The whisper of God drowned out by Clare’s never-ending inner “to do” list…

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 26th, 2007

posted by Clare

“Let us be silent, that we may hear the whisper of God.” (Ralph Waldo Emerson)

Or, in my case, the constant background chatter of my own mind. External silence is not really that hard to achieve: turn everything off, go somewhere quiet, wait until everyone else in the house is asleep…It’s interior silence that’s difficult. It would be amusing and probably a little unnerving to transcribe my thoughts as they wander while I’m trying to pray, while I’m trying to “follow the silence”, as my spiritual director tells me. It always amazes me how many forgotten tasks and great ideas come to me when I’m trying to pray in silence–the tyranny of the urgent always dragging one’s attention away from the “one thing needful”.

More on this topic:

The Holy Way and By Way of Grace by Paula Huston
John Main and the World Community for Christian Meditation. An interesting discussion on this topic, which one of the participants calls a “Superbowl of Silence“.
Thomas Keating and Centering Prayer.

Anybody have any experience with these authors or additional knowledge of them? Other recommended books or resources? Comments welcome.

Avoid the slack-jawed blank stare…

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 23rd, 2007

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by Clare Siobhan

…ANSWERS TO COMMON QUESTIONS ABOUT CATHOLIC TEACHINGS

You’re grabbing your books from your locker. You’re eating lunch in the company break room. You’re dancing the polka at the wedding reception of a second cousin. And someone comes up to you – a classmate, co-worker, distant relation – and asks you one of two questions: “Are you saved?” or “Have you accepted Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Savior?”

The usual Catholic response to this opening salvo is a slack-jawed blank stare, because we’re just not used to talking that way. What your Protestant friend is really asking you is “Are you serious about the practice of your faith as the living out of a personal commitment to Our Lord Jesus Christ?” Hopefully all baptized, confirmed Catholics can all answer “yes!” to that.

But then the tough questions are likely to begin, and if we’re not prepared, we could find ourselves spinning in circles under a barrage of questions, objections, and Biblical citations. One of the most common Protestant objections to the Catholic faith is:

“Why do Catholics teach things that are not in the Bible?”

The basis of this question is a Protestant doctrine called sola scriptura, which means “scripture alone” and refers to the Protestant belief that the Old and New Testaments of the Bible form the entire and complete revelation of God and contain the sum of all authoritative teaching for Christendom.

Ironically, this foundational teaching is itself not found anywhere in the Bible, but the Protestant arguing this point will usually point to 2 Timothy 3:16-17 – “All scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”

Notice that the text says “all scripture”, not “only scripture”, and also keep in mind that when St. Paul wrote his second letter to St. Timothy, most of the documents contained in the New Testament scriptures had not even been written, so if Protestants really want to use this text as support for sola scriptura, they must limit its application to the Old Testament scriptures only.

But they have a point. Some Catholic doctrines are not directly Biblical. Some are only loosely Biblical and some are not found in the Bible at all. The reason for this is that God has spoken to the world in written form – the Sacred Scriptures – and in unwritten form – the oral and lived practices and teachings of the Church that we call Sacred Tradition. Together, Scripture and Tradition form the two pillars of God’s revelation to mankind. When used in this way, the word Tradition is capitalized, in order to distinguish it from traditions that are truly man-made and not necessarily inspired by God, such as the tradition of having a Christmas tree. Catholics consider Sacred Tradition just as authoritative and without error as Sacred Scripture.

Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition are interpreted for us and passed on to us by the Church’s teaching authority, which comes from Jesus Himself. The term for the authoritative teaching of the Church is Magisterium, from the Latin word for teacher.

Examples of teachings that come to us through Sacred Tradition are:

The contents of the Bible itself
Nowhere in the pages of the Bible is there a list of which texts should be in the Bible. The Bible’s table of contents is an authoritative Tradition of the Catholic Church that Protestants adhere to without even realizing it.

The perpetual virginity of our Blessed Mother
Early Church fathers affirm this teaching repeatedly in their writings, but, even though the virgin birth is explicitly Biblical, the continued virginity of Mary is not found in the Bible.

The practice of infant baptism
Even though some Protestants object to the practice, historical records from the earliest days of the church prove that it was widespread from the beginning because it had been handed on directly from the Apostles themselves.

Observing the Sabbath on Sunday instead of Saturday
It is not from the Bible that Christians derive this practice, but from the lived experience of the earliest Christians, who transferred observance of the Sabbath to Sunday in order to better commemorate the Lord’s resurrection, and also to show that their observance was distinct from the Jewish observance.

