|
Published: July 29, 2008
“In 1968, something terrible happened in the Church”
Cardinal reflects on how dissenters to Humane Vitae tore the Church apart – and how rift left scars that remain to this day
(Editor’s Note: It is rare that California Catholic Daily publishes an article as lengthy as the one below – more than 4,000 words. But in this case, the story is so compelling and so important that we decided to make an exception. This article was made available to us courtesy of Catholic News Agency, and is a piece written by Cardinal James Stafford at the request of the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano. We believe it is well worth the read.)
Humanae Vitae
The Year of the Peirasmòs -- 1968
By Cardinal James Francis Stafford
“Lead us not into temptation” is the sixth petition of the Our Father. Peirasmòs, the Greek word used in this passage for ‘temptation,’ means a trial or test. Disciples petition God to be protected against the supreme test of ungodly powers. The trial is related to Jesus’s cup in Gethsemane, the same cup which his disciples would also taste (Mk 10: 35-45). The dark side of the interior of the cup is an abyss. It reveals the awful consequences of God’s judgment upon sinful humanity. In August 1968, the weight of the evangelical Peirasmòs fell on many priests, including myself.
It was the year of the bad war, of complex innocence that sanctified the shedding of blood. English historian Paul Johnson dubs 1968 as the year of “America’s Suicide Attempt.” It included the Tet offensive in Vietnam with its tsunami-like effects in American life and politics, the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee; the tumult in American cities on Palm Sunday weekend; and the June assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy in Southern California. It was also the year in which Pope Paul VI issued his encyclical letter on transmitting human life, Humanae Vitae (HV). He met immediate, premeditated, and unprecedented opposition from some American theologians and pastors. By any measure, 1968 was a bitter cup.
On the fortieth anniversary of Humanae Vitae, I have been asked to reflect on one event of that year, the doctrinal dissent among some priests and theologians in an American archdiocese on the occasion of its publication. It is not an easy or welcome task. But since it may help some followers of Jesus to live what Pope Paul VI called a more “disciplined” life (HV 21), I will explore that event.
The summer of 1968 is a record of God’s hottest hour. The memories are not forgotten; they are painful. They remain vivid like a tornado in the plains of Colorado. They inhabit the whirlwind where God’s wrath dwells. In 1968, something terrible happened in the Church. Within the ministerial priesthood, ruptures developed everywhere among friends which never healed. And the wounds continue to affect the whole Church. The dissent, together with the leaders’ manipulation of the anger they fomented, became a supreme test. It changed fundamental relationships within the Church. It was a Peirasmòs for many.
Some background material is necessary. Cardinal Lawrence J. Shehan, the sixth Archbishop of Baltimore, was my ecclesiastical superior at the time. Pope Paul VI had appointed him along with others as additional members to the Papal Commission for the Study of Problems of the Family, Population, and Birth Rates, first established by Blessed Pope John XXIII in 1963 during the II Vatican Council. There had been discussions and delays and unauthorized interim reports from Rome prior to 1968. The enlarged Commission was asked to make recommendations on these issues to the Pope.
In preparation for its deliberations, the Cardinal sent confidential letters to various persons of the Church of Baltimore seeking their advice. I received such a letter. My response drew upon experience, both personal and pastoral. Family and education had given me a Christian understanding of sex. The profoundly Catholic imagination of my family, friends and teachers had caused me to be open to this reality; I was filled with wonder before its mystery. Theological arguments weren’t necessary to convince me of the binding connection between sexual acts and new life. That truth was an accepted part of life at the elementary school connected with St. Joseph’s Passionist Monastery Parish in Baltimore. In my early teens my father had first introduced me to the full meaning of human sexuality and the need for discipline. His intervention opened a path through the labyrinth of adolescence.
Through my family, schools, and parishes I became friends with many young women. Some of them I dated on a regular basis. I marveled at their beauty. The courage of St. Maria Goretti, canonized in 1950, struck my generation like an intense mountain storm. Growing into my later teens, I understood better how complex friendship with young women could be. They entered the springtime of my life like the composite rhythm of a poem. To my surprise, the joy of being their friend was enriched by prayer, modesty, and the Sacraments of Penance and the Eucharist.
Later education and formation in seminaries built upon those experiences. In a 1955 letter to a friend, Flannery O’Connor describes the significance of the virtue of purity for many Catholics at that time: “To see Christ as God and man is probably no more difficult today than it has been ... For you it may be a matter of not being able to accept what you call a suspension of the law of the flesh and the physical, but for my part I think that when I know what the laws of the flesh and physical reality really are, then I will know what God is. We know them as we see them, not as God sees them. For me it is the virgin birth, the Incarnation, the resurrection which are the true laws of the flesh and the physical. Death, decay, destruction are the suspension of these laws. I am always astonished at the emphasis the Church places on the body. It is not the soul she says that will rise but the body, glorified. I have always thought that purity was the most mysterious of the virtues, but it occurs to me that it would never have entered human consciousness if we were not to look forward to a resurrection of the body, which will be flesh and spirit united in peace, in the way they were in Christ. The resurrection of Christ seems the high point in the law of nature.” O’Connor’s theology, with its remarkably eschatological mark, anticipates the teaching of the II Vatican Council, “The truth is that only in the mystery of the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light.” (Gaudium et Spes, 22.) In those years, I could not have used her explicit words to explain where I stood on sexuality and its use. Once I discovered them, she became a spiritual sister.
Eight years of priestly ministry from 1958 to 1966 in Washington and Baltimore broadened my experience. It didn’t take long to discover changes in Americans’ attitudes towards the virtue of purity. Both cities were undergoing sharp increases in out-of-wedlock pregnancies. The rate in Baltimore’s inner city was about 18% in 1966 and had been climbing for several years. In 1965-1966, the Baltimore Metropolitan Health and Welfare Council undertook a study to advise the city government in how to address the issue. At that time, the board members of the Council, including myself, had uncritical faith in experts and social research. Even the II Vatican Council had expressed unfettered confidence in the role of benevolent experts (Gaudium et Spes, 57). Not one of my professional acquaintances anticipated the crisis of trust which was just around the corner in the relations between men and women. Our vision was incapable of establishing conditions of justice and of purity of heart in which wonder and appreciation can find play. We were already anachronistic and without hope. We ignored the texture of life.
There were signs even then of the disasters facing children, both born and unborn. As a caseworker and priest throughout the 1960s, part of my ministry involved counseling inner-city families and single parents. My first awareness of a parishioner using hard drugs was in 1961. A sixteen-year old had been jailed in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. At the time of my late afternoon visit to him, he was experiencing drug withdrawal unattended and alone in a tiny cell. His screams filled the corridors and adjoining cells. Through the iron bars dividing us, I was horror-stricken watching him in his torment. The abyss he was looking into was unimaginably terrifying. In this drugged youth writhing in agony on the floor next to an open toilet I saw the bitter fruits of the estrangement of men and women. His mother, separated from her husband, lived with her younger children in a sweltering third floor flat on Light Street in old South Baltimore. The father was non-existent for them. The failure of men in their paternal and spousal roles was unfolding before my eyes and ears. Since then, more and more American men have refused to accept responsibility for their sexuality.
In a confidential letter responding to his request, I shared in a general fashion these concerns. My counsel to Cardinal Shehan was very real and specific. I had taken a hard, cold look at what I was experiencing and what the Church and society were doing. I came across an idea which was elliptical: the gift of love should be allowed to be fruitful. These two fixed points are constant. This simple idea lit up everything like lightning in a storm. I wrote about it more formally to the Cardinal: the unitive and procreative meanings of marriage cannot be separated. Consequently, to deprive a conjugal act deliberately of its fertility is intrinsically wrong. To encourage or approve such an abuse would lead to the eclipse of fatherhood and to disrespect for women. Since then, Pope John Paul II has given us the complementary and superlative insight into the nuptial meaning of the human body. Decades afterwards, I came across an analogous reading from Meister Eckhart: “Gratitude for the gift is shown only by allowing it to make one fruitful.” Some time later, the Papal Commission sent its recommendations to the Pope. The majority advised that the Church’s teaching on contraception be changed in light of new circumstances. Cardinal Shehan was part of that majority. Even before the encyclical had been signed and issued, his vote had been made public, although not on his initiative.
As we know, the Pope decided otherwise. This sets the scene for the tragic drama following the actual date of the publication of the encyclical letter on July 29, 1968.
In his memoirs, Cardinal Shehan describes the immediate reaction of some priests in Washington to the encyclical: “[A]fter receiving the first news of the publication of the encyclical, the Rev. Charles E. Curran, instructor of moral theology of The Catholic University of America, flew back to Washington from the West where he had been staying. Late [on the afternoon of July 29], he and nine other professors of theology of the Catholic University met, by evident prearrangement, in Caldwell Hall to receive, again by prearrangement with the Washington Post, the encyclical, part by part, as it came from the press. The story further indicated that by nine o’clock that night, they had received the whole encyclical, had read it, had analyzed it, criticized it, and had composed their six-hundred word ‘Statement of Dissent.’ Then they began that long series of telephone calls to ‘theologians’ throughout the East, which went on, according to the Post, until 3:30 a.m., seeking authorization to attach their names as endorsers (signers was the term used) of the statement, although those to whom they had telephoned could not have had an opportunity to see either the encyclical or their statement. Meanwhile, they had arranged through one of the local television stations to have the statement broadcast that night.”
The Cardinal’s judgment was scornful. In 1982 he wrote, “The first thing that we have to note about the whole performance is this: so far as I have been able to discern, never in the recorded history of the Church has a solemn proclamation of a Pope been received by any group of Catholic people with so much disrespect and contempt.”
The personal Peirasmòs, the test, began. In Baltimore in early August 1968, a few days after the encyclical’s issuance, I received an invitation by telephone from a recently ordained assistant pastor to attend a gathering of some Baltimore priests at the rectory of St. William of York parish in southwest Baltimore to discuss the encyclical. The meeting was set for Sunday evening, August 4. I agreed to come. Eventually a large number of priests were gathered in the rectory’s basement. I knew them all.
The dusk was clear, hot, and humid. The quarters were cramped. We were seated on rows of benches and chairs and were led by a diocesan inner-city pastor well known for his work in liturgy and race relations. There were also several Sulpician priests present from St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore to assist him in directing the meeting. I don’t recall their actual number.
My expectations of the meeting proved unrealistic. I had hoped that we had been called together to receive copies of the encyclical and to discuss it. I was mistaken. Neither happened. After welcoming us and introducing the leadership, the inner-city pastor came to the point. He expected each of us to subscribe to the Washington “Statement of Dissent.” Mixing passion with humor, he explained the reasons. They ranged from the maintenance of the credibility of the Church among the laity, to the need to allow ‘flexibility’ for married couples in forming their consciences on the use of artificial contraceptives. Before our arrival, the conveners had decided that the Baltimore priests’ rejection of the papal encyclical would be published the following morning in The Baltimore Sun, one of the daily newspapers.
The Washington statement was read aloud. Then the leader asked each of us to agree to have our names attached to it. No time was allowed for discussion, reflection, or prayer. Each priest was required individually to give a verbal “yes” or “no.”
I could not sign it. My earlier letter to Cardinal Shehan came to mind. I remained convinced of the truth of my judgment and conclusions. Noting that my seat was last in the packed basement, I listened to each priest’s response, hoping for support. It didn’t materialize. Everyone agreed to sign. There were no abstentions. As the last called upon, I felt isolated. The basement became suffocating. By now it was night. The room was charged with tension. Something epochal was taking place. It became clear that the leaders’ strategy had been carefully mapped out beforehand. It was moving along without a hitch. Their rhetorical skills were having their anticipated effect. They had planned carefully how to exert what amounted to emotional and intellectual coercion. Violence by overt manipulation was new to the Baltimore presbyterate.
The leader’s reaction to my refusal was predictable and awful. The whole process now became a grueling struggle, a terrible test, a Peirasmòs. The priest/leader, drawing upon some scatological language from his Marine Corp past in the II World War, responded contemptuously to my decision. He tried to force me to change. He became visibly angry and verbally abusive. The underlying ‘fraternal’ violence became more evident. He questioned and then derided my integrity. He taunted me to risk my ecclesiastical ‘future,’ although his reference was more anatomically specific. The abuse went on.
With surprising coherence, I was eventually able to respond that the Pope’s encyclical deserved the courtesy of a reading. None of us had read it. I continued that, as a matter of fact, I agreed with and accepted the Pope’s teaching as it had been reported in the public media. That response elicited more ridicule. Otherwise there was silence. Finally, seeing that I would remain firm, the ex-Marine moved on to complete the business and adjourn the meeting. The leaders then prepared a statement for the next morning’s daily paper.
