Three cheers for Amy Welborn! She’s given us all a name – St. Blog’s Parish.
Category: Uncategorized
:: Peanutty!
I’ve been reading the coverage on Carter in Cuba and it made me remember a great piece by P.J. O’Rourke. 50+ reasons why Carter was a better President than Clinton. This appeared in The American Spectator – one of my favorite magazines. They don’t have a website anymore. Trees are apparently cheaper than bits and bytes.
The funniest one from this list is missing:
Mariel Boatlift? Does Hillary know about her?
:: I’m talkin’ ’bout a revolution
I was poking around on Mark Shea’s site and happened on this link regarding earth’s rotation (or lack thereof) by Robert Sungenis. He says the earth is sitting still – it doesn’t rotate. And the moon is made of cheese. And on a clear day you can see forever. This is complete crap. I’m not a rocket scientist but I have a friend who is. I’ll get him to write something up. In the meantime I will go out on a limb and tell you that GPS satellites don’t depend fully on geostationary orbits in order to work. I found this on the inTARnet:
The other thing to note is the difference between rotation (earth spinning on it’s axis) and revolution (earth orbitting around the sun). I guess putting some nimrod opinion up on the net about how this isn’t happening does just about as good as having a vote on whether it is happening or not. When all is said and done it’s still happening.
I must say I own and love Dr. Sungenis’s books and that you should buy them, or at least read them.
:: We are more than our sexual preference
Ive had time to read and mull over “What makes the priesthood so attractive to gay men?” by Mark D. Jordan in the Orlando Sentinel from May 12.
I dont have time right now to refute the all his assertions that I believe to be false. The most distressing to me is what he refers to as homoeroticism as part of the institution of the Church.
Our public discussions of priestly sexuality won’t make any progress until we can begin to talk about the homoeroticism written into Catholic imagination and its institutions.
His opinion the Catholic Church is and has long been both loudly homophobic and intensely homoerotic.
The fact is we as individuals are more than our sexual preference. Professor Jordan, faculty of the religion department at Emory University, confuses being gay with actually being.
He posits some questionable reasons as to why gay men would be attracted to the priesthood. I wont pretend to know or understand exactly what God is doing when he calls someone to a religious vocation. On the human side I would say the initial answer to the call is, or at least the beginning of discernment is:
– A desire to do Gods will alone and thereby deny oneself many things this world has to offer, material and immaterial
– A desire for holiness and sanctity
– A desire to minister the sacraments, to preach and engage in other aspects of priestly ministry
Professor Jordan goes on to say:
The Roman Catholic Church entices us gay men to fall in love with it much before we ever consider its policies. We have long found a home in this church because many of its symbols and roles, its beauties and gifts, are so evidently our own.
Whether or not altar girls are permitted is a Church policy. The teaching on homosexual behavior is dogma. It is not policy. Policy is changeable, dogma is not. This is from a religion professor who is an adult convert to Catholicism. Yikes.
Apart from confusing policy with dogma I see here the author is doing two things. First, he is wrapping his sexual preference around his whole being. Second, he is reflecting that gay persona around the Church. It seems to be the lens through which he sees himself and the Church. I dont believe our sexual preference is wholly who we are as children of God. We can’t look at ourselves, the world and the Church in terms of gayness or straightness. We are so much more than our sexual preference.
:: Diocesan choir again! I
:: Diocesan choir again!
I just got back from our second rehearsal. What a great group of volunteers there is this group! One woman drives 2.5 hours one way to participate. We ended about 9:50. Which means I will have been in Kingdom of Morpheus for about an hour before she even gets home. The choir is praying at the Diocesan Confirmation and the Diaconate Ordination Masses. What a gift it is to have a group that can do this, and to be able to sing in it!