The Catholic who wants to prepare himself for these kinds of conversations with Protestants has a wealth of resources at his disposal. Just for starters, try these:

BOOKS
The Catechism of the Catholic Church
Where Is That in the Bible?, Why Is That in Tradition? and Answer Me This! by Patrick Madrid (Our Sunday Visitor)
Catholics and Fundamentalists: Understanding the Difference by Rev. Martin Pable (ACTA Publications)
Catholic and Christian: An Explanation of Commonly Misunderstood Catholic Beliefs by Alan Schreck (St. Anthony Messenger Press)
By What Authority? An Evangelical Discovers Catholic Tradition by Mark P. Shea

OTHER PRINTED MEDIA
Friendly Defenders Flashcards. Designed to help young people explain and defend the Catholic faith. Each card has a common question or objection and the Catholic response. Covers a dozen topics such as Church, Tradition, Saints, Eucharist/Mass, and Papacy.

Beginning Apologetics, volumes 1-9 by Jim Burnham and Fr. Frank Chacon. (Catholic Answers) Apologetics refers to the study of understandable explanations of Catholic belief and practice (from the Greek word apologia, which means “explanation”.) These are short workbooks designed to quickly prepare a Catholic for challenges from any other religion (including Mormonism and Jehovah’s Witnesses), worldview (including atheism) or ideology (including abortion advocacy and human cloning).

The Catholic Answer, a bi-monthly magazine published by Our Sunday Visitor

AUDIO
Catholic Answers Live. A call-in “Question and Answer” format radio broadcast. Many of the guests are well-known converts from Protestantism, such as former Lutheran minister Jeff Cavins, former Presbyterian minister Scott Hahn, former Pentecostal preacher Alex Jones, former Assemblies of God youth minister Tim Staples, and many others.

I’m Not Being Fed – The #1 Catholic Eating Disorder by Jeff Cavins (Ascension Press) Focuses on clear Biblical evidence for the Real Presence of Christ in the Holy Eucharist.

(This article originally appeared in the Family Centered Faith Formation News, volume 3, issue 5, January 2006, produced by the Holy Trinity Office of Religious Education, Westmont IL)

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Slogging through scores of Harry Potter pages…so you don’t have to!

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 16th, 2007

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The 5th movie — Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix–comes out July 13, 2007.
The 7th and final book — Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows–comes out July 21, 2007 – a 12 million copy 1st printing.

Still not sure whether to let your kids read Potter? Try the links below, although I can’t guarantee they’ll make your decision any easier. Plenty of Catholic opinionists believe HP is fine as is, some say fine with reservations, some say it’s a definite no-no. Some of the links appear in more than one list, and I definitely have NOT read all the articles listed–there are so many, it would be impossible. Comments on the suitability/helpfulness of links welcome.

Clare’s Exhausting-But-Probably-Not-Exhaustive List of Harry Potter Links:

New Links: (added on 12/21/07) This just never ends, does it? :)

12-21-07 “In Defense of Dumbledore” by Regina Doman
http://www.catholicexchange.com/node/68303

8/19-25/07 “Stuck in the Middle With Harry” by Carl E. Olson
http://ncregister.com/site/article/3443

New Links: (added on 12/10/07)

http://www.catholicexchange.com/node/63740
C.S. Lewis, Spiritual Warfare, and Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by Marc T. Newman, Ph.D. 7/13/07

http://www.catholicexchange.com/node/64814
Final Harry Potter Wars? By Terry Mattingly 8/23/07

http://www.catholicexchange.com/node/67042
Harry Potter: No Innocent Fun by Fr. Thomas Euteneuer 11/6/07

http://www.catholicexchange.com/node/66886
The “Outing” of Dumbledore: A Catholic Response by Bill Donaghy 10/28/07

Dumbledore:
http://eldritchhobbit.livejournal.com/175955.html
http://the-leaky-cauldron.org/2007/10/20/j-k-rowling-at-carn egie-hall-reveals-dumbledore-is-gay-neville-marries-hannah-a bbott-and-scores-more
http://www.scificatholic.com/

The Original Huge Stack o’ Links:

General information about Harry Potter:
Answers.com article
Wikipedia article
Warner Brothers (official movie site)
The Harry Potter Lexicon

General information on JK Rowling:
JK Rowling Teacher Resource file: a big page of links, including essays on Harry Potter from secular sources
JK Rowling’s website
Answers.com article
Wikipedia entry

Interviews with JK Rowling:
Scholastic
KidsReads
Stories from the Web

Audio:
The Secrets of Harry Potter (podcasts by Fr. Roderick Vonhogen)
There’s Something About Harry: A Catholic Analysis of the Harry Potter Phenomenon (audio cassette featuring authors Patrick Madrid, Michael O’Brien, and Toni Collins)
The Trouble with Harry (audio cassette by Matthew Arnold)

Steven Greydanus, author of Decent Films Guide:
Harry Potter vs. Gandalf: An in-depth analysis of the literary use of magic in the works of J.K. Rowling, J.R.R. Tolkien, and C.S. Lewis
Faith and Fantasy: Tolkien the Catholic, The Lord of the Rings, and Peter Jackson’s Film Trilogy

The Onion parodies the Harry Potter phenomenon:
Harry Potter Books Spark Rise in Satanism Among Children”, originally published by The Onion and debunked at these sites: Snopes, Religious Tolerance, Break the Chain, and Truth or Fiction.

