The USCCB, Deal Hudson, and the Monday morning conference call
InsideCatholic.com has this week's new attack on the U.S. bishops' conference, the Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD), and the rest of the Catholic social justice infrastructure that are becoming the daily bread of the Catholic blogosphere. As usual, the attack comes in broad strokes, employing guilt-by-association tactics that accuse the USCCB of being involved with groups that "advocate abortion and same-sex marriage." Never forgotten is the mention of two groups that were defunded by CCHD because of problematic ties, along with other "smoking guns," though always forgotten are the literally hundreds of other organizations that have not been defunded.
Now Hudson is training his sights on the USCCB itself, describing it as "the kind of episcopal conference authorized by the Second Vatican Council, [which] has no canonical authority of its own," one supposedly at odds with the majority of lay Catholics. (That statement about canonical authority is flat wrong, though the late Pope JPII did restrict conferences' ability to act on their own. Plus the USCCB has existed in some form since the early 20th century, information easily available at Wikipedia for heaven's sake. It was hardly "created" in 1966. But who cares about accuracy?)
Better, Hudson claims that the USCCB is analogous to the hated federal government, and suggests a "tea party" movement against it. Prepare the tar and feathers!
Hudson's attacks on his ideological counterparts, such as Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good and Catholics United, are to be expected, but "suggesting" a Catholic tea party movement against the non-partisan conference itself is something else altogether.
None of this is new of course, but I'm starting to wonder if there's not some Monday morning conference call and strategy session to find new ways to discredit and undermine the USCCB and its lobbying and social justice infrastructure. Since the current president's election, there has been a well-coordinated and effective, as well as particularly personal and vicious, effort in that regard, which most recently took aim at John Carr, who oversees CCHD.
Further, the best solutions to the social problems the conference has been working on these many decades always seem to be found in the Republican Party. Now isn't that interesting. Of course, Deal Hudson was the Catholic Karl Rove for President Bush's reelection campaign in 2004, so I guess it stands to reason.
Indeed, Hudson seems to be aiming directly at any support Democrats may find among Catholics, today blaming President Obama's election on the USCCB document "Faithful Citizenship," passages from which, when taken out of context, he claims "gave the green light to Catholic voters to ignore Obama's aggressively pro-abortion stance." I find that mildly hilarious because I'm pretty sure less than 10 percent of Catholics could even name the document, much less know what it says.
Can we just be honest here? Deal Hudson is a Republican. He thinks everyone should be a Republican, and he thinks if you're a Catholic, you should be a Republican because the only issues you should ever cast a vote on are abortion and gay marriage (as if the GOP is really pure in practice on either of those issues). Abortion and gay marriage are, after all, why Jesus came to earth. And Catholics aren't allowed to take political action on any other pressing social issues that cause human beings to suffer and die until (1) abortion is illegal and (2) gay people aren't permitted any recognition in civil law for their relationships or families. Catholics should just vote for the GOP candidate and write a check to Catholic Charities in the meantime to help care for all those people that are left behind while we work on abortion and gay marriage.
Really? Is that all the gospel, the scriptures, Catholic social teaching, the witness of the saints and other heroes of the faith boils down to? I can't believe that it is, nor can I believe that Catholics must abandon every other public policy issue until abortion is illegal. If you disagree, please at least read in its entirety Gaudium et spes, Vatican II's Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World. It's really quite breathtaking in its expansive vision of how Catholics might work in the world.
I get why some Catholics choose to be single-issue voters on abortion, and if that's where their consciences lead them, they should. But I still argue that I'm on solid moral ground in considering the broad swath of issues when I vote, as well as exercising prudence in choosing the social policies that I think will have the most effect for the sake of the poor and weak, including the unborn.
Gaudium et spes aside, Hudson's thinking certainly plays right into the hands of the GOP, which is exactly where I think he wants us. After all, unlike the "fake Catholycs" on "the left," forever fretting about how to bring people of varying views together for a common goal, Hudson wants no namby-pamby "working together" nonsense. You're either for us or against us.
This is about politics, pure and simple, not about fidelity to the gospel or the correct interpretation of church teaching or the best, most effective, and most prudent ways to address the wild injustices built into our social and economic systems. But that I know already. But I would like to know is who is on that conference call, and better, who is writing the checks to support the "grassroots" movement that wants to dismantle decades of work on behalf of the poor.
Wow, 90 comments
By Anonymous (not verified) on Monday, February 7, 2011I don't have time to read them all now but when I do I guess 90% of them will be from Republicans.
