>From http://www.lewrockwell.com/sobran/sobran66.html

}}>Begin

Imperfect Contrition
by Joseph Sobran

 The Pope’s recent "apology" for the sins of Catholics seems to be having the
direct opposite of the effect he intended. There must be a way to oppose anti-
Semitism without fostering anti-Catholicism.

Catholics should, and do, regret many things their ancestors have done over the
centuries. But our forebears – including Popes – have to do their own
repenting, just as we do. Their sins are not necessarily ours, and their
offenses against non-Catholics, however deplorable by today’s standards,
weren’t necessarily sins in their own minds. In the Middle Ages and long
afterward, just about everyone regarded atheism, heresy, and apostasy as
criminal; rulers were expected, as a matter of course, to protect the religion
of the community. The "great religions," as we now call them, regarded each
other as enemies – God’s enemies – not as brothers under the skin or valid
alternative lifestyles.

The New Testament condemns "those of the synagogue of Satan, who say they are
Jews and are not"; these words and others like them are ascribed to Christ, who
apparently said nothing about "pluralism," "tolerance," "dialogue," or "the
Judaeo-Christian tradition." The Jews are bluntly accused of crucifying Christ
and persecuting Christians, and are warned that they must repent and convert.
The Talmud is no more ecumenical, condemning all gentiles and Christians in
particular, with obscene curses against Christ and the Blessed Virgin. Islam
merely brought another fighting faith into the world, which sought to impose
itself wherever it could: that, everyone agreed in principle, was what the True
Religion was supposed to do. Immortal souls were at stake. Of course persuasion
was the ideal, but, since human nature was obstinate, force was sometimes
necessary. The early Protestants saw it the same way and acted accordingly.

Is the Pope "repenting" because twelfth-century men weren’t twentieth-century
men? (As if we can safely assume that that would have been an improvement.) And
his penitence seems to extend only to those putative sins that the twentieth
century condemns, ignoring all manner of other things that are sinful by
traditional Catholic standards. This is very much in the spirit of modern man,
who condemns earlier generations for not having been modern men.

So the papal statement, far from correcting the sins of the modern world, had
the effect of seeming to justify every modern prejudice against Catholicism. Of
course the Pope distinguished carefully between the Church as the Mystical Body
of Christ, which can never sin, and the Church as a human institution. But
since only Catholics accept this distinction – anyone who does accept it is
almost by definition a believing Catholic – the qualification seemed
Pickwickian to non-Catholics, who generally took the view that the Catholic
Church had finally, belatedly, though imperfectly, admitted that it is, after
all, the source of most of the great evils of history.

In short, the Pope seemed to be validating every familiar anti-Catholic canard.
Even ordinary Catholics of this generation, who are woefully weak in
theological and historical understanding (a fact for which the hierarchy of
today’s Church really should repent), took the impression that the modern
calumnies must be true after all. Since John Paul II is a man of considerable
intellect and diplomatic skill, it’s amazing that he didn’t foresee this
natural and predictable interpretation of his gesture. His successors will have
a lot of explaining to do.

The reaction was fascinating. To a purely rational unbeliever, it might be as
if the current mayor of Athens had apologized for the execution of Socrates, or
as if the House of Windsor had apologized for the depredations of Henry VIII
(without, however, offering to return England’s great cathedrals to the Church
of Rome). How can people who reject the concept of apostolic succession – the
principle that the Church inherits the authority of Christ – believe that
today’s Church can inherit guilt from the medieval Church? And if guilt is
hereditary, why not also blame today’s Jews for the Crucifixion? Can we now
expect rabbis to apologize for the role of Jews in Communism and for their own
"silence" during Soviet mass murders of Christians? There are interesting
possibilities here. And does today’s Church get credit for creating Western
civilization? Or is her uniquely continuous moral identity over two millennia
recognized only for the purpose of heaping accusations on her?

For whatever reason, everyone seemed to assume that the present Pope could
somehow take responsibility for all the sins of Catholics throughout history,
should take responsibility for them, and yet had failed to do so adequately.
Jews objected (again) that the Pope had failed to apologize specifically for
the you-know-what and demanded that he condemn the "silence" of Pius XII;
homosexuals complained that he hadn’t expressed remorse to gays and lesbians;
the New York Times noted sorrowfully that he hadn’t repudiated Catholic
teaching on contraception and abortion. Liberal Catholics found fault with him
too, on similar grounds. As for believing Catholics, most of them saw the
futility of trying to appease the insatiable.

