Sunday, July 29, 2007

excerpts from "Profile of the Catholic Teacher of Medicine"

<www.zenit.org/article-20184?l=english>

Introduction

"The question has to be asked whether a non-Catholic teacher of medicine will really be different from a Catholic teacher of medicine....

"It is necessary to understand the process of culture to understand the process of education. This involves four basic stages: introspection, tradition, assimilation and progress. In introspection, individuals realize their own needs. In tradition, they see what they are offered to meet these needs. In assimilation, they meet them. And in progress, they detect new needs and proceed to create new satisfiers which they have not found in tradition."


I. The Catholic professor of medicine

1. The teacher of medicine as a "teacher"


"medical culture consists of the humanization of medicine, and medical education consists of the assimilation of the humanization of medicine. The task of the teacher of medicine is to signal to the medical student how to assimilate the humanization of medicine....

"In addition to scientific and technical competence, the teacher of medicine, like any other teacher, should be an expert in educational science"

2. The teacher of medicine as a professor

"the word professor contains a religious connotation, as it comes from the verb to profess, which means adherence to a faith and its profession. If the teacher just remains at the level of teacher, they will be frustrated and so will their students. They signal health and life sciences and technology but, being realistic, they indicate that the whole of medical science and technology finally lose the battle, because death arrives and, in the face of death, all medical science and technology are shown to be impotent and fail....

"Only if they are capable of signaling, together with the same medicine and in a way from it, the overcoming of death, does their teaching have a lasting value and is not lost in just delaying the end as much as possible....

3. The teacher of medicine as a Catholic professor

"If the professor of medicine is a Catholic, then this transcendence and this victory over death are not merely beautiful desires which, for many, in our secularized culture, do not go beyond good intentions and palliatives for the failure of death, but rather they are based on the same reality of an irrefutable historical event, the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ....

"It is obvious that this is incomprehensible for those who do not profess this faith. For a physician who does not have faith in Christ and in his Church, nothing here means anything, and rather it is something absurd which would appear to be for ignorant and mad people as it goes against the biological experimental knowledge which they believe to be the only one valid in medicine: 'evidence-based medicine.' However, here is another type of evidence, even stronger than laboratory evidence, the evidence of a faith based on an irrefutable fact which is reached for the same reason, but which arises from a free and firm decision of the will of each person. St Paul already said that the announcement of a crucified Messiah was offensive for the Jews and madness for the Gentiles, but it is much wiser than all human wisdom, and what may seem to be weakness in God, is stronger than all human strength (1 Corinthians 1:23-25).

"A Catholic professor of medicine is one who teaches, signals, to their students, how to be a Catholic physician.....


II. The Catholic physician

"I take as the basis the Charter for Health Care Workers....

CHARTER FOR HEALTH CARE WORKERS

"The Catholic physician is described as follows in the Charter for Health Care Workers:

The Catholic physician's profession requires them to be a custodian and server of human life. They should do this through a watchful and solicitous presence with the sick. The medical and healthcare activity is based on an interpersonal relationship. It is an encounter between trust & conscience....

The patient is not just a clinical case, but rather a sick man toward whom the physician should adopt an attitude of sincere sympathy, suffering together with him, through personal participation in the specific situations of the individual patient. Sickness and suffering are phenomena which, when dealt with in depth, go beyond medicine and deal with the essence of the human condition in this world.

The physician who cares for them must be aware that the whole of humanity is involved, and that complete dedication is required. This is their mission, and is the fruit of a call or vocation that the physician hears, personified in the suffering and invoking face of the patient who trusts in their care. Here the physician's mission to give life is linked to the life of Christ....This life transcends the physical life, to reach the height of the Holy Trinity. It is the new and eternal life that consists of communion with the Father to whom every man is called freely in the Son, through the work of the Holy Spirit.

The physician is like the Good Samaritan....The physician thus shares the love of God as an instrument of diffusion and at the same time becomes infected with the love of God for man.

This is the therapeutic charity of Christ who went around doing good and healing all (Acts 10:38). At the same time, it is the charity toward Christ represented in each patient....
It thus results that the physicians' identity is the identity received from their therapeutic ministry, their ministry of life. They collaborate with God in the recovery of health in the sick person's body. The Church accepts the work of
the physician as part of its ministry, as it considers the service to sick people to be an integral part of its mission. It knows that physical harm imprisons the spirit, and the evil of the spirit overpowers the body. Through their therapeutic ministry, physicians thus share in the pastoral and evangelizing action of the Church. The paths that they should take are those marked by the dignity of the human being & therefore by Moral law, especially when it is a question of practising their activity in the field of Biogenetics and Biotechnology....

