I have very little familiarity with CM. Once I was at a pro-life march where Voris was one of the speakers, maybe five years ago. He was sure fired up. I was appalled that he broached the topic of contraception and called it a snake in the grass regarding the pro-life movement. Appalled, that is, to hear someone say it unashamedly, over a mic, in a public venue. One could hear a pin drop. I was blown away by the cahoonas it took to say that, because I’d never heard anyone say it out loud like that.
MV has given “indoor” talks as well, linking contraception and abortion. i downloaded one not long ago. No word-mincing. In this talk, his audience was Catholic.
The late Fr Marx, the great pro-life priest informed a Protestant pro-life group that accepting contraception was the root of “it”. Same thing; dead silence, and a refusal to acknowledge the truth.
Jason Evert the purity crusader, said that at the end of the Nineteenth Century, every major Protestant denomination condemned contraception. One denomination even stated that if it became generally accepted in the USA, it would mean the fall of the USA.
The Anglicans caved in at the Lambeth Conference in 1930. First off, it was supposed to be only in certain cirmstances (sound like abortion?), but like any thin edges of wedges that didn’t last long. MV did a Vortex (was it?) on that conference, and the influence of Marie Stopes who said she heard God’s voice telling her to push the Anglicans to accept contraception.
Another fruit of contraception:
Some homosexual (including lesbian) activist groups cite heterosexuals’ use of contraception and abortion to prevent birth to justify their own behaviour. Homosexual acts don’t result in birth. Neither do heterosexual acts which use contraception and abortion. Therefore, what’s the big deal with homosexual acts? The results are the same. So goes the reasoning.
So contraception has helped further the cause of two abominable evils, not just one.
Pope Paul VI sure was inspired.
Later on at a bible study, I heard someone complain that he was invited. I asked why, and it was mainly a tone issue. He does tend to provoke strong reactions, I quickly learned. And yet, I thought what he said was refreshingly free of bland platitudes, and honest. Strange thing, because I’m not attracted to social commentators or political figures who are strident, without naming names.
Unfortunately, sometimes the boot has to be laid in hard to wake people up from a stupor.
Respect is my default position.
Wish i could say the same but, at the age of 62, and being aware of more than a few betrayals, suspicion is sometimes de default position. It’s probably a defence mechanism: be prepared for the worst. The diocese in which i live was hit by a terrible sex-abuse (homosexual) scandal. The poor whistle-blower priest was given such a hateful time by Church authorities and his brother priests tthat he hanged himself.
This homosexual comment is out of left field. Did I miss something?
Only that there`s a deeply entrenched homosexual network within the clergy…which you probably know anyway.
It’s a relatively small group (maybe not so small) which knows exactly what it wants, and how to get it so it has power far greater than what its numbers alone would suggest. (Take the Bolsheviks.) There’s loyality among them, but only in a self-serving way. If one of them is elevated, he has to help the others, or face exposure. Blackmail.
There’s only so much a blackmailable shepherd can say and do if he wants to right wrongs. He’s over a barrel.
The cancer has to be rooted out.
Better leave it at that, but it’s an issue which bugs MV, and no wonder! The Church’s credibility has been destroyed.Not to mention devastated young lives, and heavy financial burdens borne of course by the faithful in the pews.
There is a common misconception that to preach an authentic Christian Gospel all one need do is articulate doctrine.
FALSE.
But an authentic Christian Gospel has to be rooted in The Church’s infallible doctrines and infallible moral teachings.