The Snopes article, updated 3/21/07, is particularly good, and closes with this quote: “If The Onion’s parody has demonstrated anything, it’s that we should be worrying about adults not being able to distinguish between fiction and reality. The kids themselves seem to have a pretty good grasp of it.”

(Note: if the Onion article were an actual news piece, it would be really bad: do not allow children to read it because it’s quite vulgar. — Clare)

Christian author and Harry Potter fan describes her persecution at the hands of Christian readers who took The Onion article seriously:
The Potter Parody That Got Out of Hand by Anne Morse

Other Onion Harry Potter parodies:
J.K. Rowling Ends Harry Potter Series After Discovering Boys
Infographic: New Harry Potter Film (11/16/05)
Children, Creepy Middle-Aged Weirdos Swept Up In Harry Potter Craze (12/5/01)
New Harry Potter Films Turns Children On To Magic of Not Reading (11/28/01)
Infographic: Wild About Harry (10/6/99)
Infographic: Pottermania Yet Again (7/2/03)

(Note: the Onion is sometimes very funny, but often not recognized for what it is: clever parodies and satire. The Harry Potter stuff is not the only material from the Onion that’s been mistakenly passed around the rumor mill as true. Also, the Onion is generally not suitable for children. — Clare)

Blog Threads:

Blog title: Pontifications
Author: the former Fr. Alvin F. Kimel, Jr. (formerly an Episcopal priest, now a Catholic priest)
The Gospel and Harry Potter (reprint of an original sermon by the author 6/29/03)
Can Catholics read Harry Potter and not to to Hell? (original post: 7/14/05)

Blog title: Open Book
Author: Amy Welborn
Pope Condemns Harry Potter!!!!!!!!!!! (original post 7/14/05)
HP=RC (original post 5/18/04)
Speaking of Harry (original post 7/14/05)

Blog title: Flying Stars
Author: Nancy (Carpenter) Brown
Harry Potter and the Catholic Family
Nancy Brown’s response to a Mercatornet article on Harry Potter

Blog title: JimmyAkin.org
Author: Jimmy Akin
LifeSiteNews Calls Kettle Black (original post 7/14/05)
Pre-16 On Harry Potter (original post 7/14/05)

Blog title: maureenwittmann.blogspot
Author: Maureen Wittman
The Pros and Cons of Harry (original post 2/27/06 — scroll down a bit)

Blog title: Catholic and Enjoying It!
Author: Mark Shea
various posts on Harry Potter

Michael O’Brien:
(Harry Potter and the Paganization of Children’s Culture, originally published Oct. 10 2001 in Catholic World Report)
Pope Benedict and Harry Potter (7/1/05)
Some Thoughts on the Harry Potter Series by Michael O’Brien (article originally appeared in the National Catholic Register, Oct. 22, 2000, now archived on the Catholic Education Resource Center) Note: He mentions at the end of the article that Ignatius Press has an entire section devoted to what well-known Catholic authors think of the Potter series, but I was not able to find such a section online.

Various Christian commentary on Harry Potter:
Character, Choice, and Harry Potter by Catherine Jack Deavel (Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture, vol. 5, no. 4, Fall 2002)
The Harry Potter Books: charming stories or a demonic plot?
Transcript of the Vatican Radio program 105Live, Thursday, July 14, 2005. Features Msgr. Peter Fleetwood’s interesting comments on the Harry Potter stories and the fact that it’s easier to understand and appreciate Harry Potter if one is English. (Note: last time I checked this link, it was broken. I’m hoping the transcript hasn’t been permanently removed from the Catholic Insider site, so I’m leaving the link here. — Clare)
No Catholic Consensus by Tim Ryland
Vatican official has kind word for Harry Potter’s magical world by John L. Allen Jr., National Catholic Reporter, February 21, 2003
Hogwarts Professor a blog by John Granger: “Thoughts for the Serious Reader of Harry Potter”. (Author of the books The Hidden Key to Harry Potter and Unlocking Harry Potter: Five Keys for the Serious Reader (both 2007, Zossima Press) and editor of Who Killed Albus Dumbledore? (an anthology of essays by various authors, 2006 Zossima Press). “Rita Skeeter Covers the Vatican” follows the papal flap over HP.
Matters of Opinion: The Perils of Harry Potter by Jacqui Komschlies (Christianity Today, October 23, 2000)
Harry Potter is Dangerous for Both You and Your Children, adapted from a sermon by Fr. Casimir Puskorius, CMRI, December 16,2001
Death stalks the halls of Hogwarts by Joe Woodard (4/13/07 on Mercatornet)
Nancy Brown’s response to the Mercatornet article
LifeSiteNews:
The Problem of Harry Potter

