By George Neumayr on 4.6.04 @ 12:06AM
If they can’t tell the difference between Catholic and Protestant communion, why shouldn’t Kerry flout canon law?
In America's political theater of the absurd, Protestant
politicians receive communion from Catholic priests while Catholic
politicians take communion from Protestant ministers. In 1998, Bill
Clinton, a Baptist, slipped into the communion line at a Catholic
Church in South Africa. John Kerry, a Catholic, took communion this
past Palm Sunday at an African Methodist Episcopal Church. Clinton
spent Palm Sunday in 1995 soaking up a standing ovation from
Catholic Cardinal Roger Mahony and his congregation in Los Angeles.
Kerry spent this Palm Sunday soaking up an endorsement from pastor
Gregory Groover. Normally opposed to the mixing of pastors and
politics, Kerry didn't mind receiving Groover's endorsement from
the pulpit: "We're thankful that there's going to be a revolution
in this country…a new movement…And we say, God, bring
him on, the next president of the United States."
Kerry's separation-of-church-and-state scruples don't apply to
pastors who endorse him or third-world thugs like "Father
Aristide." He reserves them for the head of his own religion. "I
think that it's important to not have the Church instructing
politicians," he said as he disregarded Pope John Paul II's
teaching on abortion.
In early March Kerry stepped into a Protestant church to
challenge the Christianity of George Bush. The ironies abounded: a
Catholic in a Protestant church was citing James 2:14 (a verse
Catholics use to argue against Protestantism) against a Protestant
President who has "faith" but no "deeds" even as that Catholic
argued in other settings that his own faith shouldn't influence his
deeds.
There are two Protestants in the race, an official one and an
unofficial one. Kerry is the anti-Papal one, protesting the
teachings of the Catholic Church in a manner befitting Martin
Luther. Kerry's reception of communion at an African Methodist
Episcopal Church is appropriate: he is more in communion with the
teachings of that church than his own.
As Kerry brazenly violates Church law -- canon law explicitly
forbids Catholics from receiving communion in Protestant churches
-- it is not clear if he is actively baiting his own church or just
considers its prelates too feckless to pull the plug on his show of
Catholicism while disobeying its teachings. It is a measure of his
contempt and their carelessness that as the American Catholic
bishops (with a few exceptions) sit on their hands -- dithering
over whether to ban pro-abortion Catholic politicians from
communion -- Kerry takes communion at a Protestant church. Would
Kerry need to preside at a Methodist-Episcopalian service before
they took action?
Last week the New York Times noticed that Kerry's
checkered Catholicism is a problem for the bishops. It didn't
notice that this is a problem the bishops made by long indulging
pro-abortion Catholic politicians. Kerry's campaign used this
defense in the Times story. "It's not once been an issue the campaign
has run into in almost two years on the campaign trail," a Kerry
spokesman told the paper. "He's given speeches at Georgetown, he's
given speeches at Boston College, he's a graduate of Boston College
Law School, and he has a long history speaking in Catholic
institutions."
Instead of censuring pro-abortion Catholic politicians, the
American bishops stigmatized the few of their number who censured
pro-abortion Catholic politicians. Nebraska bishop Fabian
Bruskewitz and a former bishop of San Diego, Leo Maher, were
criticized by their fellow bishops for confronting pro-abortion
Catholic politicians. The New York Times story reveals
that this attitude amongst the American bishops still exists. Now
it is St. Louis archbishop Raymond Burke who is the subject of
episcopal whispers for having said that he would withhold communion
from Kerry.
"Few bishops followed the example of Archbishop Burke in St.
Louis, and two who did were far less direct. A Catholic official
familiar with the bishops' thinking, who did not want to be
identified, said after Archbishop Burke's sanction: 'Notice the
resounding silence. I think many people would not consider that a
pastoral way to approach somebody,'" reported the
Times.
Here we go again: Whenever the bishops don't want to confront a
scandal, they call their passivity "pastoral." For some reason they
are proud of this "silence." Haven't they learned by now that
passivity in the name of PR only leads to bad PR and silence only
leads to scandal?
topics:
Religion, Catholicism, Protestantism, Abortion, Law, Africa