And that is the problem for the dwindling few of us who are not Republicans. The Catholic Church in the U.S. is becoming so aligned with the GOP that being and voting Republican is becoming a requirement for being Catholic.
So what are we non-Republican even liberal Democratic Catholics to do? Some are determined to stay, not to surrender our faith and identity to political and social conservatives.
As for me I'm gradually becoming comfortable with becoming a lapsed Catholic. In the last six months a job that requires Saturday and Sunday work has made it very difficult to attend a Vigil or Sunday mass. At first I felt guilty if I missed a week, I'd always gone before, but after the election and the bishops' again boosting of the GOP my guilt subsided. Gradually as I attended mass less I began to feel less angry at the Church and the men who run it. I have begun to feel as my 85 year-old mother has for decades, that what they say has nothing to do with her. I have become more relaxed on Sunday not attending what feels more and more like a Republican fund raiser.
My work schedule has changed so I'll probably start going to mass more often but I'm not going to sweat it if something prevents me. If I hear one more word from the pulpit telling me how to vote or to pick up a voting guide in the back I'll stand up and leave. Just thinking about not if, but when, that will happen makes me not want to go. I've had it. I'm not going to sit there and have priests tell me how to vote. I won't stay in my pew and listen. I'll get up and leave.
I never thought I'd become the kind of Catholic that only goes to mass now and then but I'm becoming one. I hate to say it but I think it's a logical choice.
90 comments: Sorry for being "uncharitable"...
By Jerry D (not verified) on Monday, February 7, 2011...…but I'm not buying.
I've never been to a Mass which seemed like a GOP fundraiser. There is one "orthodox" church in Hawaiian Gardens, CA that passes out information on which candidates support abortion, but it is clearly non-partisan. My wife, an ex-Democrat, pressed the issue with the pastor, who said he was sympathetic with the Democratic Party. I understood the Pastor would have voted for Ted Kennedy until his switch to being pro-abortion made it morally unacceptable to vote for him. Similarly, voting for National Socialists who advocated socialized health care was unacceptable as long as they advocated euthanizing the mentally disabled even if a person thought the net lives saved would be immense.
The reason attendance by liberals at religious services is declining is because the Gospel of Jesus Christ read at the services does not say, "I understand if you have the abortion, sleep with your girlfriend and live in drunkenness because you're under tremendous stress. It’s the social injustice of the community that causes your stress. The important thing is that you work for social justice."
Just showing up to Mass is about personal accountablity rather than saying "Jesus understands how busy my weekend is and how tired I am."
To clarify, many Democrats have excellent self-discipline and many Republicans fail to meet the ideals they advocate. The issue is the message of scripture is more comfortable for those with Republican ideals.
I’d guess there are at least five times more Sunday scripture readings about personal responsibility than helping the poor. When scripture is about helping the poor, the message is to dig into your pocketbook, not tax the guy who makes more than you to create "social justice." As far as being armed, I have yet to find the passage where Jesus calls on us to leave our families defenseless and rely soley upon government protection.
Buy it or not
By Anonymous (not verified) on Monday, February 7, 2011It's a free country.
I've been in parishes so conservative you'd have to be crazy not to know practically everyone in the pews was a Republican. I've heard it in homilies. In one the priest said that he only watches FOX News. What does that have to do with anything Catholic? Nothing except a head nodding moment for the fans in the pews.
I'm not a conservative. I'm not a Republican. I'm a liberal Democrat. Nowhere else would I willingly surround myself with people I disagree with so much, people who don't like people like me, people who have "Imagine a world without liberals" bumper stickers next to their "Catholic" ones.
It doesn't stay in the parking lot. I complained to my pastor about a "Catholic Radio" bumper sticker at the back of the church. I said it was partisan. He said if it bothered me I should ignore it.
Are you going to tell me that EWTN and Ave Maria Radio and TV aren't partisan? They're Catholic versions of right wing talk radio and FOX News. It goes beyond abortion and other life issues. Al Kresta is Ave Maria's Rush Limbaugh. He and his guests attack President Obama over economic and other policies that have nothing to do with Catholic teaching. He and other hosts present conservative Republican philosophy as the teaching of the Church and the bishops never say a word about it.
Of course I don't hear "Vote Republican" or "Donate to the Republican Party" at mass. That would invite a call from the IRS. I don't need to hear it to know that I am surrounded by Republicans.