The meeting ended. I sped out of there, free but disoriented. Once outside, the darkness encompassed me. We all had been subjected to a new thing in the Church, something unexpected. A pastor and several seminary professors had abused rhetoric to undermine the truth within the evangelical community. When opposed, they assumed the role of Job’s friends. Their contempt became a nightmare. In the night, it seemed that God’s blind hand was reaching out to touch my face.
The dissent of a few Sulpician seminary professors compounded my disorientation. In their ancient Baltimore Seminary I had first caught on to the connection between freedom, interiority, and obedience. By every ecclesial measure they should have been aware that the process they supported that evening exceeded the “norms of licit dissent.” But they showed no concern for the gravity of that theological and pastoral moment. They saw nothing unbecoming in the mix of publicity and theology. They expressed no impatience then or later over the coercive nature of the August meeting. Nor did any of the other priests present. One diocesan priest did request privately later that night that his name be removed before the statement’s publication in the morning paper.
For a long time, I wondered about the meaning of the event. It was a cataclysm which was difficult to survive intact. Things were sorted out slowly. Later, Henri de Lubac captured some of its significance, “Nothing is more opposed to witness than vulgarization. Nothing is more unlike the apostolate than propaganda.” Hannah Arendt’s insights have been useful concerning the dangerous poise of 20th century Western culture between unavoidable doom and reckless optimism. “It should be possible to discover the hidden mechanics by which all traditional elements of our political and spiritual world were dissolved into a conglomeration of where everything seems to have lost specific value, and has become unrecognizable for human comprehension, unusable for human purpose. To yield to the mere process of disintegration has become an irresistible temptation, not only because it has assumed the spurious grandeur of ‘historical necessity,’ but also because everything outside it has begun to appear lifeless, bloodless, meaningless and unreal.” The subterranean world that has always accompanied Catholic communities, called Gnosticism by our ancestors, had again surfaced and attempted to usurp the truth of the Catholic tradition.
An earlier memory from April 1968 helped to shed further light on what had happened in August 1968 along with de Lubac’s words about violence and Arendt’s insights into the breaking point reached by Western civilization in the 20th century. During the height of the 1968 Baltimore riots following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., I had made an emergency call to that same inner-city pastor who would lead the later August meeting. It was one of numerous telephone conversations I had with inner-city pastors during the night preceding Palm Sunday. At the request of the city government, I was asking whether the pastors or their people, both beleaguered, might need food, medical assistance, or other help.
My conversation with him that April night was by far the most dramatic. He described the view from the rectory while speaking on the phone. A window framed a dissolving neighborhood; his parish was becoming a raging inferno. He said, “From here I see nothing but fire burning everywhere. Everything has been set ablaze. The Church and rectory are untouched thus far.” He did not wish to leave or be evacuated. His voice betrayed disillusionment and fear. Later we learned that the parish buildings survived.
‘Sorting out’ these two events of violence continued throughout the following months and years. The trajectories of April and August 1968 unpredictably converged. Memories of the physical violence in the city in April 1968 helped me to name what had happened in August 1968. Ecclesial dissent can become a kind of spiritual violence in its form and content. A new, unsettling insight emerged. Violence and truth don’t mix. When expressive violence of whatever sort is inflicted upon truth, the resulting irony is lethal.
What do I mean? Look at the results of the two events. After the violent 1968 Palm Sunday weekend, civil dialogue in metropolitan Baltimore broke down and came to a stop. It took a back seat to open anger and recriminations between whites and blacks. The violence of the priests’ August gathering gave rise to its own ferocious acrimony. Conversations among the clergy, where they existed, became contaminated with fear. Suspicions among priests were chronic. Fears abounded. And they continue. The Archdiocesan priesthood lost something of the fraternal whole which Baltimore priests had known for generations. 1968 marked the hiatus of the generational communio of the Archdiocesan presbyterate, which had been continually reinforced by the seminary and its Sulpician faculty. Priests’ fraternity had been wounded. Pastoral dissent had attacked the Eucharistic foundation of the Church. Its nuptial significance had been denied. Some priests saw bishops as nothing more than Roman mannequins.
Something else happened among priests on that violent August night. Friendship in the Church sustained a direct hit. Jesus, by calling those who were with him his ‘friends,’ had made friendship a privileged analogy of the Church. That analogy became obscured after a large number of priests expressed shame over their leaders and repudiated their teaching.
Cardinal Shehan later reported that on Monday morning, August 5, he “was startled to read in the Baltimore Sun that seventy-two priests of the Baltimore area had signed the Statement of Dissent.” What he later called “the years of crisis” began for him during that hot, violent August evening in 1968.
But that night was not a total loss. The test was unexpected and unwelcome. Its unhinging consequences continue. Abusive, coercive dissent has become a reality in the Church and subjects her to violent, debilitating, unproductive, chronic controversies. But I did discover something new. Others also did. When the moment of Christian witness came, no Christian could be coerced who refused to be. Despite the novelty of being treated as an object of shame and ridicule, I did not become “ashamed of the Gospel” that night and found “sweet delight in what is right.” It was not a bad lesson. Ecclesial obedience ran the distance.
My discovery that Christ was the first to despise shame was gut rending in its existential and providential reality. “Let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame.” Paradoxically, in the hot, August night a new sign shown unexpectedly on the path to future life. It read, “Jesus learned obedience through what he suffered.”
The violence of the initial disobedience was only a prelude to further and more pervasive violence. Priests wept at meetings over the manipulation of their brothers. Contempt for the truth, whether aggressive or passive, has become common in Church life. Dissenting priests, theologians and laypeople have continued their coercive techniques. From the beginning, the press has used them to further its own serpentine agenda.
All of this led to a later discovery. Discernment is an essential part of episcopal ministry. With the grace of “the governing Spirit” the discerning skills of a bishop should mature. Episcopal attention should focus on the break/rupture initiated by Jesus and described by St. Paul in his response to Corinthian dissenters. “You desire proof that Christ is speaking in me. He is not weak in dealing with you, but is powerful in you. For he was crucified in weakness, but lives by the power of God. For we are weak in him, but in dealing with you we shall live with him by the power of God. Examine yourselves, to see whether you are holding to your faith. Test yourselves” (2 Cor 13: 3-5).
The rupture of the violent death of Jesus has changed our understanding of the nature of God. His Trinitarian life is essentially self-surrender and love. By Baptism, every disciple of Jesus is imprinted with that Trinitarian watermark. The Incarnate Word came to do the will of him who sent him. Contemporary obedience of disciples to the Successor of Peter cannot be separated from the poverty of spirit and purity of heart modeled and won by the Word on the Cross.
A brief afterword: In 1978 or thereabouts, during an episcopal visitation to his parish, I was having lunch with the Baltimore pastor, the ex-Marine, who led the August 1968 meeting. I was a guest in his rectory. He was still formidable. Our conversation was about his parish, the same parish he had been shepherding during the 1968 riots. The atmosphere was amiable. During the simple meal in the kitchen I came to an uneasy decision. Since we had never discussed the August 1968 night, I decided to initiate a conversation about it. My recall was brief, objective and, insofar as circumstances allowed, unthreatening. I had hoped for some light from him on an event which had become central to the experience of many priests, including myself. While my mind and heart were recalling the events of the night, he remained silent. His silence continued afterwards. Even though he had not forgotten, he made no comment. He didn’t lift his eyes. His heart’s fire was colder now.
Nothing was forthcoming. I left the matter there. No dialogue was possible in 1968; it remained impossible in 1978. There was no common ground. Both of us were looking into an abyss -- from opposite sides. Anguish and disquiet overwhelmed the distant hope of reconciliation and friendship. We never returned to the subject again. He has since died while serving a large suburban parish. The only remaining option is to strike my breast and pray, “Lord, remember the secret worth of all our human worthlessness.”
Diocesan presbyterates have not recovered from the July/August nights in 1968. Many in consecrated life also failed the evangelical test. Since January 2002, the abyss has opened up elsewhere. The whole people of God, including children and adolescents, now must look into the abyss and see what dread beasts are at its bottom. Each of us shudders before the wrath of God, each weeps in sorrow for our sins and each begs for the Father’s merciful remembrance of Christ’s obedience.
(Cardinal Stafford is Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary, Roman Curia.)
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 4:45 AM By Michael
The cardinal is correct when he states “In 1968, something terrible happened in the Church”....the true church was hijacked by the communists, masons, satanists and modernists...The Mass was protestantized, the Sacraments dubious at best, the Ordination Rite changed from Priest to Presider...Then...the Rosary was corrupted and the Stations of the Cross changed to appease man. Yes indeed ..“In 1968, something terrible happened in the Church”
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:12 AM By Fr. M.P.
Father knows best, in this case it was the Holy Father. We see his prophetic predictions have come to pass to a tee. And we see the result of pride-filled disobedience by cafeteria Catholics, including clergy. No good whatsoever comes from rejecting God's Truth.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:38 AM By Peggy
Thank you Cardinal Stafford for writing the truth about the schism in the Church with regards to contraception. It sheds new light on "why" we never heard it spoken about from the pulpit. When the pulpit was silent it was seen as an approval that the Pope got it wrong. How many lives also went into the abyss because those words were not spoken? My father used to talk about Humane Vitae but he was the only one. He like you was alone but now his words ring true. God was only trying to give me a gift through children and I refused taking birth control and then sterilizing. In discernment I know that through contraception I aborted many children. A good Catholic girl who received Communion weekly. So many of us sitting in the pews, so many of us just now 40 years later realizing that the Church was right and we were wrong. I will not be silent anymore. We need to speak up if the Church will not to a new generation to stop this assault against life. Much like abortion, exactly like abortion, the devil lies to us and tells us we cannot. Jesus says we can. God have mercy on us all.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:53 AM By Celia Cannon
I was ten years old back in 1968, it was traumatizing for me to watch this all unfold. Soon afterwards, I noticed, even as a child, less and less families attended Holy Mass. Clues for the cluesless! I`m still reeling!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:53 AM By Maria
You know, I am from Baltimore. I was born in 1961, and was just entering parochial school in 1968. Baltimore, the 3 Catholic schools that I attended for 12 years, and the church there in general did not serve me very well. I don't mean to be all sour grapes, but I lost my faith in Baltimore. I've been gone for 25 years now, and Praised be Jesus, my Catholic faith, the strong faith I had from my Omi (my granny), is strong and flourishing. My hubby and I have 9 beautiful children and because he's Irish and I'm half-German, we are stubborn and glad of it, because along the way, we, by the merciful Grace of our Heavenly Father, discovered the real Truth about our beautiful Catholic Faith, and her wondrous teachings. We delight in holding tight to obedience to our Holy Father, and ALL the teachings of the Church, especially that of the intrinsic evil of artificial birth control. And believe me, we who were free loving hippies, have come a long, long, way. There is hope for all my dear friends. Speak kindly to those who do not yet understand. Maybe it will be your kind, understanding manner that will plant the seed that will sprout into loveliness, obedience and the ability to see and embrace the Truth of Jesus Christ. God bless America and especially this bold, idealistic gereration of youth.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:54 AM By Jacqueline Lacroix
After having read "Humanae Vitae" in 1968, I asked my husband to accept the Church's teaching and I wanted to stop taking the "Pill". Obedience was important to me.
My husband coldly answered that I wasn't married to the Pope and ordered me to keep using artificial contraception.
He din't want to read Humanae Vitae and I remember being so upset that I went to consult a Trinitarian monk who answered that I'll have to follow my conscience.
To please my husband and avoid quarelling I remain on the "Pill".
Now: in 1973 my husband fled the country with another woman.
I'm sure that artificial contraception has killed love in our marriage.
The price to pay for disobedience is an abyss of sorrows.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:56 AM By Peg
Thank you, Cardinal Stafford, for your honest account of your memories and the courage of your witness to which we are all called. Words just can't describe how your article impressed me. Peg in Denver
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:14 AM By Jack
I read and read and read to the point that the words became meaningless. The article is too long and too churchy. After getting through half the article and not being able to figure out what he is talking about, or trying to talk about, I gave up. This shows how educated people lack the skill to communicate with the average person.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:34 AM By Jeanne
Thank you, Spirit Daily, for the link to Cardinal James Francis Stafford's article on Humanae Vitae.
Bitter fruits are mine daily from Humanae Vitae's rejection.
My parents had 11 children(1947-1967). My in-laws had 8 children(1934-1951). Praise God!
Now I get to mourn each day for my decisions and my children's decisions based on the rejection of Humanae Vitae.
Humanae Vitae, NFP, Theology of the Body-these are good fruits for all who obey.
Pornography, contraception, abortion, infanticide, Terry Schiavo's murder-these are the bad fruits of disobedience.
My prayer for conversion of family and friends will continue.
