Posted on 08/05/2014 11:54:37 AM PDT by NYer
CNN published an inflammatory and provocative piece of link-bait over the weekend criticizing the Catholic Church because some of the larger archdioceses happen to have “lavish homes” for their archbishops. In the process of concern-trolling for a religion he clearly despises, the writer, Daniel Burke, reveals how little he understands about the Catholic Church. Below are just seven ways he gets it wrong.
1. Theyre residences, not homes. The mansions included in this article are not the personal property of the bishops, but belong to the diocese. Every diocese in the world maintains a cathedral (sometimes multiple co-cathedrals), a chancery, and a residence for the bishop. In poorer countries, these are often the grandest buildings in the city. Typically these buildings are in close proximity to one another. Many of the cities included in this list happen to be some of the largest metropolitan areas in the country, also with the highest property values. Compounding this effect, the cathedral is usually located in a prominent location on a major street. Many of these residences were also built a century ago and the Church certainly doesnt have to pay a mortgage for them.
2. The article compares the bishops to the idle rich, but in truth, the bishops are some of the most hard-working people in the world. In addition to attending to the administrative and judicial matters of their dioceses, bishops are also the leaders of multi-million-dollar charitable foundations and endowments and serve as the public face of the Catholic Church in the media. With all these duties, the bishop is still a priest and must say daily Mass, pray the liturgy of the hours, celebrate Eucharistic exposition and benediction, and according to Pope Francis, hear confessions. The bishops should live as close to their cathedrals as possible because every moment they spend driving around or in transit is time they could be using to care for their flock.
3. The bishops residences are not exactly Downton Abbey. There are no armies of servants meticulously polishing the silver or rising at the crack of dawn to tend to massive fireplaces in every room. If the bishops have lavish furnishings and dinners, it is to raise money for the charities that the Church supports. Acquaintances of your humble writer who have been fortunate to attend one of these functions have attested that if anything, the dioceses spend too little on the maintenance and upkeep which befits the grandeur of these historic structures. Cardinal Dolans residence was once described as a 19th century funeral parlor. According to the New York Times, Cardinal Dolan does allow himself the luxury of a chauffeur, for his Chrysler minivan. Thats not exactly the glitzy-ritzy image that the article would have you believe.
4. Perhaps CNN can run a hit-piece on the practice of many Protestant and secular charitable foundations which provide their leaders with multi-million dollar condominiums as a tax-free fringe benefit. Just this weekend, a Protestant charity purchased a Manhattan office building for $13 million. The same building also houses office for the NAACP and Big Brothers Big Sisters. Meanwhile, Trinity Episcopal Church–a mere parish, not even a diocese–owns real estate in Lower Manhattan estimated at around $2 billion, with a B, as in bling. Cardinal Dolans $30 million residence is chump change by comparison.
5. Pope Francis may have a small bedroom, but he still lives mere steps from the Basilica of St. Peter in the heart of Rome in a dormitory/hotel which cost roughly $20 million to build. If Pope Franciss comments about frugality were an infallible dogma of the Church (which they are not), he would be equally guilty. It is exciting and wonderful to watch Pope Francis go out to minister to the people, but perhaps Daniel Burke forgets that basically every Pope has done this, whether they lived in a simple cell (albeit furnished with exquisite burled walnut and mahogany hardwoods) or the opulent Apostolic Palace. Indeed, Pope Francis is not the first to eschew the latter. Pope Julius II said, I will not live in the same rooms as the Borgias lived! The rooms remained disused and closed to public view until the pontificate of Pope Leo XIII several centuries later.
6. Enemies of the Catholic Church feel free to quote scripture when it suits them, but by the same authority, Jesus told his disciples:
Now when Jesus was in Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, a woman came up to him with an alabaster jar of costly perfumed oil, and poured it on his head while he was reclining at table. When the disciples saw this, they were indignant and said, Why this waste? It could have been sold for much, and the money given to the poor. Since Jesus knew this, he said to them, Why do you make trouble for the woman? She has done a good thing for me. The poor you will always have with you; but you will not always have me.
[But] take care not to perform righteous deeds in order that people may see them; otherwise, you will have no recompense from your heavenly Father. When you give alms, do not blow a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets to win the praise of others. Amen, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right is doing, so that your almsgiving may be secret. And your Father who sees in secret will repay you.
Outward symbols of humility and charity are meaningless and empty show. What matters is what the bishops spend their time doing when they are awake, not where they sleep. Maybe CNN can do a piece showcasing a life in the day of an American cardinal. They do it for political candidates, corporate leaders, and entertainers. Why not also open a window on the tireless work of Cardinal Dolan or Cardinal George?
