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View From the Right: Liberal Catholics can't handle the truth

ROME -- Some things are beyond parody. In announcing that Barack Obama is more Catholic than the pope, Newsweek takes the cake. The piece, written by Kathleen Kennedy Townsend for the magazine's Web site, in anticipation of last week's presidential-papal meeting, asserts: "(The pope and the president) politely disagree about reproductive freedoms and homosexuality, but Catholics back home won't care, because they know Obama's on their side. In fact, Obama's agenda is closer to their views than even the pope's."

Townsend, like many a commentator, misses something essential: There is a truth to which the pope subscribes. The whims American Catholics confess to pollsters are another thing entirely.

Townsend argues that the pope needs to bend his ear to the poll results, and to ditch his Christian hope for Obama's brand of faith. Townsend ultimately wants to remake the Catholic Church so that it reflects her more liberal political agenda. In this regard, she is not unlike other American-Catholic politicians. (Townsend ran for governor of Maryland in 2002.) But in doing so, she puts aside the Church's commitment to truth.

Here, Townsend joins an Obama work already in progress. When Obama spoke at Notre Dame's commencement he declared, "The ultimate irony of faith is that it necessarily admits doubt. It is the belief in things not seen." It was his reworking of Hebrews 11:1, which reads, "Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." Faith isn't a belief. It's a substance. It's evidence, as the words of Scripture say. As one priest wrote, after the speech, in his diocesan paper: "Faith leads not to doubt, nor merely to subjective conviction, but to objective truth discoverable through revelation and grace."

So when Catholics latch onto the Obama gospel, they're doing not only their church but also themselves a disservice. If they're projecting their own personal and political wants onto the church, they're rejecting their own integrity.

Townsend was far from alone in missing the point of the Obama-Benedict meeting and the new papal encyclical. The papal document "Charity in Truth" was released just days before Obama's visit and was widely described as the pope's embrace of global government. But his political guidance was not the heart of the matter -- and that's not me trying to make the encyclical mesh with my political philosophy. Taken in its entirety, "Charity in Truth" offers a view of today's world that is challenging for people of all political persuasions.

An honest reading of the encyclical is hard for right and left alike. I'm not comfortable with increasing foreign aid, redistributing wealth, and anything having to do with the United Nations. But if you went to National Review Online after the encyclical's release, you would have seen writers wrestling with the issues, reading and trying to understand the thinking behind this serious moral guide. And while we dealt with the text, the more mainstream headlines merely focused on what's "bad" for conservatives in it and suppressed what is challenging for the left. Newspapers everywhere ignored the pope's condemnation of the far too many international organizations that contribute to a culture of death (such as promoting contraception), as only one example.

As Kishore Jayabalan of the Roman office of the Acton Institute said, shortly after the Vatican press conference announcing the new encyclical: "Neither side ... seems ready to take Benedict's theology -- his own field of expertise -- seriously. Part of this is a result of our habitual, liberal-democratic tendency to separate Church and State and not let theological arguments influence our politics. This tendency invariably blinds us to the pope's combination of respect for life with the demands of social justice. ... Reading 'Charity in Truth' for partisan purposes can yield moments of agony and ecstasy for left and right alike."

Newsweek will continue to find Catholics who will put a partisan spin on the pope and his teachings. The pope, meanwhile, will continue to provoke all of us -- and yes, sometimes even make us uncomfortable -- in the interest of truth.

Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review Online (www.nationalreview.com).

(July 23, 2009)

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The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Hanford Sentinel

Devil's Advocate wrote on Jul 24, 2009 2:05 PM:

" St. Paul was very clear about how the church should deal with habitually, unrepentant believers.

Taking a hard line with Catholic government officials would certainly cost the church some lukewarm adherents, but being forced to examine their lives in light of church teachings would also bring many back into the fold.

