The Church will -- through the power of the Holy Spirit! |
Editor's Note: This is the main article from the current issue of the Les Femmes newsletter. It's not posted on line yet; I'm offering this as preview. I am on retreat this week and scheduled the article to post before I left. No comments will be posted, however, until I return on Saturday. So if you comment please be patient.
I will be computer and phone-free this week and will moderate all comments when I return. I'm praying for the intentions of my readers during this five-day silent retreat. I would appreciate your prayers as well.
The City
of God has a problem, a big problem.
Many of those charged with protecting and defending the city have gone over to
the enemy. Some are active members of the treasonous conspiracy, but others
commit treason by their silence and capitulation. They are the “nice guys” who
want to be liked and admired. They don’t want anyone rocking the boat by
insisting on unpleasant truths and they fear epithets like “rigid” and
“medieval.” And so they say and do nothing when the active conspirators within
and the enemy without take their jackhammers and wrecking balls to the
foundations of the holy city.
In a
recent article at The Catholic Thing,
Deacon James Toner discussed The Nice Guy Syndrome and raised some
provocative points:
Nice guys are sincere….. Nice guys are tolerant…. Nice guys are
“authentic”….That there can be sincere rapists, tolerant drug dealers, or
authentic terrorists; that abortionists can be pleasant people; that those
planning a political paradise marked by eugenics and euthanasia can
simultaneously be loving grandparents – all these things testify to what Hannah
Arendt famously called the “banality of evil.”….
Nice guys…have done, and can do, great evil
because of apathy, because of unwillingness to seek the truth and then to do
it. Truth obliges. Knowing the truth requires us to act in that truth – to “do”
the truth. (James 1:22, CCC 898) If being a “nice guy” means that
we must be wishy-washy or apathetic about knowing and serving truth, then we
must be as disagreeable, as dyspeptic, as possible….
Smiling nice guys are legion: we find them in parliaments and in
pulpits, in chancelleries and in colleges, in the public square and in
religious synods….
… if I do not trouble myself about the truth – about its certainty
in Christ – then I need not concern myself about doing the truth, about
testifying to that truth by what I say and do, and thus risk alienating those
very people who see me as a “nice guy.”[i]
This
article will focus, not on the “nice guys” of the world who lack the advantage
of the fullness of the faith; rather it will look at those within the City of
God with the responsibility to teach: the men in Roman collars with multiple
letters after their names, the Catholic educators and writers willing to purge
the truth from their institutions and works, and the laity in the pew who pick
and choose their beliefs in accordance with their pet sins. Not all these “nice
guys” are merely silent about the truth. Some actively seek the approval of the
world by vigorously defending what’s popular and politically correct. They may
even uphold certain teachings of the faith when it is easy and costs nothing.
Their silence, however, is deafening when it comes to hard truths that make
them targets of criticism and ridicule. These are the “nice guys” committing
treason against the City and her ruler, Jesus Christ.
The word
treason derives from the Latin “traditionem” meaning to hand over, deliver, or
surrender and from the Old French verb “trair” meaning to betray. Under old English law, high treason involved
a subject’s betraying his sovereign (in our case Christ Himself) or the state
(the City of God). Petit treason involved a subject’s offense against a fellow
subject. Today, “nice guys” commit both
of these treasons. They violate the two great commandments to love God and
neighbor. They undermine the faith and weaken the ability of the City of God to
carry out its proper role of bringing the entire world to the service of Christ
the King. They also undermine the faith of Catholics.
Let us
examine several common spheres of silence that reflect the failure of “nice guys”
to defend the faith and rob the Church of her evangelical mission to proclaim
the truth and spread it to the ends of the earth: silence in the pulpit about
moral evils common among the flock, silence from the hierarchy about syncretism,
the belief that all religions are essentially the same and all can lead to
salvation, and failure of the laity to defend the faith in the marketplace.
First of
all, consider the silence of the clergy to teach the faith clearly and boldly.
This problem plagued the Church from its very beginning and often arises from
human respect. Peter himself fell victim when he stopped eating with the Gentile
converts in order to please the Jewish converts.[ii] St.