THE IDENTITY OF THE PHYSICIAN

"A short summary of the Christian identity of the physician can be found in this position of the Pontifical Council for the Health Pastoral Care....

The Vocation and the Church

"We are going to use these three words of the Vocation as a guideline to reflect on the pontifical doctrine on the identity of the Catholic physician which we set out in the Charter of the Pontifical Council....

1. "BEING"

"...When we talk about true Catholic physicians, they are so because of a true vocation received from the same God from which they receive their whole existence, obviously without excluding the same physician's collaboration with the calling. How does God call the physician to the medical vocation, and of what does this vocation consist? Below we offer some characteristics of the " being" of this calling."

1.1. The profession

"Firstly, we will say that God calls the physician for a profession which is not the same as for a trade. Historically, three professions are recognized, that of the priest, that of the physician and that of the ruler or judge....the profession is an obligation and a responsibility which is contracted with God himself....

"This sacred nature of the medical profession led to the Hippocratic oath, which is the oath not to harm the patient, to always do good to them and to look after all stages of life, an oath which is not a promise made to the patient, but rather directly to God. In this context the physician's vocation is a vocation which is born from the love of God, and it is God that the physician follows in this profession....

1.2. The love of God in the physician

"God himself is Love. This is the deepest definition of God. His love does not consist of him lacking something, but rather of the greatest circulation of his kindness, which is presented is such a way that God the Father loves the world that he created so much that, out of his love for it, he gives his one and only Son in death (John 3:16).

"The Christian medical profession is therefore centered on love, but not on self-interested and poor, Hippocratic, love, but rather it imitates the perfect love of God and has its paradigm in the Good Samaritan....

"Pope Pius XII complements the characteristics of the physician on referring to two other commandments in particular, the fifth, 'you shall not murder' & the eighth, 'you shall not give false testimony'....

1.3. Respect for and Defense of Life

"The fifth commandment reminds us how the identity of the Christian physician means that, because of the love they are obliged to have for God and for their patient, they are totally obliged to defend life at any of its stages, but especially at the stages at which it feels the weakest, which are the initial and the terminal stages. Their personality is formed from a clear and absolute no to abortion and no to euthanasia. The whole meaning of human life is contained in the fifth commandment, as a gift given by God to be merely administered by man and by woman, and which should only have its origin in marriage."

1.4. Medical training

"The eighth commandment, 'you shall not give false testimony,' tells us about the physician's clear commitment to the truth, both to the truth of disease and of health, and to the truth of medical science....

"The physician's identity comes from the training that they receive. However, if we look at what is occurring in many Faculties of Medicine, we can see that this training has many defects....there is a bio-technical reductionism. On presenting the subjects, their anthropocentric value and the ethical, affective and existential values have been lost. The physician is seen from the requirements of the patient and the demands of an economicist health system with complete indifference for the violations of human rights, especially human life.

"We often find as a paradigm of the current clinical applications a fragmentation and reduction of the patient to organs and biological or technological functions and to medicines. The intention is to obtain a command of fragmented specialized knowledge without the perspective of the whole, through knowledge and relational competence with other human fields outside medicine. The idea of health is proposed as a passive adaptation to pathogenic stimuli and to those of a bio-physical nature. The adaptation of the clinic is carried out with often exclusive reference to the requirements, even of an economic nature, of the national health system. A loss of the ethical values in medicine and the anonymity of the patients are observed. It is even seen that little value is given to the existential aspects of the medical profession, to the person of the patient, of the physician and of the nurse.

"In the face of these problems of the medical 'being' from the beginning of the training that is received, a series of methods has been conceived to make the teaching active, especially from the so-called PBL (Problem-Based Learning) and the teaching method oriented toward the community which sees the physician as a necessarily competent person on a relational and scientific level, inserted in a community reality, capable of collaborating with other health figures and of administering the resources available with continuing learning, always an advocate of the patient's health, capable of combining knowledge with medical practice, and therefore with continuing training.