In short, if you’re going to apologize to the modern world, you have to do it
on the modern world’s terms. Technically, of course, the "apology" was a prayer
addressed to God, not to the Anti-Defamation League; but it was clearly
designed to be overheard, as it were, by secular ears. The free-for-all of
faultfinding was only to be expected.

We must ask: What is the fruit of the hundred or so apologies this Pope has now
uttered? Is there any evidence that they have drawn any souls to the Church? Do
they not, on the contrary, confirm every malicious common belief about the
Church, while discouraging faithful Catholics and confusing weak ones? What on
earth is the point?

Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League complains that the Pope had "stopped
short in addressing specific Catholic wrongs against the Jewish people,
especially the Holocaust." This is now a tenet of Holocaust-centered secular
Jewish ideology: that the Catholic Church bears guilt for the Holocaust, not
only because Pius XII was "Hitler’s Pope," but because the Church is the
historic mother of anti-Semitism. This attitude has been reinforced, not
softened, by the papal statement.

It would have been only fair if Jews like Foxman had communicated their view to
Catholic soldiers in the Allied armies early on, so that those boys would have
had some inkling of what they were being sent to fight for: a postwar world in
which countless of their fellow Catholics and other Christians were subjugated
and persecuted by Communism, while Jewish propaganda blamed the crimes of the
Axis on their Church. Probably not the sort of victory they had in mind.

But the Foxmans maintained a discreet silence on the subject as long as they
needed those Catholic boys to do the fighting. Now that the war has long since
ended favorably, they’ve sized up today’s Catholic Church as soft, and they
deem it safe to insult the dead as well as the Church with their measureless
libels. They can be confident that a Church that craves their pardon won’t give
them any backtalk. As for the young Christians who died fighting Hitler, well,
who cares? They’ve served their purpose; did they expect to be thanked?

Speaking as a convert, I am deeply grateful that the Catholic Church of my
boyhood – the Church of Pius XII – evangelized in a different spirit, claiming,
and proclaiming, the authority of Christ. Nobody dreamed of demanding apologies
from that Church, and none were forthcoming. The message was simple, unclouded
by equivocation: the Catholic Church was the way to salvation. To reject Christ
and his One True Church was to incur damnation.

There were, to be sure, qualifications. We were taught that people might
guiltlessly reject Catholicism out of "invincible ignorance"; but they were
still in danger of damnation as the natural result of original and actual sin,
and they still needed the Church, even if they didn’t know it. Catholic
teaching covered everything with majestic common sense; the theology of St.
Thomas Aquinas merely took common sense to sublime heights. The simple old
widows I saw at daily Mass and the sophisticated scholars from whom I sought
answers were in this thing together, and they understood each other as members
of the same divine family. We were American and French and Filipino and African
and everything else. Every Catholic priest in the world spoke Latin.
Catholicism was universal in a way that was far more real and resonant than
today’s abstract "universalism" and "multiculturalism" can ever be.

It all revolved around the Last Supper and the Crucifixion. Christ had
instituted the Eucharist, turning bread and wine into his body and blood and
telling us to do likewise. He called himself "the bread of life" and said that
eating his flesh was necessary for salvation. The Mass, reenacting his
sacrifice at Calvary, was our essential rite. The Mass necessitated a
priesthood, which in turn necessitated a hierarchy to ordain priests and, in
time, a magisterium to keep doctrine pure. The Holy Inquisition followed
eventually, and was essentially legitimate in spite of any abuses that might
befall it. Within this framework, the notorious Index of Forbidden Books didn’t
trouble me at all. The infallibility of the Pope, our supreme shepherd in the
line of St. Peter, the rock on which Christ built his Church, was my assurance
that I could trust the Church’s teaching authority not to mislead me. Devotion
to the Blessed Virgin Mary and the saints, prayers for the poor souls in
Purgatory, the rosary, the Stations of the Cross, all this seemed to offer a
wealth of spiritual opportunities. The Latin liturgy exuded holiness and
mystery; it also signified the unity and ancient continuity of the Church.
Catholic morality was unchanging and uncompromising. In all this I saw nothing
that called for improvement as of the commencement of the Second Vatican
Council in 1962; I was confident that the Council would merely continue what
had already existed, making some parts of the Deposit of Faith more explicit,
leaving intact everything that was already established.