As Msgr. Reilly told me recently, they do not know what it means to be a person. And that is one of the excellent points of the Cardinal-we only know what we are in light of the Incarnation.
Too late for me. But I offer this up for those who still have time.
Please read and obey Humanae Vitae.
Thank you.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:39 AM By Bill
God bless you for your steadfastness.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:43 AM By Al Janson
It was the beginning of the end and we are still feeling the effects of the dissent today. Until priests, religious and lay people seriously take the teachings of the church and Christ's Vicar on earth then the Church will continue to decline and dissent will continue which is not what Christ wanted.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:59 AM By California Teacher
Thanks for running the full text of this exceptional article. No wonder a whole generation (or two) caved, their leaders couldn't withstand the test of peer pressure. I remember the period well, and how nearly impossible it was to get good advice from the clergy. IMHO, things are somewhat improved these days.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:07 AM By Cassie
Cardinal Stafford - WELL DONE, GOOD AND FAITHFUL SERVANT!
This article brings such sadness to me and yet it underscores how God's truth will NOT be silenced.
May he have mercy on the souls of all those who lead others astray.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:10 AM By Lisa
Thank you Cardinal Stafford, for enlightening those of us who grew up in those dark days, not understanding the jist of what was happening or the future consequences in which we would find ourselves. My parents lost their faith that year, but my grandmother kept mine alive. This new generation is filled with the Spirit of a New Pentecost, the New Evangelization of Pp JP II, and joins you from one side of the abyss. We struggle, as my son who was raised in orthodoxy and obedience to Holy Mother Church, began to discern a call to the priesthood in 2002 that has been constantly attacked from both sides, especially in the seminary, and is utterly appalled and sickened by what he sees in the Church and is facing his own FIAT. Will we see a new generation in the likes of St Francis of Assisi? Mary, Mother of the Church, pray for us who have recourse to thee!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:14 AM By Lorraine
What a powerful and sad testimony! Hope is still the command. Christ will always provide a healing remedy for the Church and John Paul II's "Theology of the Body" is that gift from the Holy Spirit. As George Weigel puts it in his book "Witness to Hope" ..."Theology of the Body constitutes a theological time bomb set to go off, with dramatic consequences, sometime in the third millennium of the Church." This teaching provides the deepest and profound foundational basis of Humanae Vitae. . At this moment in time as the attacks against the teaching of the Church becomes even stronger we have this very powerful weapon against the anti-life/anti-love forces. Let's begin to learn and disseminate it. Thank you Cardinal Stafford for this moving essay!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:30 AM By Greg
Lord have mercy! So that is what happened. The majority of priests favored the follow-your-conscience theology. That explains the pro-contraception views of my elderly parents (of 11 children) - they trusted their priests. I still don't think they understand the havoc this caused.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:48 AM By VirginiaPendergast
In 1949 the leaders of the Communist party directed all their members to undermine the Catholic Church, in the USA by
placing atheists in seminaries. Bella Dodd, noted communist in NYC, later a convert, reported to Bishop Sheen, that she had placed over 1200 men ...atheists in seminaries. So when we wonder why so many priests were unfaithful we really have the answer......they were either not believers in Christ and the CHurch or they were educated by
"priests" who were placed to undermine the Church. The fact that the Church has survived is proof the Christ "will always be with us"
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:54 AM By Father Ken Parker
Thank you Cardinal Stafford for your explanation of your thoughts and experiences during the surfacing of dissention in the Church at the time "Humanae Vitae" was written, but "not even read" by so many of the priest-dissenters before they left the active priesthood. Being ordained in May of 1965, I was a young priest at the time and have spent decades trying "to sort out" what in the world happened in the Catholic Church that began the mass exodus of so many of my priest friends. As I read the Cardinal's article, I could relate with every word he wrote, including the confusion, the pain, and becoming the focal point of dissenter's anger and scorn. These are "heavy words" and not written lightly. I can also identify with the Cardinal's deep, interior experience of peace which "obedience" to legitimate Church authority brings. Jesus said to the future Head of the Church, "He who hears you, hears Me." I had to rediscover that obedience is not "oppression" as dissenters and the fallen angels would have us believe, but is the theme song of Our Lord's life. He did not come for "self-fulfillment" but the fulfill His Father's Holy Will. His beautiful Mother, Mary, also was obedient in letting it be done according to God's Holy Will. She was an is the exact opposite of the first Eve. It brought crucifixion to her Son, but also Resurrection and the New Life in the Holy Spirit shared with all His followers who obey. Thank you again, Cardinal Stafford, for sharing your first hand experiences and reflections as "an evil wind" entered the Church when she "opened the windows" to let some fresh air in. May we all rediscover that obedience is the first evidence of love. To enter the Kingdom, The Master says we must become as "little children".
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:06 AM By Mary Parks
Thanks for printing this, and thanks to Cardinal Stafford for writing this. Maybe someday the story of the large minority of laity who suffered under the regime of dissent from 68 til recently will be told. But this is the first acknowledgment of clerical wrong from a cleric. An apology is in order from the clergy to the people and to the world. Many people went over cliffs under the direction of clergy, and we are picking up the pieces today. We are at 40 years, and some dioceses are beginning to talk about Humanae Vitae, but people act as if it were the people that went against the Church, and no one mentions the sins of the shepherd. Thank you for acknowledging them, even only in reference to yourself and to the priesthood. One should in decency remember the flock that was abandoned - nay, given over - to the wolves.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:07 AM By Ed R
Thank you Cardinal Stafford for you beautifully insightful comments on Humanae Vitae. Many hearts are still hurting from the dissent of this document. May God grant healing to all who repent and make them whole in his Love. God Bless You.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:07 AM By John R.
Pray for those priests and all who embrace, actively or passively, the culture of death.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:17 AM By GTB
Thank you for printing this amazing article. I just wish someone of Card Stafford's stature had spoken up about 30 yrs ago!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:19 AM By Joseph Earl
The abyss has not opened elsewhere,it is the same cesspool.The sexual abuse is but the harvest of the many homosexual priest you sat with on that August night in 1968.The baby killers and the queer priest are of the same evil cloth. That can be the only reason that the Pro-life movement after 1973 was led by lay people,the baby killers knew the awful secret about the priethood.Silence in regard to abortion was the price for confidentiality.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:25 AM By Viola Aldridge
Since the Catholic Church is the true church founded by Jesus this world would be a better place if catholics would never have started using birth control.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:27 AM By Milu Martin
What a profound article and right on target. I too believe things began to crumble fast in the late 60's insofar as our beloved Church and society is concerned. It is nice to know that there are still some good priests/cardinals out there that hold fast to Catholic teachings and most importantly, respect for one another. Sometimes, all it takes is one good man/priest to stay firm in his convictions to make many others ponder their own actions.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:30 AM By Paul Mihalik,Sr.
What a clear but frightening explanation of the cataclysmic happening when the priests met that day with premeditated evil intentions to openly and publicly disobey the Vicar of Christ on earth. Cardinal Stafford's writing on this terrible event is a classic document which should preserved and distributed to evry Bishop in this country so they could evaluate where they stand concerning compliance with the Encyclical, and what leadership they propose to exert to teach their priests the TRUTH in the document and the meaning of obedience to the Magisterium, which is Christ on earth.May all the dissenters learn quickly, that they will be converted and saved.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:37 AM By Gregg
Thank you Cardinal Stafford. This is truly a gift of God to me. The silence is deafening.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:40 AM By Mary Ellen Whitfield
Thank you for sharing these words. I now have added direction in my prayers for priests in Healing. This struggle, is long, hard and deep. For all people, it is not easy to be raised from this type of Ecclesial pain. In Jesus, I believe all is possible and Jesus is the only one that will raise us from this pain. It is not just within the priesthood about but how the world behold Jesus' brothers on earth, in our broken age. It is how more broken we have become since the 1960's this early age of distortion of God's Will for us. We are an age that has Lost the desire to Love God's Will. But we also Lost the big picture of the Life in Holiness within God's priesthood and Holiness in the union of the sanctity of marriage in the physical and spiritual. The marriage union of God, husband and wife is Holy. Contraception and all the ramifications and uses of contraception has boken thi gift of Holiness. It allowed the sinfulnes of dissent within the priesthood and confusion and disillusionment among the faithful. This confusion led people away from the church. Priests don't say this too often even though Jesus taught using the analogy of marriage in His teachings as Our Bridegroom and the Church, His bride. If Jesus used this analogy in His teachings There is a connection so great to His gift of the smaller union within the church to build up the body of Christ. Jesus' Church, His bride.
I have aways believed this and society has corrupted this vision. Your words shed light on my confusion why things have not been said in the many parishes my husband and I have lived in over the past 26 years. The pain my heart is real, but my joy is real too! If there was a moment of coercion and deception in July 1968, it can be defeated with this moment of truth in July 2008. Praise God!! John PauI II
spoke of a new Springtime coming forth. I believe a Yellow Rose just bloomed. Thank you again. My prayers are with you and for your continued efforts to share the truth.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:43 AM By ann
I am astounded that there are no comments on this most important reflection. This article should be mandatory reading for all clergy.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:46 AM By Mickmont
The profundity of Cardinal Stafford's comments cannot be underestimated! This is the voice of one crying out in the wilderness having traversed the desolate darkness that is man's perpetual rejection of God's law and seen firsthand the horrors that result from it. Oh, that we might somehow reclaim those truths that we have so willingly, and arrogantly, cast aside these past forty years and longer!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:58 AM By Lisa
Beautiful. I am awestruck. Thank you Cardinal Stafford dear lover and follower of Christ and His Church. May God reward you and have mercy on us all. I love you in Our Lord and our Lady. I love you.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:09 AM By Barbara O'Brien Arat
I have asked the question about Adam and Eve. What did they fail to do that allowed them to be blinded by the Evil One? What were these Priests failing to do that so blinded them to the truth? Truly, we need to be more informed as to those acts, little and big that will prevent the forming of an invisible wall around us, constructed by our own omisions that allows our ultimate enclosure, and blocks our ability to see good from evil.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:12 AM By Thomas
Soon we will be linking today's inflation rate to Humane Vita!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:13 AM By Daniel
I'm a convert to Catholism since the mid 1970's and have watched the Church I've grown to love become disengaged especially at the pastoral level. I've often wondered what happened with the game plan for Vatican II. I thought the plan was to lead us into this new era on our journey to Christ. I had heard over the years that the smoke of the evil one had entered the Church in a calculating way. I now understand the seeds that were sown on the fertile soil and the harvest or lack of harvest that has taken place. It is with great sorrow that We turn away from the greatest truth of our being, God Exists. Thank you for the candid reflection on such a painful experience.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:31 AM By kathleen
There is such a disregard for respect for the dignity of sexuality and of women.
My state of Oregon now has the mandate of the people to allow pornography 1000 feet from families' homes. A schoolbus with children must drive right next to the porn shop to go back to their homes. Now the owner has placed 6 headless women mannequins with porn underwear in the main window. We see it everytime we drive out of our neighborhood. What is so sad is everyone is so desentized, probably the children as well.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:42 AM By Kevin
It is truly the greatest tragedy of the last 100 years that priests can no longer count on the loyalty and common purpose of thier fellow clergymen. As a lay person it is infinitely more difficult to establish a familial relationship with a pastor than before this rift occurred. When I address a priest as "Father" it is always with respect but not always with the sincerity and love that a child should have.
I am nostolgic for the days when I could count on a priest agreeing without reservation with the doctrine proclaimed by the pope. Now I feel often that my loyalty to the church is viewed as anachronistic or naive.
I have witnessed priests withdrawal from personal relationships because they can no longer express views without being percieved as having taken sides. The greatest suffering is for priests but we, the laity, have also been deprived of the familial relationships that Christ intended between pastors and thier flocks.
I hope that this rift is mended soon. In the meantime it is the duty of each of us to repair the hurts within our spiritual family. The best method is to remain true to Chirst and the clergy who preach his gospel as expressed by His vicar, the pope
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:49 AM By meg
Please, please pray for my mom Nancy, she had 3 strokes and can no longer walk or talk.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:53 AM By Harriet Algen
This is so tremendous a writing, that in my opinion, ALL PRIESTS, BISHOPS AND HIERARCHY, should read it, asking the Holy Spirit for His guidance of opening hearts and minds to the TRUTH and what obiedience really means in their lives, to OUR PRECIOUS CHURCH...all lay people should also read it and then all once again read Humae Vitae to discover the true value that it holds within its words..for all our spiritual lives as well as possible salvation for all...especiallly for our precious dissenting priests, who will suffer more because of their dissent and disobedience..they have not stopped to realize Satan has accomplished what he set out to do divide and conquer..the priesthoold...Hooray for Cardinal Safford...we Catholics in the pews need more llike him...as so many are being led astray...thank you Cardinal Safford...with my prayers I remain your servant, Harriet Algren
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:56 AM By William
Praying for Nancy
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:56 AM By Diane Slater
This is one of the most powerful and important articles that I have ever read. I'm a widowed mom of 14, grandma of 41..a committed Catholic. I will be making copies of this and sending it to all good priests I know for their consolation.