Paul called him to account and, when the first council met in Jerusalem, the
Church spoke clearly about the limited obligations of the Gentiles to follow
Mosaic Law. But it took a very UN-silent St. Paul to chastise the pope himself.
How many clergy fall into the same trap as the English bishops who chose
silence to please a king and avoid martyrdom? And the clergy today do it with
much less cause, since they will hardly be executed for making a handful of
parishioners angry. The bishop may lose some big contributors, of course, which
seems to be an important consideration with nice guys in the chancery.
There
are several particularly pernicious areas of silence for which our teaching shepherds are culpable. Humanae Vitae, the encyclical condemning
contraception, remains unproclaimed after fifty years. The silence in most
dioceses and parishes is deafening. Most clerics never challenge the sins of
the flesh common to their flocks: abortion, contraception, pornography, immodesty,
etc. Have you ever heard a sermon on the seven deadly sins or the four last
things? Hell and damnation are very real, but those words are seldom heard. Instead,
the Sunday homily, the major opportunity each week for the clergy to teach
doctrine and morality to their parishioners, often has little more substance
than a bowl of jello. How many clergy will have to answer to Christ, because
they abandoned their flocks to spiritual ignorance?
We
should be especially aware of the damage of silence in this anniversary year of
Fatima since Our Lady told the three shepherd children that sins of the flesh
send most sinners to hell. And certainly
the sin of our day is lust. Contraception, pornography, and immodesty give free
reign to fornication, adultery, and the perversion of the marriage bed. Contraception
often leads to abortion since many couples cite contraceptive failure as the
reason they kill their children. According to a 2011 U.K. study by the largest
abortion provider in the country, two thirds of women choosing abortion were
using contraception when they conceived.[iii] When
I was sidewalk counseling, several abortion-minded women told me it wasn’t
their fault since they conceived while using birth control. Hence, in their
minds, abortion was justified.
And yet
the silence about the immorality of these evils continues. Since the
publication of Amoris Laetitia it’s
been joined by another major assault on the family, the attack on the indissolubility
of marriage. Only a handful of clerics joined the Dubia asking Pope Francis for
clarification of the document which is being interpreted in some places to
allow adulterers and fornicators to receive Communion. The majority of the
clergy are taking the role of silent “nice guys” who want to be “pastoral” by
not upsetting those living in sin. Add the massive silence on gender ideology
and you have a triumvirate of lust treated with silence: contraception, the
indissolubility of marriage, and gender ideology.
Many families I know struggle with “gender”
issues having a son, daughter, niece, nephew, cousin, close friend, etc. who
identifies as one of the letters in the LGBTQ alphabet. Is this ever addressed
from the pulpit except in gay-friendly parishes where clergy affirm it? Silence
indicates consent. So it appears that the “nice guys” are willing to accept
that the souls in their care can choose their own genders and/or embrace
“marriage equality” even when these choices defy reality and lead to spiritual
death. Perhaps they sincerely believe it isn’t a problem for their parishioners,
but most religious polls show that Catholics are more accepting of same-sex
“marriage” and homosexuality than any other group except white mainline
Protestants and the unaffiliated.[iv]
Of course, since so many self-identified Catholics
don’t believe what the Church teaches, it’s hard to say what the statistics
really prove. It is probably more useful to look at beliefs. In a 2014 Pew
Religious Landscape study of 35,000 Americans(20.8% were Catholic, but only 58%
of the them said religion was “very important.” The survey found that about
19,000 of those interviewed favored same sex marriage while about 14,000
opposed it. The differences among the two groups were not surprising. A lower
percentage of gay marriage supporters attended religious services once a week
and prayed daily or were even certain that God exists. 76% of those strongly
opposed said religion was “very important” in their lives. Only 36% of gay
marriage supporters believed religion was important.[v]
But no matter how you look at the
statistics, it’s clear that a large number of Catholics do not accept Church
teaching on these issues. It is an obligation of charity to preach and teach
the truth lest many souls fall into hell as Mary showed the children at Fatima.