It would also cause the church to become respected, not only among Catholics, but also among Protestants, Evangelicals, and even non-believers that understand the idea that strength of conviction is something to be respected, even in disagreement. "

SJT wrote on Jul 25, 2009 7:50 AM:

" If the Church is not respected, then why are parishioners standing outside the front entrance of Immaculate Heart every Sunday, having to do so because there is standing room only inside? The respect is always there, regardless of those who look at it through a political prism. The Church is home to all Catholics, regardless of the degree to which they practice their faith. If Kate doesn't appreciate that, then oh well. Who is she? "

toleranttaxpayer wrote on Jul 26, 2009 8:31 AM:

" It amazes me how many times I have heard Catholics in Hanford use the argument that because they have a huge congregation that being a catholic must be ok. I mean come on, How does a bunch of people constitute a more holy religion than any other. Let's face it people tend to like to be where the majority of people are. Why do you think popular restaurants are always full and woodstock was such a great success. The Catholic church needs to reexamine a more current view of how they can better serve the world. That is the true spirit of religion, the power of giving. Not brag about how many people are lined up Sunday morning. "

SJT wrote on Jul 26, 2009 4:11 PM:

" The point was made to debunk another written notion that the Catholic Church is not respected; if taken in proper context, one should not have taken my point in the light that it is somehow "better" than other churches (or even other religions, for that matter). Toleranttp's point about how the Church can better serve the world is well-taken, however. "

manuel wrote on Jul 26, 2009 7:39 PM:

" Toleranttaxpayer Another atheist puts the Catholic religion down, you need to re examine yourself. SJT was not braging, he or she made a simple statement, which you seem to be offended by, to bad "

Devil's Advocate wrote on Jul 26, 2009 9:49 PM:

" "In announcing that Barack Obama is more Catholic than the pope, Newsweek takes the cake." Newsweek CLEARLY does not respect the Catholic church. With the number of Catholics in the US, that should have resulted in serious response toward Newsweek. It was an insult to Catholicism at large. Had they made a similar comment about Islam, "Obama is more Muslim than Mohammed", the backlash would be vicious (violent even), and not just from Muslims. Catholics nationwide didn't "turn the other cheek"; they just didn't care. They could have put Newsweek out of business just by canceling subscriptions. But like government officials calling themselves Catholic while trampling ALL OVER church teachings, the rank-and-file don't blink. St Paul gave these words to his son-in-the-faith, Timothy. "All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work." Can we get a little REPROOF and CORRECTION? PLEASE?!? There is nothing I love more than the church, but we need to stand up As The Church to say, "Enough!" "

toleranttaxpayer wrote on Jul 27, 2009 8:56 PM:

" Why would you assume that I am atheist ? If you would examine your communities a little more closely. In fact, it is the Mormon's and the Jehovah Witness that say all Christians and Catholics are going to hell. I am far from atheist. How many people truly understand our 3rd largest religion in Hanford, the Mormons. Or the fourth largest religion in hanford, Jehovah Witness. Or the 5th largest being Seventh Day Adventist, which also believe that only they will be saved. "

manuel wrote on Jul 28, 2009 9:40 AM:

" Toleranttaxpayer When you preach hate towards others believes, than it is assumed you are an atheist, all religions believe in god, yet they cast hate towards others, anyone can start a religion, all you need is a gift of gab, and they will follow you like sheep, look at jim jones "

toleranttaxpayer wrote on Jul 28, 2009 7:02 PM:

" Love your enemies and you will have none. An atheist is someone who does not believe in a GOD ! Someone who hates is called a HATER . Maybe my words were too strong. I apologize for that. Maybe I should have said dislike. Point well taken. "

Watchdog Fred wrote on Jul 30, 2009 7:59 PM:

" To: manuel wrote on Jul 28, 2009 9:40 AM:

Point well taken, I mean look at the President and Jeremiah Wright? "

manuel wrote on Jul 31, 2009 10:30 AM:

" Whatchdog What does the president and the radical Jeremiah Wright have to do with anything, is this your way of trying to put down the president, a good republican that lost to a Democrat will always try to smear a Democrat, it must make you and your cronies feel good "

Watchdog Fred wrote on Aug 1, 2009 10:54 PM:

" To: manuel wrote on Jul 31, 2009 10:30 AM:

You filled in the blanks, all I did was bring up the two names. If Obama keeps having to distance himself from people, he'll soon run out of associates.

I know he'd like to separate himself from Joe Biden for his wonderful diplomatic blunders of late.

Can a President fire a Vice-President? I wonder? "

manuel wrote on Aug 6, 2009 9:26 AM:

" Whatchdog Alihandero Congratulations to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad from Iran and Bush, they won their second term the same way, must make the Republicans proud "




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