By Mark Judge on 4.11.06 @ 12:06AM
Dreadful news for liberal Catholics -- their church has published a new Compendium.
The Catholic left is in trouble.
On March 31, the Catholic Church published the Compendium of
the Catechism of the Catholic Church. In format, the
Compendium harkens back to the question-and-answer style
popular in Catholic schools before Vatican II. Of course, the new
compendium has also incorporated the documents of Vatican II into
its teaching.
The Compendium will come as bad news for liberal
Catholics, who for forty years have managed to dismantle Catholic
catechism in the schools through obfuscation, politics, and
flat-out heresy. In the feverish political milieu of the 1960s and
1970s, liberal Catholic educators excused this away as the church
being "relevant" to the great issues of the day -- poverty, war,
social justice. More recently, a religion teacher at Georgetown
Prep -- my alma mater and the oldest Catholic high school in
America -- told me that they had to keep using the leftist text
The Word Made Flesh because the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, a doorstopper published in 1994, was "over
the heads of freshman and sophomores."
The Compendium most certainly is not over the heads of
the kids. But, of course, the real reason for keeping old textbooks
is political. In the 1960s the Catholic left took over the writing
and publishing of textbooks, a fact evident if you spend an
afternoon in the library, as I did, going through old issues of the
Catholic School Journal. The Journal was
published from 1901 to 1970. It went from a small, text-heavy sheet
in the early part of the century to a thick catalogue in the fat
years of mid-century Catholicism, then delved into radicalism
before folding in the summer of 1970. An ad from 1904 touts books
about ancient history and a Catechism of Scripture
History, and feels comfortable enough with its audience's
Catholicism to not only sell a book written in Latin but describe
it in the same language. Articles praise Thomas Aquinas and the
pope's stance on Communism. A 1952 ad announces the publication of
Teaching the Christian Virtues, now an out of print
neglected classic.
Ads and articles from 1966 herald the immediate postconciliar
period. There was much talk of "new horizons," but most articles
and books are examinations of the Vatican II documents -- documents
that few Catholics have read today. By 1967, the Vatican II
documents were losing out to books about teenagers, "feminine
fulfillment" and "sex and the people we are." In late 1968 an ad
for the Christian Inheritance Series notes that the 1968 Liturgical
Week Theme is REVOLUTION: CHRISTIAN RESPONSES.
When Catholic parents revolted, the education elites were having
nothing of it. In January 1970 the Catholic Journal
published an article by Sr. Marie Aimee Carey, "Are Religion
Textbooks Teaching Heresy?" The answer, of course was no. In fact,
it was the John Birch Society whipping Catholics into a frenzy.
Sister Carey notes Vatican II's paragraph on "norms for
catechetical instruction." They explain that catechetical training
is "to make men's faith become more living, conscious, and
active...." This should be based on "Sacred Scripture, tradition,
the liturgy, the teaching authority, and the life of the Church."
The teaching method should be adapted to "the natural disposition,
ability, age, and life circumstances of the listener."
From this list of guidelines, which could have been published in
1920 -- or 1820 -- Sister Carey found the meaning that "the old
catechism is wanting in every [way]." The memorization of
yesteryear -- even if buttressed by a life of Mass, prayer, and
spiritual community (my notation, not Carey's) -- "is no longer
adequate for today's children; the society in which we now live
presents challenges and threats to their faith that did not exist
in our day." Yes, certainly previous generations of Catholics knew
nothing about war, poverty, and materialism.
And for years the misinformation has continued. When the new
Catechism was being prepared in the early 1990s the Catholic left
marshaled efforts to squash it, going so far as to heckle at a
press conference announcing its publication. They also tried to
shoehorn "inclusive language" in the text, causing a delay until
the text could be corrected. Then they started to claim that the
Catechism, at 500 pages, is too unwieldy for students -- the
argument I got from Georgetown Prep. Instead, Prep currently uses a
book called The Word Made Flesh for freshman and
sophomores. In it, author Anthony Martinelli never once gives the
Church's definition for "mortal sin." He does not explain the
discipline of celibacy. To show what church doctrine is, he uses
the examples of women's ordination, writing that the Church has
never ordained women but conceivably that could change. But in 1994
Pope John Paul II firmly stated that the church has no authority
whatsoever to ordain women, and that this teaching is to be held
definitively by the faithful. Cardinal Ratzinger-- now Pope
Benedict -- later clarified this, announcing the pope was
reiterating what is to be held as a Dogma by the faithful.
And that's just the beginning. The Word Made Flesh has
so many errors and questionable assumptions that it needs its own
compendium to list them all. I'll confine myself to two of the
book's most obvious flaws: its teaching on abortion and its claim
that Christianity is not the only true faith. Author Martinelli
uses the "seamless garment" approach, a favorite argument of
liberal Christians. According to the seamless garment argument,
abortion is wrong, but it morally equivalent to poverty or pay
inequities between genders. As The Word Made Flesh
states,
The Catholic Church not only opposes abortion but
strongly opposes the conditions that lead to the need for abortion:
discrimination against women in the workplace, poverty, lack of
adequate health care and child care. The church cannot take a stand
against abortion unless it is also willing to take a stand against
the conditions that lead to it.
Moreover, the book says, "The arguments used by the church [against
abortion] are not religious ones at all. There is no appeal to
faith or the commandments or to Jesus." So the commandment not to
kill has nothing to do with abortion. The
Compendium of
the Catholic Church, in question 470 -- "What is Forbidden by the
fifth commandment?" -- says differently. Forbidden is murder or
cooperation in it, euthanasia, suicide -- and "direct abortion,
willed as an end or as means, as well as cooperation in it.
Attached to this sin is the penalty of excommunication because,
from the moment of his or her conception, the human being must be
absolutely respected and protected in his integrity."
So at long last, the fog of forty years of obfuscation may be
lifting -- that is, if the liberals agree to teach what the church
teaches. I won't hold my breath. If the orthodoxy of the new
Compendium doesn't drive them away, the prayer pages will
-- the prayers are not only in English, but Latin.
Mark Gauvreau Judge is the author of God and Man at Georgetown Prep: How I Became a
Catholic Despite 20 Years of Catholic Schooling (Crossroad,
2005) and Damn Senators: My Grandfather and the Story of
Washington's Only World Series Championship (Encounter,
2003).
topics:
Education, Health Care, Religion, Catholicism, Abortion, Books, Law, NATO, Communism