Silence is a cowardly option. Sadly, it is one commonly found on Catholic
college campuses where faithful professors are likely to be persecuted if they
break the silence, as happened to Professor Anthony Esolen at Providence in
Rhode Island. The Cardinal Newman Society website gives ample testimony to the
collapse of Catholic higher education at schools like Notre Dame, Marqhette,
Fordham, Boston College (a university but distinguished from Boston University), etc. where LGBTQ events are more prominent than teaching
the faith.
What may
be an even more dangerous error of the “nice guys,”however, is their focus on a
false ecumenism that treats all religions the same and fosters indifferentism,
a sin against the First Commandment. Authentic
ecumenism works toward the unity desired by Our Lord at the Last Supper when He
prayed that “All might be one.”[vi]
The Vatican II document on ecumenism makes it clear that:
…our separated brethren, whether considered as
individuals or as Communities and Churches, are not blessed with that unity
which Jesus Christ wished to bestow on all those who through Him were born
again into one body, and with Him quickened to newness of life - that unity
which the Holy Scriptures and the ancient Tradition of the Church proclaim. For it never loses sight of the fact
that it is through Christ’s Catholic
Church alone, which is the universal help toward salvation, that the fullness
of the means of salvation can be obtained. It was to the apostolic college
alone, of which Peter is the head, that we believe that our Lord entrusted all
the blessings of the New Covenant, in order to establish on earth the one Body
of Christ into which all those should be fully incorporated who belong in any
way to the People of God.”[vii]
Our goal
in ecumenism, then, should not be to conform Christ’s teachings to the
heretical beliefs of those who abandoned the Church. Rather we should encourage
our “separated brethren” to return to the fullness of the faith. Watering down doctrines
to make them more palatable to non-believers and Protestant Christians is like
turning the miraculous wine of Cana back into water. But that’s exactly what the “nice guys” do. In
RCIA classes they avoid discussing difficult issues like remarriage after divorce
(even more problematic after Amoris
Laetitia) and the use of contraception. They often focus exclusively on
shared and non-controversial beliefs. They join in ecumenical prayer services
that imply a union with mainline Protestants and even non-Christian religions that
does not exist. At weddings and funerals they fail to instruct that only
Catholics not conscious of grave sin may approach for Communion. Some even
invite non-Catholics to receive committing a serious sin of scandal.
Pope
Francis’ trip to Lund last Fall to “celebrate” Martin Luther’s revolution was a
prime example of the scandal of false ecumenism and it is being imitated by
some bishops. In Orlando, for example, Bishop John Noonan held a similar event
and, on the Orlando diocesan website, quoted Pope Francis’ statement from the
week of Christian Unity last January that “the intention
of Martin Luther five hundred years ago was to renew the Church, not divide
her.” That anyone can know the intentions
of another is questionable, but one can be especially skeptical after
considering Luther’s own statements.
After
refusing to reconcile with the Church, Luther responded to the Bull of
Excommunication three years after his rebellion by calling the pope the “anti-Christ.”
His statements attacking Holy Mother Church and the priesthood caused his
contemporary, the bishop-martyr, St. John Fisher, to write, “My God! How can one be calm when one hears such
blasphemous lies uttered against the mysteries of Christ? How can one without
resentment listen to such outrageous insults hurled against God’s priests? Who
can read such blasphemies without weeping from sheer grief if he still retains
in his heart even the smallest spark of Christian piety?”[viii] My answer to the saint’s question – the “nice guys.”
Ecumenism for the them equals indifferentism. I’m okay, you’re okay, we’re all
okay. This is particularly noticeable among those who believe and teach no one
needs to convert.
