Thanks to Maggie posting the MPR article of the archbishop's interview, I learned that it is important to be "100% Catholic". I'm Catholic, Roman Catholic, as a matter of fact. I believe the earth is round and actually a sphere. The Church excommunicated Galileo for postulating that. I believe in a married clergy. Until 1365, so did the Church. I'm not a fan of slavery. Until the 19th century, the Church refused to condemn it. And it took Civil War in the United States for the church to realize that slavery is actually bad. I've seen theologians like Matthew Fox (OP) and Karl Rahner (SJ) ostracized and on the verge of excommunication for postulating new ways of theological thinking. Adolf Hitler was a Roman Catholic. He was never excommunicated.
In 1969, Paul VI issued the encyclical, Humanae Vitae. Wonderful document, it really is. But it's premises are wrong and the resultant teaching has left many a catholic and many a priest scratching their heads. (Bishop) James Shannon left the priesthood and episcopacy because of that document and its short-sightedness.
The Church has a long history of simply being wrong. I believe its wrong in how it is currently dealing people who are not heterosexual. I believe it is wrong in how it is currently treating women. I believe it is wrong in how it is treating anyone who has a valid disagreement and wants to dialog, because dialog is not allowed. Apparently, the Spirit of God only breathes in the hierarchy of the Church and nowhere else. I can't believe that. And I can't blindly accept whatever a bishop or priest says without understanding and basis. I need to critically examine what is being said before it becomes a part of my belief system.
Because I do believe in God, the Father Almighty. I believe in Jesus the Christ, His Son. I believe that Jesus lived, died, and rose from the dead. I believe in the Spirit who breathes LIFE into the church and that the church is gift of Jesus to those of us who believe. And I believe that one day I will be reunited with Him.
The fact that I accept gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people, and respect their rights as people of God and as citizens of this country does not make me any less Catholic. The fact that I believe that Holy Orders should not be the purview of celibate men does not make me any less Catholic. The fact that artificial birth control needs to used in many places and in many situations does not make me any less Catholic.
I will continue to blog about this, as it is a very painful time for our church and for me personally. I love the Church. I hate being away from it. But if I can't be free to openly and freely dissent with teaching that is clearly fallible in a culture that is clearly broken simply makes me sad.
Just Thinking Almost Aloud
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Meetings
Meetings are usually stupid. They are a reason for people to get together and not do anything together rather than not doing anything individually. I wish there were a way for meetings to ONLY be held to make decisions and not discuss what decisions need to be made. Here's an idea... come to meetings with what you want to do and let everyone know what that is, discuss a plan of action, and get it done. Not that hard, folks.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Gotta Start Somewhere
So I'm sitting here in my office, spending yet another day in Saint Paul wishing I was back in my "real" office in New York where all the action is. It's quiet here, gives me a chance to think a little more than I can in the hustle and bustle of the big city. That can be good. It can also be very bad.
What makes people get out of bed and say, "I think I'm going to be an asshole today." It's just amazing to me as I drive wherever I need to drive first thing in the morning how many people must get out of bed with that mantra. No turn signals, cutting other drivers off, excessive speeding, I just don't get it. Then these same people, who have clearly decided that they would be assholes today, walk through life as if they are just pissed at just about everything. No simple "Good Morning" or even a "Hi". Assholes, all of them. I just don't get it. When I'm in New York, you expect people to be assholes. In New York, people are EXPECTED to be assholes. But in Saint Paul? Not so much.
Schultzie, welcome to assholeville. More later...
What makes people get out of bed and say, "I think I'm going to be an asshole today." It's just amazing to me as I drive wherever I need to drive first thing in the morning how many people must get out of bed with that mantra. No turn signals, cutting other drivers off, excessive speeding, I just don't get it. Then these same people, who have clearly decided that they would be assholes today, walk through life as if they are just pissed at just about everything. No simple "Good Morning" or even a "Hi". Assholes, all of them. I just don't get it. When I'm in New York, you expect people to be assholes. In New York, people are EXPECTED to be assholes. But in Saint Paul? Not so much.
Schultzie, welcome to assholeville. More later...
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