I understood the logic of Protestantism too. It issued from the rejection of
the Eucharist: the words "This is my body" and "This is my blood" were only
figurative, even to "fundamentalists" who took the Bible literally! But if
Christ had been speaking figuratively, why had so many disciples deserted him
when he announced that eating his flesh and drinking his blood were necessary
for salvation (John 6: 53-66)? When they left, saying, "This is a hard saying;
who can accept it?" he could easily have said, "Wait, come back! I was just
using a metaphor!" Instead, he rebuked them for not believing.

Once the Eucharist was demoted to a mere symbol, there was no need for a
priesthood to consecrate bread and wine, no need for a hierarchy, et cetera.
The "priesthood of all believers" became the papacy of each believer, with no
cohesive authority to ensure unity. Freedom of conscience, permitting each
believer to interpret Scripture for himself, seemed to me anarchic; and
Protestantism seemed doomed to dissolve into countless sects, creating a
centrifugal culture that would terminate in unbelief and sensuality. Some
Protestants held firm to as much of the Deposit of Faith as they had received;
such people were faithful to Christ by their lights, though they lacked the
blessings of the Sacraments they had rejected and had cut themselves off from
the graces they might have received through Our Lady and the saints. I
considered Protestants of this kind better "Catholics," as it were, than those
nominal Catholics who picked and chose among the Church’s teachings and
therefore essentially rejected the authority of the Church.

Today, whether because of the Council I don’t know, many Catholics as well as
Protestants have committed apostasy while continuing to call themselves
Christians. The "dissident" Catholic insists that he is as good a Catholic as
the faithful members of the Church, even if he denies the Real Presence of
Christ in the Eucharist and therefore rejects the very rationale of
Catholicism. But the usual motive for this internal apostasy isn’t specifically
theological; it is sexual. The defector claims a "right" to sexual freedom –
fornication, contraception, sodomy, divorce, and remarriage; nominally Catholic
voters and politicians even treat abortion as a right. I can only wonder why
these virtual Unitarians insist on identifying themselves as Catholics.

But such dissidence suffers no penalty in today’s Church. If the Pope seeks
matter for repentance – sins he can actually do something about – he should
look to the failure of the Church under recent papacies, very much including
his own, to teach and discipline Catholics properly. The Eucharist itself is
constantly abused, even to sacrilege, in the Novus Ordo Mass, which permits the
Body of Christ to be treated with contempt.
Do I exaggerate? Not long ago I saw a young man take Communion while wearing a
T-shirt that read "PARTY NAKED." Nobody in the Church is apologizing for
letting that sort of thing happen. But then, the Anti-Defamation League isn’t
complaining.

May 29, 2000

Copyright © 2000 by the Griffin Internet Syndicate. All rights reserved.

End<{{

>>> I keep finding these references to "Hitler's Pope" and the "'silence' of
Pius XII".  Consideering the Vaticaniacs existed within the boundaries of the
southern arm of Fascism, it would have been hard for any of the head Papists to
offer any words of criticism at that time.  After all, JP Dos (oka "Karol") was
laying low up there in Pole Land at the same time.  The silence of the lambples
(young sheeples).  Yet, having obtained a book on the head Papists some time
ago, I learned that the badges existed in 14th Century Spain (prior to the
Reformation, i.e., Christians were roughly 100% Catholic), austensibly "... for
requiring Jews and Muslims to wear atleast a badge denoting their religion was
to prevent Christians from being deceived into marrying them."  {{*Chronicle of
the Popes*, Maxwell-Stuart, p. 105, ISBN 0-500-01798-0 }}.  Now, this 'silence'
is an interesting notion:  was it so out of fear of intimidation  (force) or
because of a delegation of authority (choice)("the Lord works in mysterious
ways" kinda thing)?  Given Herr Adolf advanced his position on the non-'pure'
peoples within his realm of authority in the 20ies, it seems only fair that his
'victims' bear some of the burden of blame for their plight.  As we see in
Iraq, with Bush's "hitler", Saddam Hussein, or in Yugoslavia, with Clinton's
"hitler", Slobo, the people of both countries are having their feet held to the
fire for not ridding themselves of their 'bogey men'; the people are being held
accountable for keeping their leaders in power and therefore for their own
suffering.  Yet, when we read of the the 30ies and 40ies Europe, the people who
suffered are held blameless, as if they were ignorant, unresponsible children.
BS.  A<>E<>R <<<

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