We are truly in a spiritual war on all fronts--in the Church, in society, in the world. Our greatest weapons are the Rosary and Eucharistic adoration and observing the pleas of Our Lady at Fatima. We must offer our lives out of love of God for priests in this time when Satan is totally unleashed! In the end, Jesus is Victorious! We must not forget this!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:57 AM By MAC
this should be required reading for all of the clergy---------------therein is the Church's problem-the boys in black---------
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:09 AM By Bob Kord
in "Humani Vitae," The Bishop of Rome, Paul VI, sitting in Saint Peter's "Whatever you bind on earth" chair, spoke on the sanctity of marriage and the very core of marriage, the marital act itself between one man and one woman consecrated with the sacrament of Holy Marriage... and some smarter-than-all church fathers and soon to become down and out heretical priests began to preach the gospel of "If it feels good, do it." Satan smiled in his self-satisfying achievment. 1968 indeed was a momentous year of challenge between the forces of God and the forces of the evil one. The losers in all of this are the thousands upon thousands of married couples who had no solid direction from our Shepard in Rome BECAUSE local priests and seminary self-indulgent eggheads took an entire generation of Catholic people and turned them into unwilling heretics. The duped were now practicing "if it feels good, do it." It is refreshing and holy that modern Catholic Christians, some Evangelical Christians and Orthodox Christians are returning to the ancient faith which was transmitted from Jesus Christ himself to Peter and the Apostles. Long live the Bishop of Rome. Long may his mission on earth continue to correct heresies and notify human beings of the evil one and the clever sophistications of the addictive yet treacherous descent to eternal damnation.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:14 AM By Bill O'Meara
This article needs to be posted in each parish and sent through each diocesean bishop. Perhaps the "licit dissent' will one day be rejected by all bishops.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:32 AM By Violet VinZant
I agree with the mother of 14. I too am the mother of a large family. We had 17 children. We did everything to raise them strong Catholics but most have left the Church.. How can you confess a sin such as birth control if you are not truly sorry. That is where the young people are today. Priests who were opposed to the incylical of Humanea Vitea by Pope Paul VI set the pace and Sisters who were following the liberal vent were their teachers. You could not stem the tide of the slippery slope we were on. I tried as I was involved with the pro-life movement but even your own children make up their own minds. I have prayed for them all with unconditional love and placed them in the heart of Jesus. We have to pray for all those priest and Nuns who by now some are in Purgatory. Hope that things will turn around and pray for our Blessed Pope Benedict XVI. By Violet VinZant
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:34 AM By Rosemary
I am sure it took great strength to write this article. As it takes great strength to inform one's parish about the evil in lack of discernment and evil in pride. While this dissention has eventually lead to the death of millions of unborn babies, it has also led to the teaching of Theology of the Body. Which I am sure few have read,yet, should be a topic of concern in our parishes. If we all understood the gift of our Lord's Crucifiction we would have greater understanding of the Eucharist and love of each other.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:54 AM By Dan
40 years ago the Church underwent a peirasmos over contraception. Now we have another peirasmos with its progeny --homosexual marriage. Who will remain faithful to Catholic faith, and who will dissent? In these times it does seem a martyrdom of sorts to remain faithful when such powerful forces are set opposing the Church's vision of marriage and sexuality. Oremus!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:55 AM By Irish Spectre
This is very, very powerful.
How do we get it back? How do we regain a sense of the supernatural, of eternity, of God's plan for us?
Yes, each of my three sons (and would that there were not more, Lord) are at serious risk of having to confront that great abyss about which that Cardinal speaks so eloquently, but we as parents must have enough love, honesty and courage to tell our children the objective truth about God's will for them. We must help them to gain a sense of their true selves, begotten by God, so that they have what it takes to be countercultural.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:56 AM By Stephaniefeltham
We are so blessed to have such Holy Priests who live and teach the Truth who is Jesus Himself! As a convert to the Catholic faith I'm humbled and forever grateful for our many holy and faithful priests and will always pray for all priests with every moment of of my life. God bless you all.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 11:32 AM By Mary
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:14 AM By Jack
I read and read and read to the point that the words became meaningless. The article is too long and too churchy. After getting through half the article and not being able to figure out what he is talking about, or trying to talk about, I gave up. This shows how educated people lack the skill to communicate with the average person.
tTO JACK , I KNOW WHAT YOU MAN AND IT'S TRUE...MOST OF LAYPEOPLE DON'T UNDERSTAND THE THEOLOGICAL DEBATES....TO MAKE THAT LONG STORY SHORT...THE DEVIL THROUGH THE PRIESTS WHO FOLLOWED THE BALTIMORE EVIL THEOOGY PROFESSORS...SUCCEEDED IN REJECTING THE POPE VI TEACHINGS ABOUT CONTRACEPTION IN 1968...NOW OUR CHURCHIS TILL SUFFERING FROM IT, BECAUSE OF THE GREAT DISOBEDIENCE TO THE VICAR OF CHRIST...THE CATHOLIC CHURHC IN AMERICA IS IN DISOBEDIENCE WITH THE TEACHINGS OF THE POPE AND CHRIST AND HAS SPREAD ITS ERRORS IN THE WHOLE WORLD...THOSE UNWORTHY PRIESTS DID IT IN A SLY WAY BY REFUSING TO PREACH ABOUT CONTRACEPTION IN THE PULPIT..CONTRACEPTION=ABORTIO...IT ALWAYS AMAZE ME AS THERE ARE SO MUCH PRO-LIFE GROUP IN THE CATHOLIC AMERICAN CHURCH, AND YET THEY DO NOT PREACH ABOUT ABSTINENCE AND CONTRACEPTION!!! IT ALSMOST LIKE THEY ARE SAYING THAT FORNIFICATION CANNOT BE AVOIDED...PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN CURE..EACH THE PEOPLE NOT TO HAVE SEX OUTSIDE WEDLOCK, TEACH THE YOUNG ADULT TO BE PURE AND HOLY...OURNGIRLS TO DRESS DECENTLY AND BOYS NOT TO WATCH EROTIC MOVIES ONLINE AND ON T.V...THEN THE PROBLEM OF ABORTION IS SOLVES...TEACH MARRIED COUPLES NOT TO USE CONTRACEPTION TO OFFEN GOD..ORTHEY WIL USE IT TO HIDE MARITAL INFIDELITIES...THAT ONE COMMENT OF HAT HUSBAND WHO TOOK OFF WITH ANOTHER WOMAN AND ABANDONED HIS WIFE, AFTER FORBIDDING HER TO LISTEN TO THE POPE TEACHINSG ABOUT CONTRACEPTION IS A GOOD EXAMPLE..THE CREEP WAS USING CONTRACEPTION O CHETA ON HIS WIFE ALWAYS...THAT IS A SIGN!!! THOSE WHO AREPRO CONTRACEPTION IN THEIR MARRIAGES HAVE SOMETHING TO HIDE...FORNIFICATION & ADULTERY
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 11:34 AM By Portal
Cardional Stafford,
Thank you.!!!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 11:39 AM By John L. Sillasen
As for some claim of placing thousands of atheists in seminaries ... what then accounts for the lack of discernment by the seminary directors and bishops of these subversive admittees? Just because someone claims to have been such a thing as a convert does not prove so ... in the world of "spies, damn spies, and ballistics" (ok, so this needs some further development as an effective rhetorical device) ... in the clandestine world, there is no end of charades, no end of deception. At some point a bishop has to rely on the good nature of others in the process. How do we know that the late Abp Sheen was taken in by such a climant? There are, in fact, "rumors, damned rumors, and statistical rumors" (working on it already, ok?). After all, wasn't it the notorious Rasputin who suckered the Czar of all the Russias while pretending to succor them? If the laity wants salvation, then it has to "rise up and walk" ... but it seems more content to lay back and balk.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 11:53 AM By PT
I'm a recent convert, and maybe there's something I'm missing here...but honestly it just doesn't seem that difficult to me. WHY oh WHY doesn't the Vatican simply get rid of all the dissenting bishops that put up with (and even actively support) all the open rebellion? You know, FIRE THEM?? Give them 1 of two options: Either support the teachings of Holy Mother Church or hit the road. "Oh, but we have a shortage..." So what? I'd rather have fewer of them and have GOOD ones. The Church needs a cleansing, so let the purge begin.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:00 PM By pete salveinini
There are ancient prophecies that at the birht of the Antichrist there will be a rush of rebellion, violence and immorality unleashed in the world! the Cardinal's clear and moving spiritual testimony shows that that spirit entered irrupted in the Church simultaneously as it did in the world. that was forty years ago.There are other credible prophecies that the Antichrist will come to power when he is in his 50's! Does that not tell us something important about our immediate future, that final conflict between the Church and evil (Satan) that Pope JohnPaul the Great once mentioned?!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:22 PM By Rose Marie Parisi
Bravo, Cardinal, bravo! It is rare indeed to come across "faithfulness to truth" as I just did in reading this retospective article. My faith is increased in realizing that when a priest (cardinal) is walking in the gifts of the Spirit, the fruit is quite evident. Courage, fortitude, faithfulness and steadfastness are all hallmarks of your priestly career. I applaud you.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:28 PM By Gloria Dunham
I have been waiting all my life to read an article like we have from Cardinal Stafford. I have argued with dissident priests in our parish for many years until I changed parishes. I am praying for all of the priests, and I think a new day is coming with our new priests. They are much more in line with our Holy Father, especially our priests from Africa. I think anyone can look back and see all of the grief and sadness caused by not following "Humane Vitae" Our dissent priests seem to forget why God chose them to be His representative to us on earth. They have been representing someone else, who I would never name! I pray that the pendulum is swinging back to the center, which is God.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:33 PM By Domingo Litong
The truth will set us free.
May we be open to the grace of upholding the truth at all times, regardless of the cost.
Christ deserves nothing less.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:38 PM By Peter
I'm still in my thirties, so you all will just need to wait patiently . .
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:41 PM By Maey
PT..You are right, makes ou why Cardinals like Bernard Law, who has encouraged sexual scandal in our church, is sitting and in charged of one of the Most imporatnt Basilica of Mar in Rome...What the heck are these evil leaders doing in the church? I will tell you why, they are in greater numbers and they always make sure that they will hush down anything good like the "Encyclical of the Huma Viate" and go agaisnt pope like Pope Paul VI..make more researches of what they did to that pope and how they drugged him, had an impostor to take his place,,,their are articles about this online...Only through prayer and Christ power we can get rid of these evils and put them to shame and in the light..Pray that we will get a true servant of Christ, whi will rid the church and split it from the goats and the sheeps...Keep the faith...
"And the truth shall set you free"
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:52 PM By Thomas F. Schraad
The truth will set us free.
Why our cafeteria Catholic Bishops and Priests don't understand this is very troublesome. May God have mercy on their souls.
We are now seeing Bishops and Priests who are standing up to the media pressure and are speaking out. Archbishop Burke and Nienstedt are two that have caused the media to blink. They are following the teachings of the Catholic Church. We need more leaders like them. I just feel that the Catholic Church leaders are turning things back to the true teachings. We must pray for strong leaders.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 12:59 PM By Dave N.
It sounds like very few priests and theologians at the time bothered to actually read and study the encyclical--they simply jumped on the political implications and ran amuck. Based on his introduction, I was hoping that the Cardinal here would (finally) highlight and explore some of the outstanding theological thought behind the encyclical and after 40 years provide people with some pastoral education about this wonderful document. (He should be participating in the teaching office after all.) Instead the Cardinal seems to be propagating the same tired error that his opponents used--the politicization of church teaching to fit one's own ends. He rambles on with personal anecdotes providing nothing but a sort of dichotomy along the lines of the "clash of civilizations" variety, mixing and matching the events of 1968 to support his very unclear thesis. After 40 years it's time that the church (especially its official teachers) actually pick up the document and READ it instead of turning it into some club to bash those on the "other side." How these men reach the levels of authority they hold is something I'd rather not think about.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 1:00 PM By Gerald Curran
Thank you Cardinal Stafford. My questions are these: did Pope Paul IV "haul off" on the believers, did the liturgists "haul off" on the Mass goers, did the hierarchy "haul off" on the Worker Priests, did some bishops "haul off" on Our Lady's efforts get people to pray for the damned, who are the people who are "hauling off" on Bishop Burke of St. Louis right now, how soon will the kid glove start to replace the iron fist - in the Church?