"This kind of medical training would offer a new understanding of health and of disease. It would deal with prevention and the handling of the disease in the context of the individuality of the patient complemented by their own family and society as a whole. It would thus develop a learning based more on curiosity and continuous investigation than on passive acquisitions. It would reduce the information load. It would encourage direct contact with the patients through a personalized analysis of their problems and of the whole of their curriculum.

"A program should therefore be prepared which is based on the following principles:

1. Existence of a comprehensive and ultimate meaning of medical knowledge.

2. Definition of its epistemological orientation.

3. Definition of the values, the motivations, the psychological maturity, the quality of the objective knowledge and the methodological, relational and technical capacities, applied to the exercising of the profession.

4. Definition of the values, the motivations, the capacities and the quality of the training of the teachers.

5. Definition of the general and partial objectives of the training.

6. Definition of the teaching methods. These principles contain the epistemological knowledge of present-day medicine which considers health as a psycho-biological construction determined by the possibility and the quality of the person's resources and whose aim is to give a single response to the fundamental questions of human existence....

1.5. Lifelong learning

"The physician's identity is not shaped once and for all in their initial training, but rather is prolonged in their lifelong learning. It demands a very careful preparation of students of medicine, but at the same time requires the continuing and progressive preparation of the lecturers who teach any medical subject, a preparation that should never be lacking. The lecturers in particular have the responsibility to promote new physicians, and they will never achieve this if they are not sure of each student's capacity to carry out such a delicate mission.

"The same eighth commandment obliges all physicians to keep professional secrecy and, as we have already mentioned, to have a sound medical culture which should be improved constantly"

2. "WITH"

"We said that the second characteristic of the Christian vocation is expressed with the preposition 'with,' with God. That is to say that any vocation is to be with God our Lord, who prepares man to carry out a mission which, without his strength, it would be pointless to carry out....

2.1. Revelation of Christ the physician

"The personality of the Christian physician is identified with the revelation of Christ the physician. Christ sent his apostles to cure all ailment and disease and said to them, I will be with you to the end of the age....The physician performs the therapeutic ministry in this way, beside the apostles, as a continuation of the mission of Christ and with his revelation.

"The whole breadth of this revelation should be understood. The physician should reveal the whole life of Christ, which is the presence of Christ in the physician....


2.2. Pain

"He took all suffering, all ailments, all disease, without exception, and summarized them in his own death as the death of God who had become man, so that no pain would remain outside, and from his death he exploited death itself, he conquered it in the plenitude of his resurrection. One of the physician's main doubts is always the problem of pain. This question only has its answer here, when pain does not appear as something negative, but rather as a positivity which, it is true, ends in death, but in a death full of resurrection.

"The physician should thus cure, revealing the death and the resurrection of Christ. An identification of the physician as such, as a healer, with Christ the healer, is necessary for this revelation. This identification is now carried out especially through the Eucharist and through the other sacraments. The sacraments are the historic presence of Christ in the present, at the specific moment that we are crossing in life."

2.3. Health

"the physician should realize that health is complexive and bodily health should not be talked about as something radically different from the complete health that we call eternal health or salvation. The physician's ministry is therefore an ecclesiastic ministry which is directed toward the salvation of man from his body, but which involves other aspects.

"We thus describe health as a dynamic tension toward physical, mental, social and spiritual harmony and not just the absence of disease, which prepares men to carry out the mission with which God has entrusted them, in accordance with the stage of life at which they are.

"The physician's mission is therefore to ensure that this dynamic tension toward complete harmony exists, as required at each stage of the life of this specific man who is their patient, so that they can carry out the mission with which God has entrusted them....

"In this context, death is not a frustration for the physician, but rather a triumph, as they have accompanied their patient in such a way that they have been able to use their talents to the full at each stage of their life. When it has reached its end, the medical function ends, not with a cry of impotence, but rather with the satisfaction of a mission fulfilled, both by the patient and by the physician.

"Thus, the physician truly is with Christ and their profession is identified in this communion with Christ, and then the physician joins together with our Father God like a son with his father, and their professional love becomes the action of the Love of God in himself, which is the Holy Spirit. A Christian physician is therefore one who is always guided by the Holy Spirit. From the Holy Spirit and with the Holy Spirit is all the sympathy that must exist between the physician and the patient, all the due humanization of medicine and all the demand for updating and lifelong learning, as the Love of the Holy Spirit makes the physician an essentially open person for the rest, as they are obliged to do so before God because of their profession of Faith represented by their medical profession....