Not so for St. Pope John Paul II
who wrote in his encyclical, Ut Unum Sint (That all may be one) “The unity willed by
God can be attained only by the adherence of all to the content of revealed
faith in its entirety. In matters of faith, compromise is in contradiction with
God who is Truth. In the Body of Christ, the
way, and the truth, and the life (Jn
14:6), who could consider legitimate a reconciliation brought about at the
expense of the truth?”[ix]
Ecumenism will not come about by the
friendly indifferentism promoted by “nice guy” clergy with their touchy-feely
prayer services ignoring doctrinal differences on major moral issues like
abortion and theological issues like the Real Presence. They foster a false
ecumenism described by Fr. John Hardon, S.J. who writes, “In
large part, and with rare exception, Christian bodies separated from Rome
conceive the foundation of religious union more or less independent of
doctrinal agreement; or at best, they minimize the agreement and make it
subjective. They are less concerned to reunite the churches by their common
acceptance of Christian revelation than to merge them at any price, even to
eliminating doctrines that are an ‘obstacle’ to uniformity.”[x] Father also warns that this false ecumenism leads many Catholics
out of the Church who, with a weak foundation in their own faith, come to think
that all faiths are essentially the same. Fr. Hardon concludes writing, “For the Catholic Church only one condition is
necessary [for reunion] and only one possible—the acceptance of her teaching
and submission to her authority, not because they are hers but because they are
divine. Conscious of her possession of revealed truth, she assumes that those
who are seeking unity implicitly want, because they need, the unifying
principle that only God in His Church can supply.”[xi]
The silence of the English bishops, with the
exception of St. John Fisher, allowed the heretic Henry VIII to snatch the
authority of the papacy and make himself the head of the Church in England.
That entire country, with the exception of a minority of recusants, lost the faith.
Today, 500 years later, the silence of most American bishops about the real Martin Luther, a malicious heretic
who began by addressing an abuse over indulgences and ended up viciously
attacking the priesthood, the Mass, the papacy, and Jesus Christ Himself, is
creating a spirit of indifferentism.
Bishop Robert Barron recently called Luther a
“mystic of grace.”[xii]
What an insult to Jesus Christ. Luther accused our Savior of being a sinner who
committed adultery and fornication with the woman at the well and Mary
Magdalene.[xiii] Can Bishop Barron be
serious? Silence on these facts is part of the false ecumenism that threatens to
mislead poorly formed Catholics to accept the idea that all faiths are the
same. If Luther is such a hero, why not be Lutheran?
The laity too can fall into the “nice guy” trap.
Parents do it when they condone by their silence or even actively affirm their
adult children living sinful lifestyles or fail to discipline and train
teenagers because they fear their wrath. In the workplace it can be tempting to
participate in immoral activities especially in health care where a medical
school or nursing program might require a rotation performing or participating
in abortions. A psychiatric social worker might be required to affirm gender
ideology and pharmacists will almost surely face the problem of being asked to
fill prescriptions for drugs that kill babies in the womb. More commonly, the
challenge might be the temptation to be silent when work colleagues share dirty
jokes around the coffee station or brag about their immoral activities. Going
along “for fellowship” is tempting, even for serious Catholics. No one wants to
be ridiculed or disliked by his peers. We all want to be accepted and
considered “nice guys.”
Being “nice guys” may be the most insidious
temptation of our day, leading us to a treasonous betrayal of Christ. Jesus
told Pilate He came into the world to “testify to the truth.” We can testify by
our actions, but also refuse to testify by our silence. In the Confiteor of the
Mass we confess and express sorrow for “what I have done and what I have failed
to do.” Silence can be, and often is, a sin.
In May, Cardinal Caffarra, speaking at the fourth annual Rome Life Forum organized by Voice of
Family, described the culture of truth and the culture of the lie. Catholics,
he said have an obligation to testify to the truth. “Testimony
means to say, to speak, to announce openly and publicly. Someone who does not
testify in this way is like a soldier who flees at the decisive moment in a
battle. We are no longer witnesses, but deserters, if we do not speak openly
and publicly.”[xiv] The silence of the “nice
guys” is not an option for the Church militant.
Deacon Toner hit the
target when he said if being “nice guys” means being wishy-washy about the
truth we must be as disagreeable and dyspeptic as possible.” Was he advising
unkindness? Of course not! He was using hyperbole to condemn the temptation to
value human opinions above the will of God. Toner ended his article quoting a
man often called the apostle of common sense, G. K. Chesterton. “Chesterton,” he wrote “had it exactly right in
his observation that Christians are not
hated enough by the world.