Cardinal Ratzinger/Pope Benedict XVI:
Pope Benedict and Harry Potter 7/1/05 archived on Michael O’Brien’s site
The Cardinal Ratzinger Fan Club and The Pope Benedict XVI Fan Club)
Catholic World News and LifeSiteNews)
Pope Opposes Harry Potter Novels – Signed Letters from Cardinal Ratzinger Now Online (July 13, 2005 LifeSiteNews.com)
Scanned copies of the two signed letters by Cardinal Ratzinger (in German):
1st letter, 2nd letter.
Benedict XVI Opposes Harry Potter
(article title: “Pope Opposes Harry Potter Novels—Signed Letters from Cardinal Ratzinger Now Online”, 7/13/05, LifeSiteNews.com)

Articles archived on Catholic Culture:
First Things, January 2000)
St. Joseph Covenant Keepers)
The Trouble With Harry by John Andrew Murray (2000 St. Joseph Covenant Keepers Newsletter, published by Family Life Center International, Inc., St. Joseph Covenant Keepers)
Catholic World News, 2000 or Catholic World Report, April 2001)
Envoy Communications, Inc.)
Homiletic & Pastoral Review, June 2001)
Harry Potter at the Vatican by Dr. Jeff Mirus, 7/22/05 on Catholic Culture. Scroll down to read the article.
Has the Pope Condemned Harry Potter? By Dr. Jeff Mirus (Catholic Culture 7/16/05)

Archived at the website of St. Joseph’s Covenant Keepers:
And They Lived Happily Ever After by Vivian W. Dudro
Citations from Scripture and the Catechism on divination, magic, and sorcery
Harry Potter Gets Vatican Blessing? (article by “S.W.”, whom I assume is Steve Woods, containing a summary of his correspondence with Msgr. Fleetwood)
Harry Potter: Agent of Conversion by Toni Collins, Envoy Magazine
Harry Potter: An Entry Point into the World of the Occult/New Age Movement by Steve Wood
Phenomenon of Satanism in Contemporary Society by Giuseppe Ferrari with comments from Steve Wood
Restoring the Sense of Wonder. Interview with Michael O’Brien
Rome’s Chief Exorcist Warns Parents Against Harry Potter (originally appeared on LifeSiteNews.com)
Some Thoughts on the Harry Potter Series by Michael O’Brien
The Perils of Harry Potter by Jacqui Komschlies
The Trouble with Harry by John Andrew Murray, Dean of Students at Whitefield Academy in Atlanta, GA
What Parents Are Saying About Harry Potter

Articles archived at Catholic Educator’s Resource Center (CERC. Also goes by Catholic Education Resource Center):
Not Quite Narnia: The Harry Potter Books in Review by Jason Boffetti (Crisis, vol 17, no. 11 Dec. 1999)
Is Harry Potter Good for Our Kids? By Vivian W. Dudro (St. Joseph’s Covenant Keepers vol 6, no. 12 July/August 2000)
Some Thoughts on the Harry Potter Series by Michael O’Brien (National Catholic Register, October 22, 2000)
Harry Potter and the Paganization of Children’s Culture by Michael O’Brien (Catholic World Report, April 2001)
Tolkien and Rowling: Common Ground? By Michael O’Brien and Sandra Miesel (a letter to the editor by Sandra Miesel with a response by Michael O’Brien, Catholic World Report, July 2001)
When Harry Potter Goes Awry (Zenit interview with Michael O’Brien, 2001)
Some Thoughts on the Harry Potter Series by Michael O’Brien (article originally appeared in the National Catholic Register, Oct. 22, 2000, now archived on the Catholic Education Resource Center, www.catholiceducation.org) Note: He mentions at the end of the article that www.ignatius.com has an entire section devoted to what well-known Catholic authors think of the Potter series, but I was not able to find such a section online.

Google Directory Opposing Views (a page of links)

Beliefnet articles:
The Rapture of Harry (comparison between the Harry Potter series and the Left Behind series)
Harry Potter, Christ Figure?
The True Christian Myth Behind Harry Potter by Peter Bouteneff
Harry Potter and the Prophet of Doom by James K.A. Smith
Harry Potter and Sorcerer’s Failings by Mark Shea
Spinning Yarns That Deceive by Charles Colson
Pastoral Counsel for Heartsick Muggles by Paul Raushenbush
A Harry Potter Villain Beat His ‘Dark Mark.’ So Can We by Connie Neal
He’s a charmer, that Harry Potter by Deepti Hajela
Please Let Harry Potter Die by Terry Mattingly
The Potter Parody That Got Out of Hand by Anne Morse
Life Lessons From Harry Potter by Laura Sheahen
It May Not Be Hogwarts…(real-life pagan schools)
“Board” with Potter: What do Pagans and other Beliefnet members think about Potter? By Paul O’Donnell
“I Won’t Take My Kids to See ‘Harry Potter’” by Wendy Schuman. An interview with Christian author Bill Myers
What Do Harry Potter and Our Lady of Fatima Have in Common? By Andrew Greeley
They’re Not So Wild About Harry by Richard Mouw
A Hollywood Witchcraft Primer by Ellen Leventry
Wild About Harry by Jean G. Fitzpatrick