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 1:06 PM By Thomas F. Schraad
The truth will set us free.
Why our cafeteria Catholic Bishops and Priests don't understand this is very troublesome. May God have mercy on their souls.
We are now seeing Bishops and Priests who are standing up to the media pressure and are speaking out. Archbishop Burke and Nienstedt are two that have caused the media to blink. They are following the teachings of the Catholic Church. We need more leaders like them. I just feel that the Catholic Church leaders are turning things back to the true teachings. We must pray for strong leaders.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 1:35 PM By mary
I read this article through a veil of tears. Tears of sorrow that the Children of God are so disobedient, myself included. Tears of joy that one holy priest had the courage to hold fast to the Truth. One holy soul can save a family, one holy family can save a parish, one holy parish can save a town, one holy town can save a city, one holy city can save a nation and so on and so on. Let us be determined today to become holy as our heavenly Father is holy. Let us embrace our faith as never before and love one another while it is still day. Thank you Cardinal Stafford for your courage. Many priests in that room were receiving the same prompting from the Holy Spirit as you were but were powerless in the face of evil to act upon it. You are in my prayers for the rest of my days.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 1:38 PM By Michael Thelen
May God bless you, Cardinal Stafford!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 1:57 PM By Margaret
Thank you Cardinal Stafford. For the first time I have some understanding of what happened to our beautiful church. I will definitely have to read "Humane Vitae" My parents were non-practicing catholics at that time and I as young adult remember well discussions with my mother about contraception and being told that it was necessary to think about the number of children I would have because I wanted many. My catholic training was limited and therefore carried into my married life through my childbearing and raising of my own children. I, like several others have noted, am now a grandmother living with the fruits of my lack of knowledge and understanding. I am now a practicing catholic with a great devotion to Our Lady and pray everyday for her intercession to help me with my grandchildren. The hearts of my children are still cold but I place them everyday in the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus for their conversion and ask forgiveness for the errors I passed on to them. I too pray for the priests since they are held accountable for their teachings. This article should be sent to every pastor for his enlightenment. This brings to mind the importance of the Divine Mercy on us all.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:09 PM By David Suchanick
Cardinal Stafford:
Thank you for your courage and faith to stand for the Truth! Your testimony greatly helps. I have been persecuted by leftist clergy for standing up for the unborn, for NFP,and for helping start up Rachel's Vineyard of Nashville. Men, I have been told many times over, by the feminists and leftist clergy, have no say so in the abortion issue. The Holy Spirit strengthened me, as He did you. I see so many damaged and broken families because if this horrid dissention. The sheep were fed to the wolves instead of being protected by their Shepherds. I hope your testimony will kindle the fire within many of the young, like myself, who know how horrible this dissention was, and still is today. God Bless You!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:13 PM By Fr. Todd
Thank you, your Eminence, for your essay, and thank you to the publishers! While painful to read, it clarifies why this beautiful encyclical was not embraced. The voices of assent to Humanae Vitae, especially among the newly ordained, are now growing stronger. Pray for all priests - for the conversion of dissenters, and the vocalized courage of those who submit to the teachings of Christ and His Church.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:29 PM By Chris
Lust was turned loose on society. Contraception, pornography, adultery, promiscuity, active homosexuality, opened the doors for the lust demons to steal souls. Result, abortions, sex abuse, drug/alcohol/food/compulsive behavior addictions. Why aren't the leaders of our church taking the offensive against the tyranny of lust on the rampage? Instead, silence and a half-measured attmept at addressing the soul sickness that is pervasive amongst many Catholics.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:30 PM By Denise
Enlightening article, to be sure. And though it explains a lot about where things went wrong in the Church, I think all of us who truly believe in the teachings of the Catholic Church, need to be true examples of our faith. I think if we all looked inside our own hearts we would see that all the mistakes and sins we committed over the last 40 years, were all our own. We may have been left to our own devices, and our own consciences, but can we really blame our priests for our sins? Answer honestly. Even Satan can't force us to sin. God allows everything, even evil to enter the world, but always for our own good. Since the late 60's, the world has offered us every sin imaginable. Did we refuse? No. All of us has fallen to at least one of them. I know I have. Maybe there was a reason to leave us to our own consciences. Maybe God wants us all to see just what we all are capable of. Maybe these really are the end times, and all these evils in the world that we just can't seem to get rid of, are our tests of faith. If so, be careful not to judge...anyone. Not even priests. That's God's job. And if you find yourself saying anything negative about the illegal alien situation, or anyone else for that matter, remember that loving our neighbor, no matter how justified we think we are in being angry, was a commandment given to us by Jesus himself.
Obedience isn't just meant for the priests, or when it's easy.
Maybe it's time we look into our own hearts and start being the kind of catholic we should have been a long time ago.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:32 PM By Tom
God Bless you Cardinal Stafford! Thanks for sharing that with us. I was born in 1961 too as others have mentioned. I am a former Marine Officer who now enjoys 8 children. SEMPER FI!!!!! Humane Vitae!!!!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 2:48 PM By margie
To all priests who agree with Humani Vitae, please speak out against contraception, many people do not realize it is wrong. If you love your sheep you'll want to protect them.,
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:10 PM By Edward L Peffer
The Catholic press avoided truths, as in never mentioning Padre Pio's letter to Paul VI praising HV, and lamenting "even Catholics" dissenting. No mention of Mother Teresa's Nobel Peace Prize lecture telling of the counted results of her nuns teaching the Billings Method of NFP and praise of Humane Vitae. Consensus was Pontius Pilate's "What is truth?" -- A sword of truth divides from error.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:32 PM By Jeromy
Wow, I am a recent convert as well. And upon discovering the rich history and tradition of the Church, I realize how closely united she is and resembles and reflects Our Lord. She takes the hard road and stands against the tide to reveal the truth. The good and moral ways she teaches and how she follows the voice of the Father. The line between love and lust can be thin if we are not careful, and the Holy Father has shed the light on what divides it. A loss of appreciation for the gift of sexuality, the lack of a humble disposition and discipline open the doors to many temptations and degrade this gift. This gift is life, and it is clear that is what the encyclical is all about. It is evident there is a lack of faith in the authority of the Pope, authority that is given by Christ. How a Catholic can dispute that shows the influence of an evil nature seeking to divide what is sacred and Holy, which is not only the Church but every couple united in matrimony which is the fabric of human life. I place my trust and prayers in Him who has conquered and will lead us through these dark times, and in His Vicar He has placed as our shepherd.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:42 PM By Georgia
Beautifully written. Question: What happened in January, 2002?
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:44 PM By Mario Feli
I was born in 1967 and was the last of 9 children. When my parents had only eight children, they went to their parish priest to see if sterilization was possible in the teachings of the church. They were told tp "follow their conscience" and make up their own mind. Before they could go through with the procedure my mom was pregnant with me. After my birth the went through with it and as a result fell away from the catholic faith. In 1976, they divorced and being young I began a life of drinking and drugs. In 1986, at the age of 18 my son was born and life looked bleak. Through a willingness not to be like my parents I looked to be responsible in teaching my son morals. In 1991, I became a member of the Catholic Church. Today,2008, I am the father of 11 kids with my oldest now entering the seminary. I thank God, that through the Catholic Church I was able to live and I willing give all of my children back to her, God Bless you Cardinal Stafford!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:45 PM By Mario Feli
I was born in 1967 and was the last of 9 children. When my parents had only eight children, they went to their parish priest to see if sterilization was possible in the teachings of the church. They were told tp "follow their conscience" and make up their own mind. Before they could go through with the procedure my mom was pregnant with me. After my birth the went through with it and as a result fell away from the catholic faith. In 1976, they divorced and being young I began a life of drinking and drugs. In 1986, at the age of 18 my son was born and life looked bleak. Through a willingness not to be like my parents I looked to be responsible in teaching my son morals. In 1991, I became a member of the Catholic Church. Today,2008, I am the father of 11 kids with my oldest now entering the seminary. I thank God, that through the Catholic Church I was able to live and I willing give all of my children back to her, God Bless you Cardinal Stafford!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:52 PM By Kenneth M. Fisher
Jack,
"I read and read and read to the point that the words became meaningless".
Why is it that I read the Cardinals entire prophetic letter and was enthralled by it!
God bless, yours in Their Hearts,
Kenneth M. Fisher, Founder & Chairman
Concerned Roman Catholics of America, Inc.
www.crcoa.com
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 3:59 PM By Mary L. Mantel
Thank you Cardinal Stafford, and thank you, the Couple to Couple League as well, for telling us the truth.I've known what it is to be ridiculed for giving up artificial birth control, but my soul danced with delight as soon as I had done it. I hope other couples will follow. Bless you.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 4:45 PM By Mike Rizzio
I was 9 and in Catholic School at the time. 1968 was surely a tough year. I remember the heated battles at the dining room table between my diocesan priest uncle and Dominican aunt sister. I also remember how the hemlines went up and the once beautiful habit was disassembled, a casualty to the "Singing Nun's" popularity and the lure of modernity. It didn’t take long before long the Caldwell Dominicans were decimated. We have a long way to go to climb out from the resulting crater. Thank God we have the Eucharist, Mary and Joseph and many young people seeking unity, truth, goodness and beauty…what was lost in the 60’s.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 4:56 PM By Donald
Due to the sound advice of a great Catholic advertising
exectutive(RIP4/10/1966),in the fall of 1962 I enrolled in a
Catholic college where I spent four happy years and largely
escaped much of the dissent that permated other campuses
in the mid and late 1960s. However dissention over the Mass
came later and made me hesitant about entering the
Church until 12 days before Christmas of 1975.Due to the
destruction of the faith caused by the effects of the dissent over Humanae
Vitae which effected many Catholic young people I never
married---- and when I was led into a group which became
sede-vacantist I virtually lost my faith until I found it again in
1993 through priests of the Fraternity of St Peter.
Thank you Cardinal Stafford for providing us with a summary of the fruits of the dissention from a Papal Document.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:22 PM By Anne T.
I have not had the time to read everyone's post, but I want to say, "God bless this holy and faithful cardinal." I lived through those times, and although I was a confused young woman at that time, I could see the devastation
the Pill was causing in marriages, and, also, I wanted more children, so I never took it except for about a month for what my Mormon doctor called medical reasons. I have since found that there are better methods than the Pill for such medical purposes. My advice to women of child bearing age today is marry faithful Catholic men and go to faithful pro-life Catholic doctors who will not give you things that will both destroy your body and your soul. Futhermore, we need to pray that God opens the eyes of people such as Jack above.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 5:54 PM By Vin
Thank you, Cardinal Stafford, for this revealation of what happened in the church in 1968. Many questions in my mind have been answered although I am shaken by the whole situation. However, I still cling to the promise of Jesus, that "the gates of hell will not prevail over it." Although right now it is difficult to hold on to that hope, I pray for the strength and wisdom to do what I can to help those so disillusioned by clergy and to discern how best to do that. And I also hope the prayer to St. Michael will again become part of the rite of the church.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:16 PM By russ
Thank you, your Eminence,and may God Bless you always.
There is a truly 100% totally ORTHODOX CATHOLIC WEBSITE that every catholic in the world should log onto:
Website address is: catholictelevision.org St. Michael's Media Apostolate was founded and hosted by Michael Voris in May 2006. It is a live-audience Video Taping of 'THE ONE TRUE FAITH' and it is an in-your-face, no-holds-barred in preaching the FULLNESS OF THE TRUTH OF OUR HOLY CATHOLIC FAITH. Michael is a dynamic speaker and there is no aspect of our faith which he does not cover.