7. Its easy to accuse the bishops of hypocrisy, but the same could be said of CNN. By Daniel Burkes logic, the entire clergy–and perhaps the laity too–of the Catholic Church should abandon all worldly possessions and live as Jesus did. As long as a bishop has a warm bed and a homeless man is sleeping on a grate, one can foolishly argue that their positions should be reversed out of fairness. However, if it is morally wrong to live in a large house, shouldnt Ted Turner (estimated net worth: $2.2 billion) sell all of his possessions and give the money to charity? If owning property is wrong, maybe the CNN media mogul could even follow the example of Saint Francis who was a rich man before giving up all his property and taking holy orders. Daniel Burke might want to run that argument by his boss before committing him to a life of poverty though.
In the long run, tearing apart these historic homes to make way for micro-apartments will not do very much. Tearing down the Church which has done so much good will ultimately only hurt the poor. The fact is, the Catholic Church has done more to help the poor than any other organization in the history of the world. Perhaps if CNN were interested in pursuing actual journalism, they could write an article about the top-ten Catholic charities that people can support, to, you know, actually help the poor.
Not counting his managerial and fiscal duties, our bishop tries to be at each parish on their namesake’s feast day, so that’s 60+ days away from home each year. He also does confirmations each year. Of course, he does the masses at the cathedral unless he is out of town.
Ours is the largest diocese in the US by land mass and he has to travel hundreds of miles.
“Scripture did not record either all what was said, done, or practiced. Catholics believe also in sacred tradition and revelation. The books in Scripture did not fall from the skies. They were written some 60 years after the death of Christ and these books were authenticated by the early Church fathers.”
Not so much. Let’s take it apart.
“Scripture did not record either all what was said, done, or practiced.”
Of course not. Even the NSA hasn’t mastered that yet. What was recorded was inspired by God for His Church. He excluded much. What He included is able to lead souls to Christ as Savior, mature them as believers and teach how believers should act in the household of God.
“Catholics believe also in sacred tradition and revelation.”
That they believe it is indisputable. That it has authority is false. There is no list of sacred traditions passed down from the Apostles. There is no extra-Biblical revelation except natural creation, which is general.
“The books in Scripture did not fall from the skies. They were written some 60 years after the death of Christ and these books were authenticated by the early Church fathers.”
They were written starting thousands of years BEFORE Christ and were inspired by God’s Holy Spirit as He moved men. They alone have authority that is unchangeable.
best
WOW! Just WOW.
While true some were written thousands of years before, it was the Catholic Church that confirmed what books were legitimate to be part of the Bible and what were not, that included writings at the time of Christ such as the “Gospel” of St. Thomas. Only through the authority of Peter given to ONE Church was this achieved.
Every mop finds its handle.
Meaning the wife is the mop and the husband is the handle?
What behavior, living in buildings owned by the Church while doing the job the Church has asked them to do? Wearing the uniform of their position while performing its duties?
Religious vestments and habits are the opposite of “worldly”: they are intentionally unworldly, that is, not what regular people are wearing. A suit and tie, or hipster gear, or randomly-selected Salvation Army items would be “worldly,” although not necessarily unsuitable to the roles of the people who choose that clothing.
Yes, it was a violent, anti-woman screed. Who did you ever decipher that, you smart thing, you.
My children will have similar memories of the Missionaries of the Poor, who have a mission near us.
How, not who, lol.
I saw a similar case with St. Joseph’s Church in Middletown Delaware. Th priest there is an honored guest to Catholics there, but his actual owned house is one block from the church, and just a little larger than a trailer park home.
I’m so glad your kids will have these wonderful memories. I cherish mine. I just remembered being in the White Father’s house during a blizzard - it was after school and my mother was typing away while the snow fell silently. Bliss, sheer bliss.
Once when we were at the mission, when my youngest was a few months old, a tiny Brother from the Philippines, who looked about 12, carried her around all morning because he was so homesick for his siblings. Finally I had to say, “Please, Brother - she needs her diaper changed!”
I don’t agree with Evangelical Christians in all ways theologically, that bein said, I do agree that a lot of journalists misrepresent by use of strawmen and generalization as opposed to the actual doctrines.
“Just another dopey attack.”
BINGO!
All made up out of whole cloth and pagan rituals."
Lol, I appreciate a good pun.
Lots of things we (including you) do today have long histories and often have ties to something else like a pagan ritual or other cultural practice (think about what holidays you acknowledge and seasonal practices you have). There's not necessarily anything wrong with that--especially if an entity like the Catholic church altered an existing destructive social practice in a culture into something productive and edifying.
“It is worldly, as are their costumes.”
So is the internet.
You are shoring up wonderful memories for your child. (Even though she was too young at that point.) Believe me, those are unforgettable memories.
Joel Grinning Hyena Osteen got his 55 million by milking old grandmas out of their life savings. Let’s see CNN do a hit piece on this con-man and the rest of the protestant “pastors” who live lifestyles of the rich and famous. Take a look at Mr. Ed Osteen’s current crib.
I didn’t see it as anti woman more in line with The Bible instructs a wife to submit herself to her own husband;...........
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