Fr. Gabriele Amorth, the Vatican’s chief exorcist:
Vatican’s Chief Exorcist Repeats Condemnation of Harry Potter Novels
LifeSiteNews.com Rome March 2, 2006
Rome’s Chief Exorcist Warns Parents Against Harry Potter (LifeSiteNews.com January 2, 2002 — scroll down a bit to see the article)

Everyone’s great battle

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 16th, 2007

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“Be gentle with each person you meet, for each of them is fighting a great battle.”

(St. Ephrem the Syrian)

P.S. Anyone know what the above quote is from? I came across the quote while browsing the blogosphere–it was on the “masthead” of someone’s blog, but I can’t remember whose. I collected the quote and moved on, but now I can’t remember where I saw it…

TV episode review: Star Trek – The Original Series “Mirror, Mirror”

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 10th, 2007

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by Clare Siobhan

The “evil Spock with a goatee” episode

Summary:
A transporter malfunction causes the Enterprise landing party to switch places with their counterparts in an evil alternate universe.

In 1968, “Mirror, Mirror” received a Hugo Award nomination for “Best Dramatic Presentation,” and in a Special Edition issue of Entertainment Weekly (Jan. 18, 1985) this episode appeared 3rd in a list of the 10 Best Episodes of Star Trek. You can see the actors really sinking their teeth into these crazy roles as they play evil versions of their characters, and it’s just as enjoyable for the audience. But the real stars of this episode are the Halkans. (Who?)

Story synopsis:
An Enterprise landing party comprised of Kirk, McCoy, Scott, and Uhura beam down to Halka and confer with the planet’s council, attempting to acquire the rights to mine dilithium crystals there. Dilithium is the power source of all the starships in the Star Trek universe.

The episode opens as these negotiations draw to a close: the Halkans refuse to allow the Federation to mine dilithium on their planet. The leader of the Halkan council tells Kirk “our dilithium crystals represent awesome power. Wrongful use of that power, even to the extent of the taking of one life, would violate our history of total peace. To prevent that, we would die, Captain, as a race, if necessary.”

Lightning flashes as Kirk signals the Enterprise to beam up the landing party. Spock warns Kirk that the ship is being assailed by a powerful magnetic storm. As the landing party beams up, they partially materialize in the transporter room, then fade. When they finally do materialize, the landing party find themselves in a world starkly different from their own: uniforms are immodest and militaristic, discipline aboard the ship is brutal, officers routinely move up in rank by assassination, and the Captain keeps a concubine in his cabin.

They quickly realize what has happened, adapt their demeanors to that of their Evil Shipmates, and set about devising a way to return home. Meanwhile, Evil Chekov attempts to assassinate Kirk, Evil Sulu sexually harasses Uhura, and Evil Spock soon catches on to the fact that Scott and McCoy are making unauthorized adjustments to the ship as part of their plan for beaming back.

After much thoroughly entertaining mayhem, the landing party successfully makes the switch with their evil counterparts and everyone is back where he or she belongs.

Story analysis:
Just before the landing party beams up from the planet Halka, the leader of the Halkan council reminds Kirk that the Federation could, if it wished, take the dilithium crystals from Halka by force, since the Halkans are bound by their own ethics to offer no resistance.

“But we won’t,” Kirk counters. “Consider that.”

The Evil Empire is completely different. Once it becomes clear that the Halkans will not permit the Empire to mine dilithium, Evil Spock orders a complete phaser barrage of the Halkans cities, which is standard procedure in cases like this.

“Regrettable that this society has chosen suicide,” Evil Spock observes.

Kirk can’t stomach this, naturally, so he cancels the attack and speaks to the Halkan council leader one more time, but the Halkans stick to their position:

“We are ethically compelled to deny your demand for dilithium crystals, for you would use their power to destroy.”

“We will level your planet and take what we want,” Kirk replies. “That is destruction. You will die as a race.”

“To preserve what we are,” says the leader of the Halkan council, nodding assent.

Even in the evil mirror universe, the Halkans are total pacifists who are so committed to their ideal that they are willing to die for it. This is why I said that the real heroes of this episode are the Halkans.

