(Go here for Part I.)
This Vortex is longer than usual – about 10
minutes – but Michael Voris dissects the Archdiocese of New York’s “official unofficial”
statement about the issue in a way that is well-worth watching. I’ve also included
the script below the video, for those who prefer seeing the words.
First, though, I
want to highlight something Voris says at the end of the episode. He notes that
the AoNY blog post justifies inviting Obama in this way:
We
can still show respect for his office, and for him as a person, and treat him
with civility. It gives us an opportunity to act as Christians, and show some
love to our adversaries…
Voris responds
(my emphases):
Again, a very telling comment. Do you see the implication there? That to
oppose him is to somehow not show respect for his office. That to call him out on his murderous death-dealing
policies is to somehow not treat him with civility. And the coup de grace: that
this is showing love to our adversaries.
AND THAT, my Dear Friends in Christ, in
one short phrase sums up EVERYTHING that has gone wrong in the Church the past
50 years: that to speak the truth
plainly and boldly is somehow NOT love.
Love has been absolutely confused with
the concept of being nice and politically correct.
And this distortion has allowed the leaders of the Church to totally and
completely abdicate their roles as
fathers who love and die for their children. Fathers
say the tough things. It is bound up in masculinity to confront and defeat evil and wrong-doing.
To not do so is to lay aside your masculinity and adopt a self-centered desire to be liked by all and therefore surrender your claim to manhood and, by
extension, fatherhood.
Why has the Church fallen into such
horrible straits? Because the masculine
has been abandoned in favor of the effete!
And this scandal is a glaring high profile center-stage example of it.
He is so right.
Where have all the real men gone in our Church? It seems there are a few
bishops here and there beginning to stand up to the challenge, but the jury is
still out: will they really stand up under pressure? And I think a lot of the
problem is tied up with the issue of homosexuality in the Church…but that’s a
topic for another day.
Here’s the
Vortex:
Here's the script; the quotes from the AoNY blog are indented, italicized, and bolded.
Continuing on from yesterday’s Vortex where we discussed the poorly reasoned and argued officially UNOFFICIAL response of the New York Archdiocese regarding the invitation to Barack Obama to the annual Al Smith dinner…
Let’s look at
some of the points put forth by Ed Mechmann, the high-ranking New York
Archdiocese official who wrote on the New York Archdiocese blog in response to
the scandalous controversy.
First he says:
People
need to take a deep breath, relax a second, and think carefully about this.
The
condescension in that remark alone should be enough for you. The implication of course being that anyone
who disagrees hasn’t thought carefully enough.
Call it hubris on the part of the archdiocese.
A couple of
paragraphs down, he says:
The
dinner is not a religious event in any way.
Uh, wrong. Or at best, extremely misleading. It is organized by a foundation the board of
which is headed by the Cardinal himself and the Vicar General of the
archdiocese. It has their approval. The money raised goes to the archdiocese for
charitable work. It is promoted by the
Archdiocese and attended by the Cardinal.
While its
technically true that it isn’t RELIGIOUS, like the MASS for example, it most
certainly is a CATHOLIC event and no one even attempts to make the distinction
between RELIGIOUS and CATHOLIC. It IS a
Catholic event.
Catholicism is
celebrated at the dinner, right down to the very reason for the dinner: that Al
Smith was the first CATHOLIC to run for president on his party’s ticket back in
1928. It’s disingenuous to try and paint
this as nothing else than
a
civic event, much like a Veteran’s Day parade (but with a fancier menu and
white tie).
Next he says:
It
is strictly non-partisan.
A total red
herring. No one cares about what party a
politician belongs to. It’s his
positions and policies, not his party, that is at issue. Stop trying to muddy the waters.
…politicians
who speak at the dinner are not being given any honor or award by the Church…
How could anyone
say this with a straight face?
