S
SoCalRC
Guest
I’ve actually been thinking about this question for hours. And it finally clicked tonight. My wife and I elected to ignore a recommendation for a medical abortion with our youngest. Fortunately, my wife survived the pregancy and our son is one of the lights of our lives.
But he is severely disabled. We ended up raising a severely autistic son at a time when institutionalized care and a wholly misguided stigma was the norm. With things like IDEA and a much greater focus on community based care, things are better, much better, today. But raising a severely disabled child is still no picnic. Explaining it to other parents is like them explaining parenthood to their still childless friends. You can try to convey it, people nod, but until you’ve been there you have no idea.
Anyway, we stay pretty involved in various causes for the handicapped and someone finally sent me Michael Savages rant about autism as a “fraud” from a few days ago. When I heard him recycle the ‘blame the parents’ idiocy that inflicting 50 years of unbelievable pain and still leads grandparents to horribly misguided ‘help’ today, my first thought was - this is the guy who coined the phrase “compassionate conservatism”.
My second thought was, if you are a ‘strong conservative’ in the US, there is a very good chance you listen to a Savage, Coulter, Malkin, Limbaugh, etc. And if you listen, then you do not find hate speech, the vile dehumanization of fellow children of God, wholly reprehensible.
Now I can’t help but wonder, how can anyone listen to calls for violence, cruelty, and hate each weekeday and not see a stark contrast to the readings they hear each Sunday?
The Universal Catechism is a very thick book. The United States Catechism for Adults uses larger print and pictures, but it is still a serious read. Realizing this, JPII called for the creation of a compendium. It is a pretty thin book, in a simple question/answer format. But just in case even it is too much, there are simple formulas for Catholicism in the back. The first of these is seemingly from Luke and Matthew: Love God with all your heart and Love your neighbor as yourself.
If you readily, even gleefully, reject at least the second half of this as part of your regular day, say nodding yes to hate on your morning commute, why even bother calling yourself a Christian or Catholic? Seriously, if you reject the Faith is its most boiled down and simple form, why pretend otherwise?
But he is severely disabled. We ended up raising a severely autistic son at a time when institutionalized care and a wholly misguided stigma was the norm. With things like IDEA and a much greater focus on community based care, things are better, much better, today. But raising a severely disabled child is still no picnic. Explaining it to other parents is like them explaining parenthood to their still childless friends. You can try to convey it, people nod, but until you’ve been there you have no idea.
Anyway, we stay pretty involved in various causes for the handicapped and someone finally sent me Michael Savages rant about autism as a “fraud” from a few days ago. When I heard him recycle the ‘blame the parents’ idiocy that inflicting 50 years of unbelievable pain and still leads grandparents to horribly misguided ‘help’ today, my first thought was - this is the guy who coined the phrase “compassionate conservatism”.
My second thought was, if you are a ‘strong conservative’ in the US, there is a very good chance you listen to a Savage, Coulter, Malkin, Limbaugh, etc. And if you listen, then you do not find hate speech, the vile dehumanization of fellow children of God, wholly reprehensible.
Now I can’t help but wonder, how can anyone listen to calls for violence, cruelty, and hate each weekeday and not see a stark contrast to the readings they hear each Sunday?
The Universal Catechism is a very thick book. The United States Catechism for Adults uses larger print and pictures, but it is still a serious read. Realizing this, JPII called for the creation of a compendium. It is a pretty thin book, in a simple question/answer format. But just in case even it is too much, there are simple formulas for Catholicism in the back. The first of these is seemingly from Luke and Matthew: Love God with all your heart and Love your neighbor as yourself.
If you readily, even gleefully, reject at least the second half of this as part of your regular day, say nodding yes to hate on your morning commute, why even bother calling yourself a Christian or Catholic? Seriously, if you reject the Faith is its most boiled down and simple form, why pretend otherwise?