3. "FOR"

"When God chose Moses, it is very clear that he did so to remove his people from the power of the Egyptians....


"Physicians cannot withdraw into themselves....A true physician is a physician for life. If they have truly received this vocation, they will have it for ever and they must practice it for humanity as a mission specifically received for the good of all, and for which they must account to God....


3.1. Openness to the patient

"We said that love of the medical profession imitates the love of God which is disseminated. Physicians cannot hide their knowledge in pure theories and laboratories, but rather should expand them in favor of the community. They have received the gift of taking care of life and making it grow. Their vocation is for life, never for death, which would be to blind the mission with which God has entrusted each human being. According to Pope John Paul II, nowadays the religious ministry is connected to the therapeutic ministry of physicians in the affirmation of human life and of all those specific contingencies in which life itself can be endangered by deliberate human will. Their deepest identity involves being ministers of life and never instruments of death....


"According to Pope Pius XII, Catholic physicians should place their knowledge, their strengths, their heart and their devotion at the disposal of the sick. They should understand that they and their patients are subject to the will of God. Medicine is a reflection of the goodness of God. They should help the sick to accept their illness, and they should make sure they are not dazzled by technology and use the gifts that God has given them and not give in to the pressure to assaults on life. They should remain firm in the face of the temptations of materialism....

"The good physician must therefore have dianoetic virtues and skills and convert them into virtuosity, that is to say into a habit....


3.2. Fundamental qualities of the physician

"The fundamental qualities of the physician have thus been classified under 5 sections:

Awareness of responsibility,

humbleness,

respect,

love &

truthfulness.

"Awareness of responsibility leads them to work with the patient and be aware that it is the physician who gives the direction.

Humbleness tells them that physicians look after their patients and not the opposite. Humbleness makes them see themselves as indebted to the patient....they should receive their patients as if they were Christ himself.

Respect and love for the patient...are the basis for their humbleness....

Truthfulness entails being aware of the great trust that the patient places in them on revealing their personal matters....They should never experiment on the patient if this involves a danger disproportionate to the good that they intend to do. This must be absolutely necessary and the patient must agree to it. They should notify the patient of the development of their illness, tell them the truth about their condition in the most appropriate way and at the most appropriate time possible. They should complement their action with the action of the priest....


3.3. Portrait of the physician

"The 'Portrait of the perfect physician,' described by Enrique Jorge Enriquez in 16th century Spain in the flowery language of the time, is still current....


"Nowadays, we would talk about medical excellence....


3.4. Morality and Law

"Initially we said that the medical profession is something that goes beyond the Law and is positioned in the framework of Morality, and this is true, but this does not mean that we can do without medical Law. Medical Law without adequate morality would be arbitrariness based on shameful interests. Morality without medical Law would just be general principles without direct application. The rules of medical Law must be sufficiently clear and brief to aid the physician's action. The leading principle is always the same: the physician's purpose is to help and to heal, not to do harm or to kill.

"It is worth mentioning in particular the field of Ethics, the field of Morality, in which the physician must be competent, but in which so often they are not specialists. Bioethical committees are therefore required in each health centre, and should also be created in the teaching centers, in open dialogue with the specialists....


"Physicians are thus trained to bear witness to God....They can even be valid bearers of ecumenical dialogue and dialogue with other religions....The physician will thus actively belong to the Church as an individual person and as a group....

3.5. Teamwork

"In order to carry out such a demanding mission, physicians cannot stay enclosed in their own individuality, but rather should first open up to other physicians and be sufficiently humble to work in collaboration and as a team....


"In a certain way, within this opening-up, in the Spanish field of medicine what two authors call the decalogue of the new physician is designed. They express it like this:

1. Multidisciplinary teamwork with a single person ultimately responsible.

2. The more scientific the professional, the better.

3. The human aspects will be strengthened in professional practice.

4. Action will be adapted to agreed scientific diagnostic and therapeutic protocols.

5. They will be aware of the expense. In addition to the protocols, they will use guides to good practice.

6. They shall aid coexistence and solidarity with work colleagues and with the patients.

7. They shall think that all healthcare acts can involve a preventive action, and even a promotion of health.

8. They shall bear in mind at all times the need to care for the satisfaction of the user of the service.

9. The Patient Service Units will be strengthened, circulating the complaints and suggestions which arise among the people affected. Frequent opinion surveys will be held.

