I did not mean to say that conservatives are the good guys here. We can be too heady and be out of touch with the poor (as are most elite liberals in office, I’m sure) and think they’re just being lazy. Some may take too much advantage of welfare, but squalor can dampen the spirit, despite the man’s responsibility, if physically and mentally “there” enough, to be the main provider in 90 something percent of families, where it’s possible.
I think there is a schism between right-wing and left-wing. I think St. Francis was orthodox in his beliefs and also understanding of the poor’s problems. I think he would have treasured beautifully-adorned houses of God built to praise Him with a society’s first fruits of the best they could provide as the finest ointment spilled on Christ’s feet in the Bible, yet preferring to stay in simpler surroundings as he may feel too swept away and not want to leave. Who’s to say Brother Juniper, who cut the rings off the altar cloth for the poor didn’t respect why it was made, but was driven out of pity for the poor to give away the rings?
Liberation theology is really, I think, what I was addressing. Some went to far in pity for the poor and oppressed to the point of breaking ranks with the Magisterium (the mistake, out of charity for souls, that people like Archbishop Lefebvre made). Apparently, one of those liberation theology priests is now head of the UN General Assembly. I hope I have not gone too far in A.b. Lefebvre’s or Fr. Gruner’s direction when criticizing the errors of the post-Vatican 2 clergy in not cleaning up the mess faster and/or more efficiently over 40 years, but it is the Church Christ created and our leaders are the leaders, by correct means of handing down the office of bishop and Pope. We are to be obedient to them unless they any should propose something wrong that is obvious to all the loyal faithful–like a dogma no-no, such as condoning birth control. God can’t talk to His faithful if we are following our own lights. Well, there is the prophesied Great Awakening, so I can’t say He can’t, but He can’t as He tends to relate to us in ordinary circumstances.
I think many Catholics have become their own lights unto themselves, deciding what they’ll believe or not and claim ignorance about Vatican 2 as the excuse. That is culpable with that attitude. This has become a very self-centered society and very little has been done at Mass to shake us out of our selves. Faith in the priest has been replaced by faith in big science or some other tool that has become a religion of its own and whose doctrines are considered reasonable because it can be measured and studied and replicated in a lab, for an example of big science. People want to see results, despite the fact that big science changes and our Faith does not and we have all these saints to show that our Faith teaches the right Faith in good times and in bad. They miss that science cannot prove evolution or panevolution, but they can prove no trickery has been played on weeping statues that are pronounced worthy of believing in the sign. This “reason” is the false centricism of which the author comments to which I respond in partial agreement. We have lost faith and rationalize it as “reason”.
Of course, as I said, schismatic traditionalists see these small signs right, but miss the forest for the trees. They believe themselves on the right path for understanding those things, but not who’s still in charge or that “Old Catholics” probably think them wrong for sticking with the likes of Pope Pius X, the hammer of the heretics, of all popes!.
I went this way and the way of the previous paragraph. It’s not centered and neither is some that is overtly orthodox, but heterodox in inspiration, such as the stripping of the altars, getting wishy-washy with time-honored admonitions that seemed too dreary, tossing out sacramentals, and maybe even a similar sounding prayer style or excusing all this as being merely tradition with a small “t” and thus, non-essential to the faith (maybe so, but not to mass psychology, who cannot give as much direct attention to God as a monk, hermit, and/or friar).
In other words, this was really about liberation theology but aren’t most Catholics on the edge of going that way? Many don’t believe in all the teachings of the Church but their stoic act in their head has them thinking themselves “centrist”.