R
Ridgerunner
Guest
Individual bishops think different things, and the USCCB is not necessarily the voice of any particular bishop, or even the majority of them. It’s a bureaucracy, more or less under the general control of the Catholic bishops of the U.S. as a group, but which operates itself day to day. It’s funded by the various dioceses of the U.S. That it does “its own thing” at least at times, is pretty evident.Your view of the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops is obviously clouded by the reports of the main stream media which is totally anti Catholic to begin with. The USCCB is not tied to any political party at all, never has been and never will be. Attempts to “tie” the USCCB to any political party are only made by the main stream media in their efforts to denigrate our faith.
I would say “liberation theology lite” (American version) is pretty strongly influencing a lot of bishops, and the USCCB frequently seems to be in line with it. Since that’s consistent with the approach of the Democrat party, the USCCB sometimes does seem as if it’s a wholly owned subisidiary of that party. But not always.
It’s hard to get the perspective of the Church as a whole sometimes, regarding particular issues that seem timely. Part of that is because the Church itself does not directly endorse particular political positions. It endorses or condemns moral positions that might or might not coincide with particular political issues at any point in time.
It also moves slowly. There is a fair number of Catholic bishops who really do seem devotees of Liberation Theology Lite. But it has seemed to me that most of them are pretty old, and a lot of the newer bishops seem to be less tainted by that, if at all. Less political. More spiritual.
I’ll add this. What might make good sense in one part of the world might take on a whole different meaning in another part. But the Church has to speak to the whole, which is why sometimes its statements are so general. “Redistribution of wealth” might, for instance, mean one thing in some country where farmland IS wealth, and a handful of families own it all and let most of it lay idle while the populace starves. In the U.S., it is understood to mean “leveling” the population by confiscation and donation of middle class savings or investment to people who, by world standards, are already pretty well off.