10. It will be essential to apply ethical principles to the professional activities"


CONCLUSION

"This is the Catholic identity of the physician, to reveal Christ the healer.

"Being a Catholic professor of medicine is to have far-reaching sight to be able to see the resurrection in death. It is not just this, though. It is the ability to sense a harmonious tension in health which leads to plenitude, in accordance with the different stages of the life of people. And it is to feel in medical science, technology and skills the all-powerful force of God who resurrects his Son Jesus Christ and who already gives us a foretaste of the resurrection in medical progress. Being a Catholic professor of medicine is to teach the Love with which the Holy Spirit delivers Jesus Christ on the cross to the Father, who with his loving strength brings him back to life. Being a Catholic professor of medicine is to teach the physician to be the loving caress of God who looks after his children in sickness and in death, making their condition more bearable for them and opening up for them a complete expectation of health which will not now be tension toward harmony, but rather the total harmony of love. Being a Catholic professor of medicine is to teach the physician to be the revelation of Christ the healer."


Tuesday, July 24, 2007

excerpts from the U.S. State Dept.’s “Trafficking in Persons Report 2007”


(Click individual images to enlarge.)
















(William Wilberforce: champion of anti slave trade efforts in the British Parliament in the 18th/19th centuries.)


(Chris Smith: champion of anti human trafficking efforts in the U.S. Congress in the 20th/21st centuries.)

Sunday, July 22, 2007

A magnificent new translation Of Pope John Paul II's "Theology of the Body"


It was in 1968 that Pope Paul VI gave the world “Humanae Vitae,” his beautiful encyclical on human life: “The transmission of human life is a most serious role in which married people collaborate freely & responsibly with God the Creator…. Responsible men can become more deeply convinced of the truth of the doctrine laid down by the Church on this issue if they reflect on the consequences of methods & plans for artificial birth control.

  • “Let them first consider how easily this course of action could open wide the way for marital infidelity & a general lowering of moral standards….

  • “Another effect that gives cause for alarm is that a man who grows accustomed to the use of contraceptive methods may forget the reverence due to a woman, & …reduce her to being a mere instrument for the satisfaction of his own desires….

  • “Finally, careful consideration should be given to the danger of this power passing into the hands of those public authorities who care little for the precepts of the moral law. Who will blame a government which in its attempt to resolve the problems affecting an entire country resorts to the same measures as are regarded as lawful by married people in the solution of a particular family difficulty? ….Should they regard this as necessary, they may even impose their use on everyone”

Few doubt that there has indeed been “a general lowering of moral standards,” as well as a growing disrespect for women, in the past four decades. We also see affluent governments trying to impose contraceptive practices on less affluent governments! Yet, in spite of its proven prophetic nature, Humanae Vitae continues to meet with monumental resistance.

Before becoming pope, John Paul II prepared a masterful work, largely intended to lead the Church and the world to a better appreciation of Humanae Vitae. As he became pope before publication, he used his notes to address audiences at weekly catechetical sessions, over five years. Michael Waldstein has published an updated and magnificent translation of these “Theology of the Body” addresses, under the title: “Man & Woman He Created Them.” This magnificent and scholarly translation provides a lifestyle challenges, which does not seem to have been so elusive for people of past generations.

As per Pope John Paul II, “The whole of the catecheses…can be grasped under the title, ‘Human Love in the Divine Plan,” or with greater precision, ‘the Redemption of the body & the Sacramentality of Marriage’….The first part is devoted to the analysis of the words of Christ….The second part of the catechesis is devoted to the analysis of the sacrament based on Ephesians (Eph 5:22 - 23), which goes back to the biblical beginning of marriage expressed in the words of Genesis, ‘a man will leave his father and mother and unite with his wife, and the two will be one flesh’ (Gen 2:24)” (11/28/84).