I see what has happened in the Church in this country as similar to what happened to the boy scouts. When I was a scout in the 60's BSA's national headquarters was in New Brunswick New Jersey. Before that it was in New York City. From its founding in 1910 to 1979 when its national headquarters moved to Irving Texas in the heart of the Bible Belt scouting included a cross-section of American boys. Among them was an overabundance of nerdy unathletic ones like me and an underabundance of non-whites but being a scout didn't automatically mean your family was probably conservative and Republican.
Since the move to Irving it gradually has. BSA's national leaders have put a more conservative and overtly religious stamp on scouting. Their efforts to exclude gay and athiest scouts extended to the Supreme Court and drove away huge numbers of scouts and parents who were not so conservative or religious. Jews fled. Because of their history many Jews are especially sensitive to discrimination against others. They are also not wild about enrolling their kids in organizations with overtly Christian identities.
I know this because I was a scout leader for 14 years. I put my kids through scouting and served as a leader for the same reasons I took them to mass and sent them to religious ed, because it's what I grew up in, what I believed in and despite my strong disagreements with its leaders there was nothing that could replace it. Other non-Republican scout leaders feel the same.
After my sons were done with scouts I felt a pang of loss as their childhood and my identity as the father and leader of scout aged boys ended. But after a while I noticed the same thing I've noticed since I stopped going to mass every week. I don't think about the right wing conservatives I feel have ruined the best organization ever founded for boys. The less I think about it the less angry I get about it. I don't read online scouting forums. I don't bore my wife with rants about scouting.
Maybe after a while I won't bother myself with this either. Maybe then we'll both be happier.
"Surrounded by Republicans"
By The Eminem Fan (not verified) on Monday, February 7, 2011Being surrounded by Republicans....Now that's a very scary thought, even for the (Traditionalist) Eminem Fan. lol
Radical Gay Culture
By Anonymous (not verified) on Monday, April 5, 2010The entire church is so evil as a result of the gay culture within the church that few if any of the clerics can be trusted to proclaim the truth of Our Lord. You have not seen but the tip of the iceburg, and once completely exposed, they will run to the gates of hell where they are trying to send the faithful....Pray, Our Blessed Lady begs us!
knowledge
By Anonymous (not verified) on Monday, April 5, 2010And you owe this extensive knowledge of the gay culture in the church to what experienced, or do you just know it?
Great Editorial
By JustFaith Alumnus (not verified) on Monday, February 22, 2010It does fit into GOP policies as with just abortion and gay marriage you also have the endless push to keep Catholics in the pews and away from the outside world. This is all part of the class struggle (yes, that term). Staying away from the outside world pushes most money up to the institution and there is a solidarity with the rich and not the poor. It was only a matter of time before the CCHD would be attacked.
Cage Match---Cones vs. Hudson?
By Tom (not verified) on Thursday, March 18, 2010When Bryan Cones goes after Deal Hudson, Bryan's writing seems to drip hatred and anger.
Liberals just can't come to grips with the reality that our movement towards 100 million abortions is an abomination worse than slavery, war and poverty combined. (BTW--those hated republicans contribute far more to charity than the constantly-weeping/kvetching left).
I recommend a cage match between Bryan and Deal so that Bryan can get past his vitriol.
Thanks, Tom
GOD IS WATCHING YOU
By Anonymous (not verified) on Friday, February 19, 2010GOD IS WATCHING YOU
He knows what is in your heart.
You must do the right thing.
You know what that is.
Abortion is bad.
Abuse of the poor is bad.
Dropping Bombs on innocent people is bad.
Rich Men Make War And Poor People Die.
Torture is evil.
Capitalism has lead to the exploitation of humanity. For Profit Prison Systems and War Machines Are Evil.
You can feed your family without hurting someone else's. It is your purpose to find a way, a good way.
God Is Love.
If it is not love, it is not God.
Torture is not love.
Exploitation is not love.
Abortion is not love.
Not caring for the poor is not love.
Shunning or scapegoating or mistreating immigrants is not love.
None of us are perfect.
But we need to do better.
Republican and Democrat ideology will not do
you a bit of good in the afterlife.
You know what is wrong and you know what is right.
You must do what is right.
He knows what is in your heart.
GOD IS WATCHING YOU.
To whoever wrote "God is watching you"...
By David Phillips (not verified) on Friday, February 19, 2010...This is one of the best writings I have ever read.
I could not agree more; everything you expressed is so true.