In 1984, John Michael Talbot, founder of The Brothers and Sisters of Charity, wrote a book called The Fire of God. In Chapter 6, “The Fire of Nuclear Holocaust” he wrote:

To really “win” a nuclear war, governments say they need first strike capabilities. This means not allowing one enemy warhead to detonate within your national boundaries…More than likely, first strike success would not be complete. Not only would we destroy millions within enemy boundaries, but millions of our own would also die. It would be mass devastation. This kind of mass destruction cannot be deemed moral by any definition. To win you must be ready to strike first. If you do this you must be the aggressor. This cannot be deemed moral by any Christian definition of a “just war.”

Would it not actually be better to disarm unilaterally? Simply to refuse to use nuclear weapons at all is surely the only moral way in the face of such a holocaust. If we play bluff at the bargaining table in the arms race we must be willing to use those arms. Otherwise our bluff is itself a lie and a self-deceit. If we use the arms at all we become immoral as a nation. The only moral option is to disarm bilaterally, or if we must, unilaterally. Of course bilateral disarmament is the first and more appealing option.

This does not mean we would refuse resistance to a Communist takeover. If the United States unilaterally disarmed, the people of the United States would have to make it emphatically clear to any Communist nation that we would nonviolently resist on every domestic level. Faced with such nonviolent non-cooperation, no foreign power could overcome us without killing us all. Then the question would arise: Would we rather use our nuclear weapons and take the world with us, or would we sacrifice our own lives in the name of human life and peace? I could only pray we would take the moral rather than the immoral option.

Talbot wrote this book in the mid-1980s, before the fall of the Communist superpowers, but these words are applicable now, even though Communist nations are not the only ones we’re currently worried about. There is no doubt that if the United States were to unilaterally disarm, there are a number of nations that would happily nuke us to kingdom come.

Bilateral disarmament is the better option because it is the least likely to result in a one-sided nuclear massacre, since both opposing sides will have agreed that they are unwilling to use their nuclear capabilities.

Unilateral disarmament is a risky option because the side that refuses to disarm retains the potential to destroy the side that does disarm, either by a nuclear strike or by a conventional invasion. The nuclear-capable side would be able to exert a lot of power over other nations.

However, unilateral disarmament provides the greater opportunity to imitate Christ. In the scenario John Michael Talbot describes, the disarmed nation, like the Halkans in “Mirror, Mirror,” commits to a policy of non-violent resistance and non-cooperation in the case of an invasion by the nuclear aggressor. The aggressor would be forced to kill all the non-violent citizens of the opposing country. The citizens of the disarmed country would have to be willing to die—“to preserve what we are”–rather than enter into a war.

The fictional Halkans had a global population united in an ethic of total pacifism. For the United States or any other real-life sovereign power to come to a similar accord–unilateral disarmament which risks either destruction by nuclear bombs or a violent conventional takeover and the execution of all its citizens–would require a level of Christian conversion not seen since antiquity. (The European nations of the Middle Ages, for example.) The likelihood of this happening is slim, obviously.

But what would happen if just one segment of a certain demographic group did something totally radical?

In his blog, Light on Dark Water, Maclin Horton published a piece called “A Fit Instrument?” (click on the link and scroll down a bit to read the original post) which explores matters of war & peace, the modern application of the Catholic criteria for just war, and the right of sovereign nations to defend themselves:

…no state will pay much attention to a teaching that says it cannot defend itself. Not only would it require national suicide for the state, and quite possibly the surrender of its own non-combatants to murder and other brutalities, but it would implicitly cede governance of the world to the most ruthlessly violent.

This exactly describes the fictional scenario of “Mirror, Mirror,” in which a sovereign state did pay attention to an ethic forbidding them the use of violence, even in self-defense and even though it resulted in their extermination.

Horton continues:

What, then, can the Church—what can Christians—do..?

Here’s a thought—a discomfiting, in fact dreadful thought—and only a thought, which I haven’t considered at length or at all thoroughly, so don’t expect me to be able to defend it. Perhaps in the end literal self-sacrifice might be required of some. To issue from a position of security a moral precept, however compelling and authoritative, that might require martyrdom of the recipient inevitably smacks of “binding heavy burdens and laying them on other men’s shoulders.” The example of Our Lord points the way: he never asked of his disciples any suffering which he himself was not willing to undergo.

Imagine the heavenly counterpart of the hellish suicide bomber. Imagine a cadre of witnesses ready to accept martyrdom by entering war zones (or potential war zones), having no physical power to protect the innocent but standing alongside them and saying “If you kill them, you must kill me, too.” Harmless as doves, some of them would die, and the spiritual effect of such sacrifice would surely be great. But, wise as serpents, they would serve, in a world where vivid images and stories have an immeasurable impact on the way people think and behave, as a means of inducing revulsion for slaughter. In the recent (and not really concluded) war between Israel and Hezbollah, for instance, could such a witness have made a difference?