This apostolate is a God-send to all Catholics.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:47 PM By Christie
Thank you, Cardinal Stafford! May God bless you richly for your love of His truth, and may He open the hearts of all Catholics to overcome the division, pain, and confusion caused by this dissension. In our community paper, a local priest has a column in which his article last week was entitled "The Birth Control Encyclical: Forty Years Later" and blatantly attacked Humanae Vitae. Despite not having lived during this time in Church/American history, I have long prayed that priests would heal the wounds that resulted from this, but sadly, some are making the wounds even deeper. I ask for your prayers and even suggestions as to how to charitably respond to this article, to the lack of shepherding in my own parish, and to "cafeteria" Catholics who argue vehemently against certain Church teachings, often out of ignorance. By the grace of God, after a lack of purity during courtship and contracepting during the first year of my marriage, I escaped the evil one's grasp despite relatively poor Catholic formation in my younger years. Proper formation is not taking place in our school, in our religious education programs, in marriage preparation, nor in our RCIA program. We so badly need good shepherding. May God give strength to the priests who love His truth, that they may speak it always, even when it causes them persecution and challenges those who hear them. The flock is hungry -- feed us! May we always pray for and encourage the priests who do stand for truth. May lay and clergy dissenters repent of their sin before their final days on earth. May God's mercy be on us all.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 6:56 PM By Tom Byrne
God bless the Cardinal, and perhaps the "Ultra-Cats" who blame Vatican II for all this will reflect that things could not have gotten that rotten between 1963 and 1968, and that the poison that burst forth at HV had been collecting under the skin of the Church for decades. Despite the name Modernism is an old name, not a new one, and not everything was so great, perhaps, during the "Going My Way Years" on mid-20c American Catholicism.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:01 PM By Sr M Elizabeth
On the evening of July 29, 1968, 40 years ago tonight, I first became convinced of the truth of the Catholic faith. Ten years later, in 1978, I made my profession as a cloistered Carmelite nun---the same year Pope John Paul II was elected. God's grace is alive and active at the very moment when things seem darkest. The Holy Spirit continues to breathe new life into the Church through the teachings of Vatican II, the great Popes of our time, and the many faithful servants of Christ who walk, often unnoticed, among us. Yes, we have shared the suffering of Christ in His Body, the Church, during these 40 years; but we have also known in an unprecedented degree the power of His Spirit, Dominum et Vivificantem. The very nature of the times we live in calls us to holiness---even those who feel that they have thus far not responded as they should. Remember St. Peter and take courage!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:17 PM By Kathleen
God bless you Card.Stafford! Your article was humble and honest with strength fostered by the Holy Spirit. I predict that with this writing a new day is dawning! The Paraclete is bringing the good news to all the world via the internet and a faithful son of Holy Mother Church this blessed night. May we all be open to His Grace.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:20 PM By steve m.
Thank you Cardinal Stafford, thank you. As one who received 1st holy communion in December of 68, I was clueless until I became a Father myself as to how messed up the church became within my lifetime. I 've been listening to Fr. Fessio on you tube and I agree with him that that B16's recent Motu Proprio is as significant to the church of the 1st half of this century and HV was for the church of 2nd half of last century. It's the same mentality of disident clergy/"faithful" that abuses everything: morals, doctine AND worship. If you desire to feel what the good cardinal felt way back then, then try charitably approching your pastor or bishop with the request for his help in implementing the popes recent liturgical initiative within your parish/diocese. That should be a good gauge as to just how in line anyone is with the vicar of Christ. Don't be too surprised of the responce you receive, you might be asked to leave your parish like I was. But we enjoy watching them they cringe when my family fills up pews and kneels for communion:)The "liturgical renewal" of the 60's, 70's has been every bit as damaging to the church as the non implementation of HVs been. Jesus Mercy!
Fr. Fessio's 4 you tube shorts are awesome.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:21 PM By JPeterman
Margie makes a great point above when she requests that all priests who believe in HV speak out against birth control. This is so needed. Where are the morally courageous priests these days? Stand up, speak out, forget about what might happen to the collection plate or what your liberal diocesan Bishop will say. When is the last time you heard a sermon on sin, the evils of birth control or loose moral living? My old school, 60's era liberal priest actually said this past Saturday that he never buried anyone who went to hell. At first I thought he was making a point about people not believing in sin but then I realized.. HE ACTUALLY BELIEVES THIS!! My first thought was how the heck would he know? But this is just a reflection of this generation of liberal priests unfortunately. There is no sin and certainly birth control is no sin..I pray for these priests and I look forward to the day they retire!
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:35 PM By A Child of the 70's
God bless Cardinal Stafford for his bravery in speaking the truth, heartwrenching as it is. Their is nothing more precious to me than my Catholic Faith. I have learned the truth of which Cardinal Stafford speaks the hard way. God, in his mercy and through the intercession of our Blessed Mother, has brought me back to the safe harbor of his Sacred Heart. As dark as things are, I remind myself daily of our Lord's promise concering the Church, "that the gates of hell will not prevail against it"; and our Blessed Mother's prophecy that "in the end, her Immaculate Heart will triumph". I pray daily in reparation for sin and for the conversion of sinners; as do millions of other faithful, and I KNOW that our Lord will hear and answer that pray, in His own time and according to His divine will. Jesus, I trust in You.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:36 PM By Tom Valois
I strongly recommend that everyone read "The Death of the West" by Pat Buchanan, especially the chapter "Four Who Made A Revolution". This is a very insightful chapter that explains, culturally, why our foundation was ripped out from under us. I'm not a huge fan of Buchanan and he does not go deeply enough for my liking, but he touched on a main theme here. Also, research Antonio Gramschi and his belief in "the slow march through the institutions". This was his phrase that the marxists build their revolution upon and the result was the tearing apart of the Church and the family. This was the plan.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 7:38 PM By John L. Sillasen
Jack, find someone you can trust to explain these things to you. That is how the Lord has it set up ... not everyone is a world champion reader, but this does not mean the ideas and so forth are meant to be restricted to those who do read well. Trust is the key ... trust is one of the virtues which helps unite the Church. Those with gifts such as being able to read such material are called to share the fruits of those gifts. Find somebody who will do that, reliably.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:02 PM By Bob
Thank you Cardinal Stafford for your revelations and your faithfulness to the Truth. Those early seeds of dissent have come full term and ripened into error and even heresy. True Catholic Dogma is no longer taught and remains virtually unknown in many Catholic schools, parishes and dioceses. Far too many who call themselves Catholic don't know enough about the Catholic Faith to understand that they're not even Catholic including clergy (also witness the "I'm personally opposed to abortion but..." political elites). Pray that the Truth will inspire hearts and minds to conversion - a few rosaries wouldn't hurt either. Keep in mind that Jesus Himself promised to be with His Church to the end of time and that the gates of Hell will not prevail against it It can't get any better than that.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 8:24 PM By greg
Bless you, your Eminence, for witnessing to the truth when the other apostles left Him! Holy Moses must have felt a similar pain for teaching abstinence (Exodus 19:15) at Mt. Sinai only to find a massive loss of faith upon return.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 9:29 PM By Loves Paraclete
Mario Feli, your post is the most beautiful story I've read in a long time. You certainly are the apple of Jesus' eye! I'm so happy to hear of your seminary-bound sons. God Bless and Keep them.
Paul VI should certainly be cannonized soon for his spiritual acumen in issuing HV.
And thank you Cardinal for an extraordinary article.
Let's all pray for the victims of abortion--children, mothers, fathers, society. God have mercy on us all.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:07 PM By Christie
Thank you, Cardinal Stafford! May God bless you richly for your love of His truth, and may He open the hearts of all Catholics to overcome the division, pain, and confusion caused by this dissension. In our community paper, a local priest has a column in which his article last week was entitled "The Birth Control Encyclical: Forty Years Later" and blatantly attacked Humanae Vitae. Despite not having lived during this time in Church/American history, I have long prayed that priests would heal the wounds that resulted from this, but sadly, some are making the wounds even deeper. I ask for your prayers and even suggestions as to how to charitably respond to this article, to the lack of shepherding in my own parish, and to "cafeteria" Catholics who argue vehemently against certain Church teachings, often out of ignorance. By the grace of God, after a lack of purity during courtship and contracepting during the first year of my marriage, I escaped the evil one's grasp despite relatively poor Catholic formation in my younger years. Proper formation is not taking place in our school, in our religious education programs, in marriage preparation, nor in our RCIA program. We so badly need good shepherding. May God give strength to the priests who love His truth, that they may speak it always, even when it causes them persecution and challenges those who hear them. The flock is hungry -- feed us! May we always pray for and encourage the priests who do stand for truth. May lay and clergy dissenters repent of their sin before their final days on earth. May God's mercy be on us all.
|
Posted Tuesday, July 29, 2008 10:59 PM By sunday payor
In 1968 I was nine, but I knew something was very wrong...I have known it since, and I welcome a return to the pre-Vatican ll chaos, a new Springtime!
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 12:19 AM By Tess
As a woman, wife and a mother of four, THANK YOU for your support for the Truth. HV shows how a woman's dignity (and men's too) is maintained and cared for.
HV is the language of love and respect.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:08 AM By Fran
Blessed be God! It is more and more clear to me that beginning around Vatican II we Catholics have been in a very vicious and terrible war; not a war of guns and bullets, but a spiritual war, one that has decimated our Church and destroyed our way of life. Just as in a war fought with guns, bullets and armies, territory was lost, those on the front lines were defeated, and the enemy took over strategic positions. Many lives have been lost. It took a long time for me to see we were in a war. It took long time for me to remember that when I received the sacrament of Confirmation I became a soldier of Christ. It took me a long time to understand that as a soldier it was my duty to pick up my weapons (the Eucharist, prayer, and the Word of God) and fight this spiritual war with spiritual means. Just as any soldier, I did not win every battle, and I was wounded many times, but as time went on I became better able to outsmart the enemy, to anticipate his attacks, and to fight more effectively. Dealing with misguided priests, pathetic sisters posing as “religious,” cafeteria Catholics…anyone who chose Christ has war stories to tell. What we soldiers learned from prior spiritual wars fought by the saints of old is that our most powerful weapon is the Eucharist, that Christ is with us, the Our Lady is His general whom He sends to encourage and lead us. Our most heroic and greatest Commander in Chief so far was Pope John Paul II. So Cardinal Stafford’s article documents a “war” story that occurred near the beginning, and shows how the enemy infiltrated into the ranks of leadership and orchestrated sneak attacks on the lieutenants, majors, and generals. Many, being weak in faith, faltered and fell. The enemy’s plan seems to have been to overtake the leaders, knowing that then the rank and file would fall into confusion and be easy to overcome. That is what happened. Many of our children and grandchildren are little more than pagans. We worry for their souls. But there have been many victories too. We know Christ is ultimately victorious. I know it was through leaders such as Cardinal Stafford that the Church was able to mount a counteroffensive and begin
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:30 AM By Sandra Bater
I remember this encyclical very clelarly. I had friends who were convinced and rejoicing that contraception would be allowed. I remember saying to them "if the Pope allows contraception, I will leave the church". I didn't need any information, other than I knew within myself that it would be wrong. Life was and is hard, but I knew the truth deep within my soul and I believe that God's plans for His creatures will always work out if we say 'yes' to Him. He isn't a cruel God, but let's face it, He knows what He is doing - most of the time we don't!
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 2:06 AM By Hislittlelamb
Georgia
re: Question: What happened in January, 2002?
8 January, 2002: Vatican publishes guidelines on how to deal with paedophile priests, saying all cases should be reported to Rome.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 2:55 AM By MaryKathryn
His Eminence UNDERSTATES the problem all of us who are orthodox have had to cope with. Only heretics were allowed to get Masters in Religious Ed one place I worked -- because I'd stood up to a heretical professor, I wasn't accepted; when I appealed, I was accepted with such obnoxious provisions that my boss warned me not to step into the spider's web, he was waiting to bop me -- all because I'd publicly said to him, "You're teaching heresy and you know it." when he taught transignification was right and transsubstantiation absurd. My suspicion is enormous numbers of nazi, mason, and communists smuggled into seminaries after WWII during Vocations rush used every means licit and illicit to worm their way into power -- the bullying and intimidation His Eminence speaks of. I got chewed out by a retiring nun recently for believing that women could not be ordained, as if I was an absurd little child. The damage is far, far greater than sex scandals. We MUST restore exorcisms to blessings and Baptism for a start.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 4:24 AM By Humanae Vitae Echoes
A Slippery slope of malicious discontent. It is true what God said about satan, "the father of lies". One only has to view where the church is in encountering secular views disparaging of the truth. And the fallout continues generationally from the 1968 teaching to pedophile priests, and homosexuality wanta be marriage, to God judging our merit in allowing such abomination of partial birth abortion. How can one compose rhetoric that a blob of tissue continues to be such when its entirety, albut babies head, is perfectly seened. That understanding (abortion)disconnects reality. The blob is a real life, "origin: human being, as I was!" Is the church continuing to be silent out of fear of hurting someones feelings, or losing tax deduction? Or are these subjects just too controversial... You know like life vs death, hell vs heaven, mortality vs immortality, mercy vs judgement. Jesus said "be not deceived", babies are children and not globs of tissue whom judges and society have surrendered to that oblivious definition, along with currently redefining over 10,000 + years of marriage between a MAN and WOMAN as revised. Reviled is truth by such reinterpretion of truth "without the sovereign validating wisdom of God". Secular wisdom has as its own emminent foundation a web of deceit ensuing the peril of God's wrath upon us all. Have we learned anything, where is society going without God? Next, multiple plural marriages, bestiality, robot, clone, hybrid animal-humans...God is not asleep at the wheel! However, our gift of freedom and choice quoting Cardinal Stafford has met "Pierasmos".