Seriously. No, Obama isn’t
getting an award. The issue of an award per
se is another red herring. But he is
being given an honor. Of course, it’s an
honor. Exactly what situation is there
that arises where someone is invited to speak at a fund-raising event – to be
one of the headliners – and it NOT be considered to be an honor?
To posit
anything else would be to say that the organizers of the dinner DON’T consider
it an honor when they extend an invitation to someone to speak. Does anyone think that Obama himself won’t
consider it an honor, or not make remarks to that effect in his comments?
Any
comparison between the Al Smith Dinner and the honorary degree given to the
President at Notre Dame’s graduation ceremony is thus completely off-the-mark.
Uh, no they are
not completely off the mark. That VIEW
is what’s off the mark. Of course it
smacks of the Notre Dame controversy all over again. Again, while no award is being given, the
mere fact of an invitation IS an honor.
What is it to honor someone after all?
It’s to call them out and set them above others and recognize them as
being worthy to listen to, or follow, or emulate.
Can anyone
reasonably assume that this is not EXACTLY what the world will construe by this
invitation?
Mechmann is
trying to paint the picture that this is just some civil event, that being
invited to speak at is no big deal .. no honor involved and as is decidedly NOT
Catholic and therefore bears nothing in resemblance to the Notre Dame fiasco of
2009.
And here, I’m
afraid, Mr. Mechmann’s argument is totally warped. The comparisons between the
dinner and Notre Dame are too glaring to ignore.
First with his
claim that it isn’t an official religious event: Well, Notre Dame isn’t an
OFFICIAL Catholic university; it’s controlled by a lay board of trustees and
has been since 1968. The Church has no
OFFICIAL capacity at Notre Dame whatsoever.
It doesn’t own the campus. It
doesn’t reap the rewards of the football program. Nothing. Yet is there anyone
who doesn’t associate Catholicism with Notre Dame?
Even Notre Dame
associates itself with the Church by leaving up statues and crucifixes and a
basilica on campus. No one walks around
Notre Dame and walks away with the idea that it is some kind of Muslim
stronghold, after all.
And that’s the
way Notre Dame likes it. Be Catholic
when it suits them and deny it when it doesn’t suit them.
That’s the same
principle that Mechmann is laying out here.
The Al Smith Dinner isn’t a religious event – read Catholic – so it’s no
big deal if Public Enemy Number One of the faith receives the honor of a
speaking role.
Can’t have it
both ways, Archdiocese of New York. Either it’s a Catholic event by virtue of
the money you receive from it as well as the prestige of years gone by…or it
isn’t.
Given the consistency and strength with which our bishops — particularly Cardinal
Dolan — have been proclaiming the Catholic view of public policy, it is hard to
see how this one Dinner could possibly lead anyone to believe that the Church
is softening her defense of life, the family, and religious liberty.
It isn’t a
question of softening the defense of the Church. Again: a misdirect, a red herring. It’s a question of the appropriateness of
doing this at all. If it’s SOOO HARD to
see how anyone could conclude that, then why did Archdiocesan spokesman Joe
Zwilling get hammered by the New York media on THAT VERY POINT?
It seems
everyone in the world – even the secular media – sees the obvious contradiction
here, and only paid employees of the archdiocese hunkered down in Fort Chancery
cannot.
And if they want
to continue to insist that NO ONE could conclude that, they ought to take some
time to read the comments on their own blog.
When
everyone wakes up the morning after, the struggle will resume.
This comment is
perhaps the most grating of all, as well as the most telling. It states quite plainly that this is a break
from the struggle – which of course implies that the struggle can be broken
from, if even for a night of jokes and cocktails.
Show me anywhere
where Our Blessed Lord or the saints or the doctors of the Church or the
Fathers of the Church EVER, for one single moment suggested that. That comment is disgusting and very
revealing.
WHY …WHY are we
taking a break in the struggle to hob nob with a man who wants to strangle the
Church? Do we really suppose that his administration back at the White House is
taking a break from enforcing the wicked HHS mandate on the Church?