I think there have been attempts to do this kind of thing, but from what I’ve read they didn’t seem entirely serious—more like media events than a firm intention to interpose oneself. To be effective, such nonviolent tactics would have to be very serious indeed. And a plea, in the name of God and humanity, for the two parties to find some other way of settling a dispute must be addressed to both parties. The great weakness of Western peace movements is that they apply their efforts almost exclusively to their own side, which is generally the one where just war principles are already at least somewhat respected and which is very unlikely to punish them in any serious way. And so their gestures often seem just that: at worst just a self-affirmation of the protestor’s moral superiority, at best a rebuke to only one of two warring parties, and not likely to be very effective. A one-sided protest may even encourage an aggressor.

But a peace movement whose members were willing to put their own lives on the line, as ordinary soldiers do every day (which is probably one reason why most people have more respect for soldiers than for war protesters), could not fail to win the respect of all.

Imagine.

Christian values depicted:
The Halkans refuse to offer even remote cooperation with violence and death-dealing, even though in the evil universe they know they themselves will die for it.

During a confrontation-turned-brawl in sickbay, the landing party critically injures Evil Spock. McCoy insists on providing life-saving medical care to him, even though doing so jeopardizes his chances of returning to where he belongs.

When it looks like one of the landing party will have to stay behind to operate the transporter controls for the others, Scotty volunteers to stay behind. Kirk makes it clear that he won’t allow it: he orders Scotty and Uhura onto the transporter platform, fully intending to be the one to stay behind.

Christian values denigrated: (by the bad guys!)
In the Evil Universe, immodesty and unchastity were blatant.

The “Captain’s woman” (Lt. Marlena Moreau) shows Kirk a device in his cabin that has allowed his evil counterpart to monitor and, when necessary, “disappear” his enemies. She uses the device to foil yet another attempt on Kirk’s life, this time by Sulu and some of his henchmen. Marlena uses the device to dispassionately kill Sulu’s three henchmen.

The Empire’s barrage of the Halkan cities is an immoral act of mass murder: “Any act of war aimed indiscriminately at the destruction of entire cities or extensive areas along with their population is a crime against God and man himself. It merits unequivocal and unhesitating condemnation.” (The Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World: Vatican II, Gaudium et spes, section 80)

Related links:
Catholic Peace Fellowship
Peace Takes Courage — A 16 year-old home-schooled student in Alabama puts this site together. The animations WWJD? and California Dreaming? are especially moving.
Horrific images of war and violence are not limited to the Middle East: go to these 9/11 photo galleries: New York Magazine’s “Day of Terror” and Time Magazine’s “Shattered.”

Other episodes of Star Trek with war and peace as their themes include Day of the Dove, Balance of Terror, Arena, A Taste of Armageddon, The Doomsday Machine, and A Private Little War.

Favorite quotes
McCoy: “I’m a doctor, not an engineer.”

Original airdate: October 6, 1967
(The Original Series, 2nd season)
39th episode produced
33rd episode aired
Written by Jerome Bixby
Directed by Marc Daniels

Orlando Bloom Explains It All For You–A Hollywood History Lesson on the Crusades

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 9th, 2007

by Clare Siobhan

“Men went to the Holy Land just to kill,” says Orlando Bloom, the star of Kingdom of Heaven, a 2005 summer movie about the Crusades.

Orlando is only an actor, so perhaps we can forgive him for this blatantly inaccurate statement. But the fact is, what most people think they know about the Crusades of the Middle Ages is also not quite right:

The Crusades were nothing but a European grab for wealth and land in the Middle East, all under the guise of religion and backed by the Church.

Not exactly. At the time of Christ, all the cities and regions of the Holy Land—including Jerusalem—were in the hands of the Romans. The early Church endured much hardship and persecution at the hands of the Romans, but eventually Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, which included the Middle East. The Holy Land had come under legitimate Christian control.

Then the Holy Land and its cities came under attack by the armies of a rapidly growing local religion called Islam, and by 638 Jerusalem was under Muslim control. At the time, this was not a huge problem, as the Muslims allowed Christians in the area to practice their faith and Christians from Europe to come unhindered on pilgrimages to the holy places.

But about 400 years later, a violent faction of Muslims called Seljuk Turks took over Jerusalem and other areas of the Holy Land and made it dangerous for the Eastern Christians to live their faith and for the European Christians to visit. The Eastern Christians sent an urgent plea for help to their brothers in Europe. The Crusades were the European response to this plea.

Some of the knights who went to the Holy Land certainly must have had visions of the Taj Majal** dancing in their heads, but most of the Crusaders had truly noble intentions motivated by authentic religious devotion: to wrest the Christian holy places from the hands of the Muslims and provide a safe environment for Christians living in the holy land and for Christians visiting from Europe. The Crusaders considered their journey to the Holy Land a religious pilgrimage and they regarded the sufferings they endured as penance for their sins. The Popes of the Crusades even granted indulgences to those who “took the Cross”, as going on Crusade was called. (The word “crusade” comes from crux, the Latin word for cross. Texts of papal pronouncements regarding indulgences for Crusades are here and here.)