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 5:25 AM By Rob
Something else was percolating around 1968. The sexual abuse of children by priests.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 6:20 AM By MichelleM
to Lisa whose son is discerning his call to the priesthood "We struggle, as my son who was raised in orthodoxy and obedience to Holy Mother Church, began to discern a call to the priesthood in 2002 that has been constantly attacked from both sides, especially in the seminary, and is utterly appalled and sickened by what he sees in the Church and is facing his own FIAT. Will we see a new generation in the likes of St Francis of Assisi? Mary, Mother of the Church, pray for us who have recourse to thee! " Please lead him to look into the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius in Chicago, IL. I feel so blessed to find this pocket of amazing priests who are trying to restore the sacred. He will certainly find his niche.....
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 8:27 AM By Judy
In 1968 I was the young mother of one child, had left the Church, and was using birth control pills. In 1969, when the connection between the pill and cancer became evident, my husband made me flush them down the toilet. Along came our next child. I then progressed to the IUD, not realizing how it really worked. When abortion became legal in 1973, my husband and I became involved in the pro-life movement. It was then I discovered the truth about the IUD, which I promptly had removed. And so another child. Around this time, I returned to the Church and learned about NFP. Although we were very religious in using the program, I managed to conceive yet a fourth child. It was at this time my husband began to speak of sterilization. I told him I could never do that, so he looked into getting a vasectomy and went so far as to make an appointment. Little did we know the surprise in store for us as that day drew closer... he had unknowingly made his appointment on a Friday at 3 p.m..... it happened to be Good Friday. Needless to say, the appointment was canceled and we went on to have two more children. To this day, we thank God for his kindness and grace to show us the way. We had been victims of a mentality which sought to warp the true essence of sacramental marriage and destroy life. We were on a very dangerous slippery slope which I fear would have destroyed our marriage and our souls. Praised be God for his Mercy! And thank you, Cardinal Stafford, for your courage to speak the truth about the evils of contraception. I know first-hand of its effect and its power to destroy.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 8:28 AM By Mary Ann
My husband and I were a young couple raising 4 young sons during this time. The religious leaders here were teaching all about "hug a planet" and love and nothing about responsibility of catholics following the teachings of our Holy Father and of the church. In fact that was kind of "laughed" about. That whole generation of young people are now suffering the effects of what they were NOT taught.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 9:08 AM By John L. Sillasen
"Homosexuality is the consequence of sin": Obviously there are similar consequences. There is some explanation for the dissent over HV. Something led to it. Cdl Stafford was unable to open a dialog with the late priest who managed the Baltimore clerical dissent. That was 1978. Questions: Who was the top leader of that group? What was the network (re: Charles Curran, eg)? This expose' by Cdl Stafford may open up some profound research and exploratory efforts among motivated students of truth. Wonder what it will cost these courageous souls?
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 9:39 AM By Pat
With deepest gratitude I thank you dear Cardinal. After reading the article I found myself thinking....so that's what happened. I often pondered the strange period of the sixties in this country and wondered "what the heck happened?" But didn't JPII say that Vatican II was a precursor to the advent of the new millenium? No suprise that the devil ran a parallel game, he always does. However we must fear nothing, go foward and continue to strive to grow in holiness in our everyday and very ordinary lives. We are the yeast, the salt of the earth and must persevere in our desire to give glory to God in all things.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 10:07 AM By John L. Sillasen
Catholicism does not stem from such as "loving a planet", but managing nature stems from loving God first.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 11:12 AM By Sara
This is amazing. I was 18 in '68. Although I remained totally faithful to Jesus, that is the year I left the church.
It suddenly became something of a spiritual attack and lie to me; unholy people coming out of the closet with hatred and ignorance all assuming "young people" were on their side. I no longer could trust my faith was safe in the Left's radical, angry and amoral "church." I did not want them calling me in union with them as I felt it was a sin and had no power to knock them off their "moral high ground" of rage and revenge. It was the opposite of the Spirit of Jesus; yet done in His name with the authority of priests and Catholic adults. I did not walk; I ran from the Catholic Church.
I never went back; but still have my Catholic faith in of Jesus. I still pray as a Catholic and still obey the teachings of Jesus as best I can. I feel that something very evil rocked my Church and it is still acting out in the sexual abuse of boys - and only God knows what else. This infection in the church rips and it shreds anything of innocence and love.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 12:27 PM By John L. Sillasen
Sara, you need to find a trustworthy parish ... there are many of them. Notice that the writer of the essay has survived as a clergyman ... because of faith, hope, love and courage. You can do this also.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:18 PM By Lena Marchi
Thank you Cardinal James Frances Stafford for the explanation of those horrendous years of 1968. I had four
teen ages to bring up in those years and a roaming husband,
they certainly are not years I want to ever think about but to
have an explanation as to what was going on in the church
explains happenings to me now. Another situation that has
me perplexed is when I visited Italy in 1972 I was told not to go to
the Vatican because the Pope was not the true Pope he was an imposter and that Pope Paul VI was kept drugged
this has always bothered me as we thought we were being
Blessed by the true Pope. I wonder if there is an explanation to this issue? Thank You again and perhaps
the world will now become a better place for those that
have kept up their Catholic Faith. I thank God for my son
he has Great Admiration for the Priest.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:20 PM By Vincent
i saw a movie with rex harrison he played the pope that hired artist for ceiling in his church,,,,,he was the only pope that said there are enimies at our gates so he picked up a sword put on his armor and said who ever wishes to hlpme fight thease rats come wit me well some did and he routed the emies of the vatican,,, thats mykinda pope respectfully vincent.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:34 PM By Dave
Abortion & contraception have destroyed human relations and even in the Church. The dissenting clergy can almost be compared to an abortificent. Notice how when birth control and contraception were legalized and disupted the human body, the Church weakened.
It is as if the devil through poison into the cake and the Church ate it without knowing, therefore causing an array of confusion and mess. 40 years later we wake to say, we were poisoned.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 4:53 PM By Glen B
Thank you Cardinal Stafford, for your vivid memoirs of those difficult days. I liked the quote of Helen Arendt's, "where everything seems to have lost specific value, and has become unrecognizable". We see this now with regard to marriage. How is it peopel can't see that marriage IS bewteen a man and a woman. It's something that was obvious for thousands of years.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 5:00 PM By John L. Sillasen
OK, let's look from this angle: The Church got hit bad by the devil in the sixties. What brought on the success of the attack? What was the Church doing or not doing that opened a grave vulnerability, which was duly exploited by evil? I don't believe God whacks the innocent.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 7:22 PM By A Benedectine Monk
Yes, that uproar and public dissent from papal teaching on the part of so many Catholics (including many priests), in combination with the liturgical revolution, the cult of "the young", the war, racial unrest, the subversion from the communists and other radical leftists, the disappointed hopes for a new Church and a new humanity ... It was an
explosive mixture. So many priests and nuns lost their way and never found their way back to sanity.
Basically good nuns got confused and made decisions back then that have been profoundly damaging. And all that awful Kumbaya & mariachi & Marty Haugen rubbish was institutionalized as normal for Catholic Mass! Ditto for the teaching of the faith in Catholic schools.
The present Pope, back when he was just Father Joseph Ratzinger, was a university professor at Tübingen, which had possibly the most prestigious theological faculty in Germany. The students launched a revolution that
totally disrupted the university and plunged everything into upheaval. It was so horrible that Father Ratzinger resigned his position at Tübingen in order to get away from the chaos and took a position at a much less well-known university where things were more calm.
Father Ratzinger had been seen as a reformist Catholic before then. When the Catholic renewal movement turned into a revolution, he had to part company with it. It was not so much that he left them, as that they left him.
The bitter fruit of the revolution of 1968 is still with us.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 7:56 PM By Christie
Thank you, Cardinal Stafford! May God bless you richly for your love of His truth, and may He open the hearts of all Catholics to overcome the division, pain, and confusion caused by this dissension. In our community paper, a local priest has a column in which his article last week was entitled "The Birth Control Encyclical: Forty Years Later" and blatantly attacked Humanae Vitae. Despite not having lived during this time in Church/American history, I have long prayed that priests would heal the wounds that resulted from this, but sadly, some are making the wounds even deeper. I ask for your prayers and even suggestions as to how to charitably respond to this article, to the lack of shepherding in my own parish, and to "cafeteria" Catholics who argue vehemently against certain Church teachings, often out of ignorance. By the grace of God, after a lack of purity during courtship and contracepting during the first year of my marriage, I escaped the evil one's grasp despite relatively poor Catholic formation in my younger years. Proper formation is not taking place in our school, in our religious education programs, in marriage preparation, nor in our RCIA program. We so badly need good shepherding. May God give strength to the priests who love His truth, that they may speak it always, even when it causes them persecution and challenges those who hear them. The flock is hungry -- feed us! May we always pray for and encourage the priests who do stand for truth. May lay and clergy dissenters repent of their sin before their final days on earth. May God's mercy be on us all.
|
Posted Wednesday, July 30, 2008 8:52 PM By John L. Sillasen
Sometimes the Lord winnows the harvest ... and the chaff flies off into the winds of oblivion.
|
Posted Thursday, July 31, 2008 6:54 AM By Daphne
I am thankful for this article being published in today's world. I was in high school in 1968 so the initial stages of horrific consequences were intact. Today I see signs, literally, on billboards that are the consequences of the 'human twist' to God's Truth...Gentleman's clubs are rampantly displayed for our young children's eyes to see. Here, in North Carolina, Joe The Camel was taken off the billboard. On the opposite side of the street is that Gentleman's club advertisement on a billboard with pictures of two alluring, beautiful females welcoming the public. If we can take Joe the Camel off the billboards due to deaths caused by cancer, surely we can promote the removal of these Gentleman's club advertisements which, through promotion of indecent exposure to sexuality, allows the entry to serious diseases which also cause death...not cancer, mind you, but Aids, STPs, etc., with no dignity towards God's children. I also see groups of young teenage or pre teenage girls who are dressed in the garb of the prostitute walking common neighborhood streets... unfortunately their parents are their pimps and money is their idol. Now, in today's world, our colleges are filling up fast with indecency regarding sexual exploitation and infestation of gender trial and errors, confusion, lack of grounding in God's Word. It all seems to point to that basic human twist of God's Word back in 1968...hopefully we are now in the process of accepting God's Truth while taking a serious look into our own sins of the past, reconciling, and being truthful to partaking in the Holy Eucharist. I see the Catholic Church coming out of the latent past and starting to teach our children God's Truth. God's Word does prevail! May people open their eyes and see the Truth, open their ears and hear the Truth, and open their hearts and know God's Truth. Amen!
|
Posted Thursday, July 31, 2008 11:48 AM By Charles Gill
Thank God for this article. Those difficult years of the 60s and 70s make more sense know the facts written here. May God have mercy on our souls.
|
Posted Thursday, July 31, 2008 12:55 PM By Eileen
HE TAUNTED ME TO RISK MY ECCLESIASTICAL 'FUTURE' ALTHOUGH HIS REFERENCE WAS MORE ANATOMICALLY SPECIFIC. THE ABUSE WENT ON.
I did not become "ashamed of the Gospel" that night and found sweet delight in what was right. It was not a bad lesson. Ecclesial obedience ran the distance. Thank you, Cardinal Stafford for your courage in writing this enlightening and inspiring article!Thank you, for your example of mercy and kindness shown to the priest/leader during your future attempt to discuss that fateful evening. You were trying to draw him back to the fold by initiating a painful but crucial matter. May God have Mercy on the soul of this priest. May God have Mercy on each and every one of us who has kept our eyes down when we could have spoken the truth. Thank you, Cardinal Stafford for your most humble example and reminder that "Each of us shudders before the wrath of God, each weeps in sorrow for our sins and begs for the Father's merciful rememberance of Christ's obedience".
|
Posted Thursday, July 31, 2008 1:43 PM By Roberta Genini
I read Cardinal Stafford's article as a meditation before the Blessed Sacrament (our parish is privileged to have Perpetual Adoration.) I am grateful to him for his courage.
In 1968 I was 25, a Theology M.A. candidate at USF, and knew so much better than the Holy Father. What I said about him was unprintable.
I wish I could remember the name of the priest whose article in a Catholic publication changed my mind after 6 years of disobedience to the beauty of the Church's teaching on Human Life. All I can say is that I am back and have been since 1974. In the meantime I (with my MA in Theology) didn't have the sense to realize I had left the Church.
I would guess that there are quite a few of us who went from crass despising of the Church's wisdom to gung ho defenders in love with it!