“The reflections about the sacrament of Marriage were carried out in the consideration of the two dimensions essential to this sacrament, namely, the dimension of covenant and grace and the dimension of sign….The doctrine contained in…[Humanae Vitae] remains in organic relation both with the sacramentality of marriage and the whole biblical problematic of the theology of the body, which is centered on the ‘key words’ of Christ….all the reflections dealing with the ‘Redemption of the Body and the Sacramentality of Marriage’ seem to constitute an extensive commentary on the doctrine contained precisely in Humanae Vitae” (11/28/84).

Michael Waldstein has done a great service for the Church, the people of our generation, and the people of future generations.

Click to see this review on Amazon.com.


Saturday, July 21, 2007

The Scandalous Life of Father Robert Drinan, SJ


"The Strange Political Career of Father Drinan" <www.cwnews.com/news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=21136> recounts the Jesuit's scandalous tenure in Congress and his continued, post-Congress abortion advocacy. When President Clinton vetoed a ban on partial birth abortion in 1992, "It was...shocking to many people that one of the president's strongest defenders was a Jesuit priest, Father Robert Drinan." As a member of the House of Representatives from 1971 till 1981, Drinan "was perhaps the single most reliable supporter of abortion 'rights.'"

As per Joseph R. Stanton, MD <www.excommunication.net/Articles/Quislings.htm>, there was, in 1968, "a gaggle of theologians invited to Hyannisport by Senators Robert and Ted Kennedy and the Shrivers for a weekend discussion, a private colloquium on abortion. Former priest Albert R. Jonsen, in a paper titled 'Theological Ethics, Moral Philosophy and Public Moral Discourse,' reports another Hyannisport meeting in 1964 with Senators Ted and Robert Kennedy. Robert was running for the New York Senate seat 'and their political advisors wished to discuss the position a Catholic politician should take on abortion.' Albert Jonsen, then a Jesuit novice, and Fr. Joseph Fuchs, SJ, Fr. Robert Drinan, SJ, Fr. Richard McCormick, SJ, and Fr. Charles Curran of Catholic University of America were among attendees....

"So here we have the 'personally opposed, but reluctantly vote for abortion,' which Ted Kennedy and Fr. Drinan have used so effectively ever since. This has spread as a mantra among 'Catholic' politicians who by their 'personally opposed, but' votes have sustained the ongoing Herodian slaughter of the unborn in the USA....years before Roe and Doe, the stage had been set for surrender of a critical Church position. All of the priests involved were Jesuits, excluding Fr. Curran....

"On 4 June 1996, Robert F. Drinan, S.J., identifying himself as a Jesuit priest and professor of law at Georgetown, endorsed near-birth abortions....On that date, Fr. Drinan in a New York Times Op-ed piece told the president he was right to veto the bill which would have saved viable children from a ghastly and barbaric death....Fr. Drinan’s posture continues to be cited by purported Catholic legislators"







The Verdict is In!


I see Josh McDowell's "The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict" (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1999), Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli, SJ's "Handbook of Christian Apologetics" (Downers Grove, Illinois: Intervarsity Press, 1994), and Lee Strobel's "The Case for Faith" (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2000) as companion volumes. In fact, McDowell frequently references Kreeft and Tacelli, while they return the favor. One chapter of Strobel's book consists of an interview with Peter Kreeft.

For the believer, "The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict," is a delightful collection of basic Christian apologetics, marinated in tasty data from biblical archeology and other branches of modern science. As a compendium of basic common sense, it comprises an in-your-face (but loving for all that) challenge to unbelievers (or better said, "not-yet-believers") and other skeptics, as it will knock one off that familiar and oh-so-comfortable high horse. It challenges the mushy sentimentality behind the notion that all religious creeds are basically equal - the idea that choosing a creed is akin to choosing an ice cream from any one of 31 delicious flavors.

Very methodically and with the precision which we have come to expect from all those "Law and Order" and C.S.I. (Crime Scene Investigation) television shows, "Inspector" Josh McDowell looks at "The Case for the Bible," "The Case for Jesus," and "The Case for and Against Christianity." A final section, "Truth or Consequences," not only sums up overwhelming evidence for the jury - but reviews basic logic, in case we try to skip out on bail into a state of denial!

The Case for the Bible: Just as a collection of historical literary works, the Bible is so undeniably unique that no intelligent person would want to be ignorant of it (Yet, plenty are!). As per McDowell, "The Old Testament has been shown to be reliable in at least three major ways: (1) textual transmission (the accuracy of the copying process down through history, (2) the confirmation of the Old Testament by hard evidence uncovered through archaeology, and (3) documentary evidence also uncovered through archaeology" (p. 69)." He introduces us to the science of historiography (with its bibliograhical, internal evidence, and external evidence tests), to gauge the historical reliability of New Testament documents.