The Crusades were an attempt to force peaceful Muslims, at sword point, to convert to the Catholic faith.

This statement, also, is a misconception. The Muslims of the 11th century—the Seljuk Turks – were not peaceful. They were militarily aggressive and expansionist to the point of even threatening Europe. Many people are shocked when they learn that in the Middle Ages Muslim armies invaded and took over a large portion of Spain. In Kingdom of Heaven, one of the shooting locations is a Spanish castle built in the 1200s as a frontier fortification between Muslim-controlled Spain and Catholic Spain. Conversion of the Muslims to Catholicism was not one of the goals of the Crusades. The goals of the Crusades were to regain control of the original Christian holy places in the Middle East, protect Christians on pilgrimage from Europe, and eventually to prevent Muslim expansion into Europe.

The Crusades certainly are marred by a few infamous episodes, such as the brutal and merciless sacks of Jerusalem in 1099 and of Constantinople in 1204, and nefarious characters such as the vicious warmonger Reynald de Chatillon, portrayed with devilish gusto by Brendan Gleeson in the movie. It is worth noting that the Christians responsible for the sack of Constantinople acted without approval of the Church and were in fact excommunicated for what they did: the killing of innocent non-combatants has always been condemned by the Church.

Would the Crusades meet the Church’s modern definition of a “just war”, that is, a war that meets the criteria of justice and morality? The Church requires the following conditions to be met:

First, the damage inflicted by the aggressor on the nation or nations coming under attack must be lasting, grave and certain.

Second, all other means of putting an end to the attacks must have already failed or been proven not practical.

Third, there must be a serious chance of success.

Fourth, the use of force and the waging of war must not produce greater evils than those the war seeks to eliminate.

(see the Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraphs 2307—2309 — scroll down.)

Reflect on these four conditions again after you’ve delved into the history of the Crusades. Be aware that most of the historians are not sympathetic to the Catholic Church and will paint the Crusaders as bloodthirsty, intolerant barbarians who used their religious faith to excuse all kinds of brutality. The following sources are written from the Catholic point of view and will provide balance to the secular sources:

What Were the Crusades? by Jonathan Riley-Smith
The Crusaders by Regine Pernoud
Those Terrible Middle Ages! by Regine Pernoud
The History of the Church—A Complete Course (The Didache Series)
The Church in the Dark Ages by Henri Daniel-Rops
A Catechism of Church History by Father Robert J. Fox
Christ the King, Lord of History by Anne W. Carroll
Church History by Fr. John Laux
A History of Christendom by Warren H. Carroll

Crisis Magazine has a good article called “The Real History of the Crusades” by Prof. Thomas F. Madden, chair of St. Louis University’s history department. and author of The New Concise History of the Crusades.

Also, see Catholic movie-reviewer Steven Greydanus’s take on Kingdom of Heaven. (Note: this film is not suitable for children and probably not even for teenagers.)

** Note: I am aware of the fact that the Taj Mahal was constructed in the mid-1600s, several hundred years after the Crusades. Hopefully my deliberate anachronism in the interests of a whimsical turn-of-phrase can be forgiven.

Copyright 2007 by Clare Siobhan
Originally published in Family Centered Faith Formation News.

April ‘07 Stack o’ Books

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 8th, 2007

April Stack o’ Books

This is Number One Daughter’s stack o’ books. As you can see, she takes after Mom. (Click on the picture to read the titles.)

Living the Gospel Without Compromise

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 2nd, 2007

From Living the Gospel Without Compromise
by Catherine Doherty, foundress of Madonna House:

“God calls each one of us who calls himself a Christian. He calls us directly. There is no compromise in his call: ‘Whoever is not with me is against me…If you love me, keep my commandments’. His call is revolutionary…If we Christians implemented it, we would change the world in a few months.”

Calling all Earthy-Crunchy Catholics

Posted by claresiobhan on Apr 1st, 2007

Just turning your attention to a couple things on my blog roll/website list that concern conservation, ecology, environmentalism and authentic Catholicism, sustainable development, sustainable community..that sort of thing, plus a couple article links on those topics:

Catholic Conservation Center
Caelum et Terra website and blog
Annunciation Byzantine Catholic Church
Little Portion Hermitage, home of the Brothers and Sisters of Charity
The New Agrarian
Light on Dark Water (blog by Maclin Horton, one of the editors of Caelum et Terra magazine)
Catholic Exchange article: “Catholics and the Environment”
…and finally “Let There Be Ecological Light” an article I wrote for the National Catholic Register. (You must be a subscriber to the paper, snail-mailed version of the Register to get to this.)

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