Thank you, Lord, for opening my eyes.
|
Posted Friday, August 01, 2008 8:51 AM By mike hurcum
Now you have all read the article, perhaps you will do something actively. Send it as a link or a letter to your parish priest and bishop
|
Posted Friday, August 01, 2008 2:09 PM By Lisa
Spirit & Life®
"The words I spoke to you are spirit and life." (Jn 6:63)
Human Life International e-Newsletter
Volume 03, Number 30 | Friday, August 01, 2008
.................................................................................. www.hli.org
Former Humanae Vitae Dissenter Signs the HLI Pledge
In the course of my week I get many letters from all kinds of good people (and a few not-so-good ones...) who express their sentiments on how Human Life International impacts their lives; and every now and then I get a letter that literally causes me to shed tears of gratitude. This week was one of those weeks. I received a letter from a former priest who had signed the "protest document" just after Humanae vitae was released forty years ago last week, and it is one of the most touching testimonies that I have read in a long time. I would like to share the joy of this particular Humanae vitae conversion story with you in the hope that it will touch your heart as it did mine.
"Dear Fr. Euteneuer,
I have signed and am returning the Pledge of Assent to Humanae vitae for the Laity. There is for me a special significance in signing this Pledge, and [it] will give me a peace of mind and heart that I have not experienced since 1968. In 1968 I was a young Franciscan priest studying in the Graduate School of Religious Education at Catholic University. I personally knew Fr. Charles Curran and Fr. Dan Maguire, and was a student of Fr. Robert Faricy, SJ. Since they, as well as many other professors and graduate students were signing the Protest Document, I went along and did so also.
In 1975 for personal reasons not related to any doubts or questions about the Faith, or the Church, or the Religious Life...I requested and obtained...a dispensation from Pope Paul VI returning me to the Lay State. Later, I was married in the Church and raised my two children in the Faith....I have had many conversations with my Pastor and with his assistant (who is my spiritual director) about my days as a Franciscan Priest, and have been active in many of our parish's lay apostolate and ministries.
But I have always regretted having signed the Protest Document agai
|
Posted Saturday, August 02, 2008 10:58 AM By jeannette
Dear Cardinal Stafford, You are a light on a hill for all Catholics. God's abundant blessings to you. I as a convert from Judiasm pray that all faithful, obedient Catholics will not be silent but speak the truth to those who are in darkness. In Jesus and Mary, Jeannette
|
Posted Saturday, August 02, 2008 10:14 PM By A.W.
To you, Cardinal James Francis Stafford, Thank You!!
I'm sure faithful men such as you will hear this:
Matt 25:21 His lord said to him: Well done, good and faithful servant, because thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will place thee over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy lord.
To the rest of us...Onward Christian Soldiers marching as to war, with the Cross of Jesus, going on before!!
Remember St. Padre Pio said, "The Rosary is the weapon."
Fr. John Corapi says, "Surrender is not an option."
We all need to listen to the faithful Priest who are in union with the Bishops who are in union with the Holy Father.
|
Posted Wednesday, August 06, 2008 7:02 AM By Gerry Anderson
Dear Cardinal Stafford, As I read all the responses to your document, I noticed that I had a much different take on the situation than most of the responders. I had become embroiled in a conflict at our Catholic School over the controversial "Growing in Love" program. In doing my research on this project, I found that one of the authors of the program, Fr. Richard Sparks, considered Rev. Charles Curran as one of his mentors. When John Paul II came out with his beautiful encylical, Veritatis Spendor, I used it as an argument for declaring Mortal Sin as still important. I found that the Rev. Charles Curran wrote a very clever rebuttal to this beautiful document, using the words of St. Thomas of Acquinas, twisting their meaning (in my opinion). Now I find out that this same Rev. Curran was a leader in causing the destruction in our church over Humanae Vitae. He was not alone, however. Many others, all over the world, contributed to this huge error. The Jesuits and their leadership played a huge part in this deception. I would like everyone who reads this comment to take a look at what your children are learning in your Catholic schools. Who are the authors and what do they believe. I believe the enemy of our souls is still at work very subtly to influence our youth through the material they are given to read and study. St. Michael, help us all!
|
Posted Monday, August 11, 2008 12:57 PM By Amos
These heartfelt comments restore belief in the power of the human intellect attempting to convince others of their version of what is true and valid, now and for ever. What should be of interest is why there are so many who argue otherwise. Could it be their ignorance, selfishness, perversity, personal anecdotal experience, willingness to view the issue through their side of the prism? Is it that they are in bad faith, and look to themselves as the sole arbiter of morality? Who dares to sit in judgment? There is an old German adage: “Say not this is the truth, but so it seems to me to be as now I see the things I think I see.” Those thoroughly convinced of the position of Paul VI, surely mirror those who felt similarly when earlier popes and church councils spoke definitively about matters that later were conclusively proved to be error. No doubt, there were those in the time of Urban VIII, who felt their faith seriously threatened, and agonized over the findings of Galileo concerning heliocentrism. This is not suggested in any way as skepticism. Rather, it is introduced to show that although Paul VI’s teaching requires acceptance by Catholics, it has yet to be infallibly defined doctrine. Until such time, there will those who will continue to explore the implication of this teaching as it relates to the human race’s struggle toward its destiny. Meanwhile, nodding to the practical side of the issue, it should be worthwhile noting that antidepressants are marvelous medications for suppressing the sexual urge. In fact, vets are resorting to them in lieu of neutering oversexed male dogs. As a positive side effect, Prozac, Cymbalta, etc. do not interfere with the voluntarium. So, free will is not compromised.
|
Posted Wednesday, August 13, 2008 8:54 PM By Michael
Thank you Cardinal Stafford and the CCD for publishing this. I am not characteristically short of words but no words can do justice to this article. Thank you again.
|
Posted Tuesday, November 04, 2008 3:35 PM By E Howard
I am a father of five, with seven grandchildren. Nevertheless I remain very much on the fence about Humanea Vitae. I am still puzzled. The tenor of the Cardinal's article is higly charged and emotive and the responses are a combination of heartfelt ultramontanism, a palpable ignorance as to the circumstances which caused the admirable Paul VI to reject the advice of his own appointed commission on this matter; and some truly nasty and aggressive observations that put their authors precisely on a par with those who rejected the Pope's decision so angrily and discourteously. Why am I puzzled? If artificial non-aborfacient contraception is so manifestly a crime, why would a Pope of all people set up a commission to examine it? Simple. he had doubts. Humanae Vitae (quite rightly) is a code for saints.Its language is not extreme or heartless. It recognises that the Catholic world (as it turned out it was the vast majority of priests and lay people) would find the decision startling and theologically abstruse. So it's either obey the Pope outright or revert in such a momentous controversy as this to conscience, in company with the vast majority of the priests of the Church, most of our theologians; and without forgetting the weight of scholarship on the matter within the other Christian traditions. The sensus fidelium, whether we like it or not, has dissented from this teaching. Even Cardinal Newman would now be saying after 50 years 'it's better to let the matter go'. Lastly, let's get away from this judgemental traditionalist mindset e.g. that compares dissenting clergy to aborfacients. Why does anyone in the Church ever dissent? Why did some of the saints of the Church dissent? What is clear is that Pope Paul, right or wrong on this issue, cannot have foreseen the consequences of ignoring his own appointed advisors.
|
Posted Tuesday, November 04, 2008 7:29 PM By Anne T.
E. Howard, one of the things the Holy Father knows is that the birthcontrol pill is dangerous for women. My life was saved because a priest faithful to the majesterium talked me out of taking some pills my doctor had given me. Both the birthcontrol pill and abortion contribute to breast cancer. That type of cancer is epidemic in the United States. Even very young women are getting it, and that was unknown in the 1950s and 1960s. Also, Planned Parenthood gives it to young women before their bones are fully developed. They don't really care about the health of the women as long as they are making a profit. It has also contributed, as Pope Paul predicted, to mass immorality. I have seen it myself. It has contributed to a high divorce rate also. Many more people play around when they think they are safe from a pregnancy, but when the contraception fails, they just kill the child.
|
Posted Wednesday, November 05, 2008 8:25 AM By E Howard
Thank you Anne T for your courteous comments in reply to my contribution. I have no idea whether or not Paul VI knew the dangers of 'the pill' which, after all, was in its infancy in those days. The instruction was not, as you know, argued along these lines. You say contraception leads to mass immorality. No doubt but this is not in the context of Catholic marriage but in the secular world outside where promiscuity is rife today. Humanea Vitae was an instruction for married Catholics, irrelevant to the secular world. When you talk of mass immorality, may I ask by whom? And where are the statistics on Catholic divorces you suggest are caused specifically by contraception? many things also cause divorces including big families.Contraception outside marriage could never have been averted by the Catholic Church. Sadly, traditionalists are quick to disparage dissenting Catholic married couples by linking them first to contraception and then to abortion. That's as judgmental as it is false. Abortion levels in secular society are dreadful,but that's mostly outside marriage where anything goes. You make good points on the dangers of contraceptive pills, the same with many artificial medicines. And I agree that what we are looking at here is not whether, in the context of Catholic marriage, it is moral to plan families - which the Church accepts it is - but the principles behind artificial contraception. The greatest insult to married Catholic women who dissent from the Church's teaching on this is to be swept up in abusive generalistions and then told that the quality of their unitive sex is impaired if artificial contraception is deployed. No one has the right to speak for someone else's experience. Humanea Vitae, simply, failed to make its case. That has happened before in the Church's history. I too, applaud the Cardinal's bravery and conviction. But the call comes 50 years too late for the majority.
|
Posted Monday, January 05, 2009 2:52 AM By Brent Anthony Egan
1968 absolutely destroyed The Church here in Australia as well. We are still picking up the shabby pieces.
|
Posted Monday, January 05, 2009 9:44 PM By C. Russell
To E Howard: I agree with you on Crdl Stafford's bravery and conviction, and your call for civil discourse. In response to your questions and your comments: 1. Paul VI was prophetic: he predicted the pill would lead to immorality and misuse by governments. 2. The stats show Catholics contracept at nearly the same rate as society; we have the same divorce rate. 3. Encyclicals such as HV are for ALL Catholics, not just married. As they teach the truth, they are meant for all people to help them obtain eternal joy with God. 4. Big families don't cause divorce, a husband or wife stop loving and leave. 5. The link of contraception to abortion is a fact admitted to in secular health literature. 6. Abortion is not outside marriage-‘anything goes’ is often an attitude in marriage. One aunt and one sister in law of mine had abortions in their marriages. 7. The principle of artificial contraception is to frustrate fertility, an integral element of the marital embrace (full and total self giving body and soul, open to life, until death do we part). Quality of sex is a false analogy-without openness to life we fail to love as God calls us to love. 8. The Church has an OBLIGATION to speak out on the issue but it did little outreach until the late great JP2. HV made a good case but it never got a chance in the face of naked and powerful dissent, aptly described by Crdl Stafford. Thank God for JP2 and his TOTB- see beautiful summaries by Fr. Richard Hogan or Christopher West. God bless you.
|
Posted Friday, January 09, 2009 11:01 AM By Talitha Kumi
Thank you CCD for publishing this entirely. Thank you Cardinal Stafford. Thank you Pope PaulVI. Thank you Pope JPII. Thank you Pope BXVI. Thank You God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
|
Posted Saturday, January 17, 2009 6:10 AM By E Howard
Thanks C Russell. I agree some of your points. However in answer, and limiting myself to objective facts:
1. If Paul VI knew what you say he knew then he would not have called a commission of experts to examine the traditional teaching. You could be helped by studying how his decision was reached.
2. Catholics are part of society and, certainly in the West, because the sensus fidelium has rejected HV, what you allege is hardly surprising.
3. Are you saying that HV was also for Catholic couples having sex outside marriage? In other words that they should fornicate without pills or condoms and be open to illegitimate children? Never heard that one. Perhaps you need to think it through.
4. Stress is a major factor in divorce and a common reason for stress is large families. There are, of course, many other reasons as nullity law recognises.
5.and 6. I know of no statistical evidence that Catholic married couples treat abortion as 'another means' of contraception. HV was a teaching above all for Catholic parents, in the tradition of Pius XI' 'Casti Conubii'.
7. Nature massively frustrates fertility. What matters more to people is loving intent. Responsible parenthood is critical. Children have human rights, one of which is to be brought into families that can lovingly take care of them. No one ever sees it like that. The church in the West, clergy and faithful, by and large disagrees with the magisterium on how to exercise responsible parenthood. I cannot change that.
8.Yes, it must do so; however, historical errors by the teaching authority of the church (I'd be happy to list these) mean that the lay faithful need also to be true to conscience as the Church calls them to be.
At this stage in the life of the church, we might be better off trying to bring souls back to the pews than lamenting the failure of HV.As a parish chairman I know there is great pastoral work to do. My best for 2009. E Howard
|
© California Catholic Daily 2008. All Rights Reserved.
|