While McDowell's book makes powerful arguments, I do not agree with everything he has written. He treats the Septuagint (i.e., the Greek translation of the Old Testament done for Jews of Alexandria, around 250 B.C.) inconsistently: At times, he treats inclusion in the Septuagint as confirmation of authenticity (eg.,



  • "These books appear with the rest of the Hebrew canonical books in the Greek translation of the Hebrew canon called the Septuagint (LXX)" (pp. 26 - 27);

  • "Paul Enns notes that [the Septuagint] '...is based on a Hebrew text one thousand years older than our existing Hebrew manuscript....'" (p. 83).

  • "The Septuagint was the Bible of Jesus and the apostles. Most New Testament quotations are taken from it directly" (p.89)).

In the sixteenth century A.D., Martin Luther rejected the Septuagint and several of its books or parts thereof. McDowell's treatment could seem disingenuous:



  • "the Greek Old Testament of the Septuagint differs from the Hebrew canon in the quality of its translation as well as its content and arrangement" (p. 83).

  • "The Apocrypha consists of the books added to the Old Testament by the Roman Catholic Church. Protestants reject these additions as canonical Scripture" (p. 29).


The Case for Jesus: No one ventures to put forth the position that Jesus Christ is a fictional character; no one denies that He walked this earth. In one chapter, McDowell takes us on a fascinating exploration of Jesus' fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies. Directly and indirectly, Inspector McDowell maintains that there is no getting around the fact that this Jesus Christ claimed to be God. As per John 8:58, for example, "Jesus said to them, 'Most assuredly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I AM" (p.142). The people of Jesus' time knew what this meant: "the renowned [Catholic] biblical scholar [Father] Raymond Brown writes in reference to this passage, 'No clearer implication of divinity is found in the gospel tradition" (p. 143). Now what sort of sane, moral "fella" goes around saying He's God - if He's not. Either, He's telling the truth, He's lying, or He's nuts. McDowell insists that logic does not give us a fourth option. Perhaps, the easiest way to discredit Jesus would have been to come up with His body, disproving His disciples reports of the resurrection - no one ever did so! And not for lack of trying!

The Case For and Against Christianity: As per McDowell, "it is important to understand a common misconception and faulty mind-set held by most antagonists of the Bible: the presupposition of anti-supernaturalism" (p. 349). "The anti-supernaturalist bases his thinking on the presupposition that God has not intervened in history. Therefore he rejects evidence indicating the supernatural no matter how convincing" (p. 368).

Click to see this review on Amazon.com.




The Heavenly Banquet


Before reading "The Lamb's Supper," I had not been a Scott Hahn fan. However, Dr. Hahn's book provides an incredible key to a deeper appreciation of the Mass and the Book of Revelation:



  • "Of all things Catholic, there is nothing so familiar as the Mass....Yet most Catholics will go a lifetime without seeing beyond the surface of memorized prayers. Few will glimpse the powerful supernatural drama they enter into every Sunday. Pope John Paul II has called the Mass `heaven on earth,' explaining that `the liturgy we celebrate on earth is a mysterious participation in the heavenly liturgy'" (p. 3).

  • "For most of the early Christians it was a given: the Book of Revelation was incomprehensible apart from the liturgy....As Jewish Christians, we would immediately recognize the Temple in Revelation's description of heaven....Revelation revealed the Temple - but to devout Jews and jewish converts to Christianity, it also revealed much more. For the temple and its trappings pointed to higher realities" (pp. 66 - 69).

This is a fabulous, little book!



Click to see this review on Amazon.com.

Tired and Tiring Promotion of Contraception


In spite of its title, this book - ultimately - has far more to say about the agenda of Father William Bausch, than it does about "the Scandal of Sexual Abuse." Offensively, Father Bausch even seems to take a certain pleasure in the scandal in which the Church finds herself....

"The strict hierarchy with priest over laity, bishop over priest, and pope over bishop is melting. This, perhaps, will be the ultimate casulaty of the scandal - and it's long overdue....As for Rome, she has let them [i.e., the laity] down too many times, especially on the birth control issue....they [i.e., the U.S. bishops] bowed to Rome's pressue not to discuss in any sympathetic way contraception, celibacy, or the ordination of women" (pp. 75 - 85).