Too often, we are ‘nice guys.’” “Nice guy” is a title, none of us should seek,
especially if it means advancing the culture of the lie instead of the culture
of truth and life. We are called to be soldiers in the Church Militant and
should ponder carefully the words of Cardinal Robert Sarah at the 12 Annual
National Catholic Prayer Breakfast in 2016. “Discern carefully – in your lives,
your homes, your workplaces – how, in
your nation, God is being eroded, eclipsed, liquidated….You have a mission of
bringing Divine Revelation to bear in the lives of your fellow citizens…. Do
not be afraid to proclaim the truth with love…. In the words of Saint Catherine
of Siena: ‘Proclaim the truth and do not
be silent through fear.’…and above all pray.”[xv]
[i]Deacon
James Toner, The Nice Guy Syndrome,
The Catholic Thing, https://www.thecatholicthing.org/2017/05/17/the-nice-guy-syndrome/,
May 17, 2017.
[ii]
Acts of the Apostles
[iii] Peter Baklinski, Two-thirds of women seeking abortions were using contraception: Britain’s largest abortion provider, LifeSiteNews, February 5, 2014, https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/two-thirds-of-women-seeking-abortions-were-using-contraception-britains-lar.
[iv]
Pew Research Center, Changing Attitudes on Gay Marriage 2001-2016,
[v]
Pew Research Center, Religious Landscape Sudy, 2014, http://www.pewforum.org/religious-landscape-study/views-about-same-sex-marriage/
[vi]
Gospel of John
[vii]
Unitatis Redintegratio,
[viii]
St. John Fisher, The Defense of the Priesthood, translated by Msgr. P.E.
Hallet, published by American Council on
Economics and Society, Fraser, Michigan 1996, p.2.
[ix]
Pope John Paul II, Ut Unum Sint, chapter 18, http://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp-ii_enc_25051995_ut-unum-sint.html
[x]
Fr. John Hardon, S.J. Christ to Catholicism, Chapter XI, The Ecumenical
Movement, http://www.therealpresence.org/archives/Church_Dogma/Church_Dogma_033.htm
[xi]
Ibid.
[xii]Bishop
Robert Barron, Looking at Luther with Fresh Eyes, Catholic World Report, June
13, 2017, http://www.catholicworldreport.com/2017/06/13/looking-at-luther-with-fresh-eyes/#comment-699
[xiii]
Raymond Taouk, Luther, Exposing the Myth, http://catholicapologetics.info/apologetics/protestantism/matluther.htm#_ftn57
[xiv]
Cardinal Carlo Caffarra, Address to 4th Annual Rome Life Forum, May
19, 2017, http://voiceofthefamily.com/cardinal-caffarra-we-are-no-longer-witnesses-but-deserters-if-we-do-not-speak-openly-and-publicly/
[xv]
Cardinal Robert Sarah, Address to the 12 Annual National Catholic Prayer
Breakfast, May 17, 2016, https://thewarourtime.com/2016/05/18/his-eminence-cardinal-robert-sarahs-keynote-speech-at-the-12th-annual-national-catholic-prayer-breakfast-tue-may-17-2016/
This is brilliant, Mary Ann. Simply fantastic.
ReplyDeleteI hope and pray your retreat goes well for you. :^)
Catechist Kev
I heard a homily yesterday (August 18) which, in many respects, was right on target. Father spoke eloquently about the indissolubility of marriage, since the Gospel focused on Jesus' own words in this regard. Yet right there in the sanctuary is a banner depicting Pope Francis and Our Lady of Fatima, as if these two are on the same page. Father did talk about the Fatima message, but not about Amoris Laetitia. The good priests seem to feel that, if we systematically ignore and whitewash the crisis in the Church, it will eventually go away.
ReplyDeleteBoston College is what you want, not Boston University, which is secular. Get your facts right!
ReplyDeleteIn view of the fact that Boston College is a university, I think the "mistake" was not a very significant one. But thanks for the correction. I'll edit it.
ReplyDelete