Do we suppose
that the diabolical is taking a break from its all-out assault on the Bride of
Christ? In fact, with this man’s presence at the dinner, the diabolical is the
one enjoying a night of laughter.
We
can still show respect for his office, and for him as a person, and treat him
with civility. It gives us an opportunity to act as Christians, and show some
love to our adversaries…
Again, a very
telling comment. Do you see the
implication there? That to oppose him is to somehow not show respect for his office.
That to call him out on his murderous death-dealing policies is to
somehow not treat him with civility.
And the coup de grace: that this is
showing love to our adversaries.
AND THAT, my
Dear Friends in Christ, in one short phrase sums up EVERYTHING that has gone
wrong in the Church the past 50 years: that to speak the truth plainly and boldly
is somehow NOT love. Love has been absolutely confused with the concept of
being nice and politically correct.
And this
distortion has allowed the leaders of the Church to totally and completely
abdicate their roles as fathers who love and die for their children. Fathers say the tough things. It is bound up
in masculinity to confront and defeat evil and wrong-doing.
To not do so is
to lay aside your masculinity and adopt a self-centered desire to be liked by
all and therefore surrender your claim to manhood and, by extension,
fatherhood.
Why has the
Church fallen into such horrible straits? Because the masculine has been
abandoned in favor of the effete! And
this scandal is a glaring high profile center-stage example of it.
You wanna talk
about love? About TRUE charity?
The most perfect
way of demonstrating TRUE charity would be to set an example for not only
Barack Obama, who is trapped in his own evil and needs rescuing as well, but to
lift up the spirits of tens of thousands of Catholics dismayed and shocked over
this – and un-invite Obama.
Now that would
be a true statement of AUTHENTIC charity!
As a close,
consider how telling it is that in the emasculated, highly feminized Church of Nice
what to see other than this weak-kneed lily-livered statement.
The
message is also that we can set aside our deeply-held differences and leave the
partisan politics at the door for an evening, speak nicely and politely to each
other
And there it is!
At the end of the day, it all boils down to just being NICE.
‘Nuf said.
Please sign thepetition to have the invitation rescinded. In the name of Charity – for the
sake of TRUE Charity, Cardinal Dolan – rescind this invitation.
Please make a
prayer and offer a sacrifice that the Cardinal do the right thing.
AoNY Blog
response: http://blog.archny.org/steppingout/?p=2525
And now that Paul Ryan is the VP choice we'll have to put up with the bishop's saying things like, "Ryan's budget is not Catholic."
ReplyDeleteCreative Minority Report just said, "The bishops are wrong." Ya think?
Ugh. CMR is right! The bishops need to get out of politics, except where true teachings of the Church are involved (like abortion, contraception, homosexual "marriage", etc.). This focus on "justice and peace" is misguided - not because justice and peace are "wrong", of course, but because the phrase has been co-opted by the liberal left and doesn't mean "justice and peace" at all.
ReplyDeletePrudential judgements should be exactly that, prudent. This term cannot be used to justify any action that is not intrinsically evil. The point is that many Catholics do not think it was prudent, but scandalous. Just as going alone to dinner with another man's spouse, by itself is not intrinsically evil, it is not prudent, but scandalous. Having an official meeting with her at work on the other hand is appropriate. Cardinal Dolan did not choose the right forum for dialog and it is downright scandalous.
ReplyDeleteFraternizing with the enemy at a dinner party is scandalous especially when you were the one who personally invited him. I believe the problem is that many Catholics don't think President Obama is a enemy of the Church as evidenced by their voting in 2008. So what was the Fortnight of Freedom all about anyway? I believe many Catholics don't try to practice their faith 100% and when the Bishops do things like this it somehow justifies their own personal lack of the virtue of prudence. Come on, Jesus dining with sinners cannot be compared to Jesus leaving the Disciples to attend a gala with King Herod.