Just looking at contraception, it's absolutely disheartening to find a priest so unappreciative of Paul VI's courageous stance - nearly 4 decades after the pope's "Humanae Vitae." A quick re-read of that document - particularly its warnings of family breakdown and coercive contraceptive policies adopted by governments - show Pope Paul VI to have been truly prophetic.

Father Bausch would do well to reacquaint himself with authentic Catholic teaching. In particular, I would suggest that he start with the Catechism of the Catholic Church and Pope John Paul II's Theology of the Body.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

"No Radical Theological Reversal in Pope's Words" (BC Courier Times, 8/20/07)

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(What follows is the original, unedited submission....)






Two recent statements from the Vatican have received a flurry of published commentary, including your own July 13th editorial. You state that, “Only days ago Benedict XVI revived the old Latin Mass. Now he has made an even bigger splash by reaffirming the primacy of the Catholic Church and declaring that Catholicism provides the only true path to salvation.” As the Holy Father has bemoaned to his brother bishops, “News reports and judgments made without sufficient information have created no little confusion” <www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/b16SummorumPontificum2.htm>.

I assume that the Courier Times is referring to Pope Benedict XVI’s July 7th apostolic letter <
www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/b16SummorumPontificum.htm> and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’s July 10th "Responses to some Questions Regarding Certain Aspects of the Doctrine on the Church" <www.ewtn.com/vnews/getstory.asp?number=80675>. As you were unable to correctly identify the authorship of the latter, I suspect that you have not actually read either statement.

Simply put, Pope Benedict XI’s apostolic letter, “Summorum Pontificum” <
www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/b16SummorumPontificum.htm>, allows for a much wider use of the Latin Mass. However, the overwhelming number of Masses will continue to be celebrated in the vernacular languages. As we supposedly live in a more open and enlightened era, why would anyone possibly have a problem with this? Well, Benedict XVI identifies two, sometimes-unspoken, fears:
· “In the first place, there is the fear that the document detracts from the authority of the Second Vatican Council, one of whose essential decisions – the liturgical reform – is being called into question….
· “In the second place, …that the possibility of a wider use of the 1962 Missal would lead to disarray or even divisions within parish communities.”
The Holy Father sees both of these fears as unfounded. Be that said, he invites his brother bishops “to send to the Holy See an account of your experiences, three years [down the road]….If truly serious difficulties come to light, ways to remedy them can be sought” <
www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/b16SummorumPontificum2.htm>.

On July 10th, the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued "Responses to some Questions Regarding Certain Aspects of the Doctrine on the Church" which clarifies the “authentic meaning of some ecclesiological expressions used by the Magisterium which are open to misunderstanding in the theological debate.” There is absolutely no radical theological reversal contained in this statement. Nothing deviates from the Catechism of the Catholic Church <
www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_INDEX.HTM> or the Compendium of the Catechism <www.vatican.va/archive/compendium_ccc/documents/archive_2005_compendium-ccc_en.html>. As an English language translation is available online (See <www.ewtn.com/vnews/getstory.asp?number=80675>), truly interested readers need not rely upon ill-informed commentary.

Your editorial takes an ad hominem swipe at the Holy Father, accusing him of “blackballing a whole lot of human beings.” Shame on you. You also accuse him of trying to sabotage Vatican II: “In what is partly an effort to reconnect with the church's traditional, conservative roots, he seems to have taken the opportunity given to any leader of the world's 66 million or so Roman Catholics to point the church in a particular direction. Backwards.” As this Holy Father is speculated to have been – as a young theologian - a ghostwriter for one of the council’s most important documents (i.e., Lumen Gentium - the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church), your statement is particularly off base. I enthusiastically encourage you to actually read the 16 documents of Vatican II <
www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/index.htm> and to refrain from ignorant commentary.


Pro-Life Rally in Dublin, 7/7/07

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

NFP Awareness Week 2007

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The Beatitudes from "Jesus of Nazareth"

 

Use of Emergency So-Called Contraceptives in Catholic Hospitals for Those Reporting Rape

Book & Film Reviews, pt 1

Book & Film Reviews, pt 2


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