taken as a whole, where we do our best to follow scripture, tradition, reason, and the guidance we receive through prayer.’
Agreed.
Well that just as bad..people should support themselves..I do not want illegals supporting lazily Americans and I don't want working American supporting illegal. .both are equally wrong. The truth is I want to see Mexico successful. .if this country of Mexico is brimming with so many hard working people their they just spill over the border..why isn't Mexico and economic powerhouse.? The truth is its most all unskilled labor..cheap labor..works that does not pay for itself. imported unskilled labor is basically labor from "Wallmart"..dirt cheap import..but Walmart product is not subsidized by the federal government to drive its price under the total cost.. so it has to sell at a true price that support it being
JEB Bush is a RINO and CINO who goes against the Catholic Church teachings on abortion. He is not pro-life, believing that abortion should be allowed in cases of rape, incest and life of mother. In otherwords kill the baby and let the rapist live. This is also Spanky Kristie’s position. This is also Paul Ryan’s position and 99% of the other republican Catholic politicians.
I also knew that 90 cents out of every dollar donated by non-Catholic charities (i.e. Red Cross) goes to admimistrative costs. For Catholic charities, its the reverse. That makes sense since so many of those charitable foundations (Mother Theresa's Home for the Dying, for example) do their work for the love of God.
Money can't BUY that.
pope francis has spoken out against abortion. why aren’t durbin, biden, and pelosi called out?
According to this list, the Red Cross does better than Catholic charities.
http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Guide-to-Giving/America-s-Top-50-charities-How-well-do-they-rate
JFK knew what he was doing when he was trying to change the immigration laws to replace the American voters.
Then you've been most likely paying for abortions.
POPE CALLS OUT CATHOLIC CHARITIES FOR PROMOTING ABORTION, CONTRACEPTION
Also, they might not have gotten ALL of it right, especially when VOLUNTEER work isn't computed in there.
If the "man hours" were calculated, that is, the priests, sisters, brothers, monks and unpaid (of course) volunteers, who live their lives for Christ and His charities, I doubt if the Catholic Church would come up third.
In fact it would be my guess that the other charities would be second and third by too large a margin to believe.
How DOES one calculate the hours, months, decades of volunteer work? Do we discount the unpaid work of the sisters, monks, brothers and priests? Does their labor have no price tag? I guess not.
How many Catholics ARE there? Over the past century, the number of Catholics around the world has more than tripled, according to a study by the Pew Research Center. As of 2010, there are nearly 1.1 billion Catholics, up from an estimated 291 million in 1910.
How much do these Catholics contribute in food, housing, clothing, work, medical care, counseling, St. Anthony kitchens? Doctors and nurses have ALWAYS volunteered their time for the poor. That can't be calculated either.
ALL volunteer. There simply IS no price tag for that.
You are assuming way too much, ebb. Our contributions are ear marked, quite specifically--for our parish, parish school, for St. Anthony's kitchens, St. Vincent de Paul, etc.
There is no collection for a "Catholic Charities" group that does abortion-- well, not yet anyway. Our parish collections are shown to us in black and white: how much goes where. That is one of our pastor's duties.
None of the above do abortions.
Any doctor or hospital that DOES do them is committing murder and they know it. If anyone in that charity arena IS performing abortions our archbishop will be the first one to step in and close it down. He didn't get to be archbishop by taking the easy path or being fearful of abortion clinics/doctors/pills/procedures...or the press.
Have you given money to the USCCB’s Catholic Campaign for Human Development? It’s an annual collection in all U.S. Catholic churches.
What are you rambling about?
I read your post on percentages that charities used for overhead, and your numbers seemed way off, especially your claim that the Red Cross used up 90% in administrative costs, in fact you claimed that for all non-catholic charities.
You should go to the link I posted, and then apologize for discrediting charities are not part of the Catholic church, with false claims.
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