M
Memaw
Guest
I think thatās their favorite pastime. God Bless, Memaw
I think thatās their favorite pastime. God Bless, Memaw
Funny how we have went from āThe Church starved children to death and threw them is a septic tankā to "The Church didnāt speak out enough against disapproval of unwed mothers. " Of course the Church was the one who took them, gave them food and shelter and provided their children with an education. But its never enough in some peoples eyes.I didnāt intend my comment about the sinner/sinner distinction to be interpreted like it was. In one of his talks, Dr. Kreeft makes the point that modern society has exactly the opposite problems of ancient society. Ancient society was very good at pointing out evils and explicitly condemning them as evil. The problem is that in the course of condemning evil they would ostracize and castigate those individuals who performed these actions. A good comparison would be the way that homosexual were treated in the past.
In Ireland we see that those woman who conceived outside the bonds of marriage were shamed, ostracized and outcast. Thatās something (Iām hoping) we can both agree. The use of the love/hate was reference to the famous dictum ālove the sinner and hate the sinā.
Iāve never said that Gospel doesnāt have plenty to say about loving the sinner. That doesnāt necessarily mean that individuals priests chose to emphasize those passages or apply them to this social issue. Iāll tell you what. I will gladly concede youāre right if you can show me **any evidence at all **that Church in Ireland made a widespread campaign to lessen social stigma surrounding these women. Given the severity of the problem, it should have warranted at least as much response as the immigration issue. The USCCB has been very vocal and very public about their opposition to same-sex marriage and abortion. Was there a comparable movement by the Irish Catholic bishops is response to this problem?
Itās not that there were some bad attitudes or that a minority of individuals felt this way. By all accounts this was the prevailing attitude in Ireland. Claiming that the Church tried and failed to counter this attitude would be akin to claiming that the Church is completely incapable of influencing the Irish people (untrue, as we saw with attitudes surrounding abortion). In circumstances where people rebel against Church authority (e.g. contraception, homosexuality, abortion) we note that there is a motivating factor for that rebellion.
In this case we arenāt so lucky. Let me ask you this question. Why were the Irish so vehemently opposed to pregnancy outside of marriage it wasnāt for the Church in Ireland? Are you saying that itās complete coincidence that the Irish strongly opposed behavior that was strongly opposed by the Catholic Church? These attitudes had to come from somewhere.
Ultimately, the Church is a victim of Her own power. When you have the kind of power that Church wielded in Ireland, the wielder of that power gets the credit for the good and the bad. Either youāre claiming that the most powerful, influential institution in Ireland was incapable influencing the attitudes of its members on an issue of sexual morality or youāre forced to concede that the Church failed to act in the interest of a marginalized segment of Irish society.
Iāve posted on this issue in this thread already (#14). If one says the Irish attitude to unmarried motherhood (shame, concealment) originated with the Church, that leaves a great deal of explaing to be done on the parallel and related attitude of the Irish people to *other *forms of difference.ā¦Let me ask you this question. Why were the Irish so vehemently opposed to pregnancy outside of marriage it wasnāt for the Church in Ireland? Are you saying that itās complete coincidence that the Irish strongly opposed behavior that was strongly opposed by the Catholic Church? These attitudes had to come from somewhere.
I donāt think itās that simple. Society is influenced by many things. Ireland was not that much different from the rest of western civilization in itās attitudes toward societies āundesireablesā, There were a lot of bad ideas during the time period the home was open, like Eugenics. There is no way, Ireland escaped being influenced by that swill. People in the Church arenāt immune from a societyās bad ideas.In this case we arenāt so lucky. Let me ask you this question. Why were the Irish so vehemently opposed to pregnancy outside of marriage it wasnāt for the Church in Ireland? Are you saying that itās complete coincidence that the Irish strongly opposed behavior that was strongly opposed by the Catholic Church? These attitudes had to come from somewhere.
I did it for five years.Very rewarding but very emotionally drainingThis issue has inspired me to begin training as an Advocate for a pregnancy crisis center our parish is sponsoring.
This issue has inspired me to begin training as an Advocate for a pregnancy crisis center our parish is sponsoring.
Donāt you see the change of your words. You are going from saying the Church as a whole should be condemned for the prevalent attitude in Ireland to now saying that INDIVIDUAL priests MAY not have applied gospel readings to this issue. When challenged you retreat to this much weaker position, ask for evidence against the possibility of your weaker position and if none s produced you want to assume you are correct and then jump back to the stronger assertion that the Church s a whole should be condemned for the prevalent attitude. The logic you are using is incorrect.Iāve never said that Gospel doesnāt have plenty to say about loving the sinner. That doesnāt necessarily mean that individuals priests chose to emphasize those passages or apply them to this social issue.
Again you are creating a false position in your logic. You are comparing a situation of today which is 1) current 2) immersed in a plethora of recordable electronic media and 3) a time of mass communication with decades ago where priests verbally addressed parishioners.Iāll tell you what. I will gladly concede youāre right if you can show me **any evidence at all ** that Church in Ireland made a widespread campaign to lessen social stigma surrounding these women. Given the severity of the problem, it should have warranted at least as much response as the immigration issue. The USCCB has been very vocal and very public about their opposition to same-sex marriage and abortion. Was there a comparable movement by the Irish Catholic bishops is response to this problem?
We have to distinguish between the valid attitude that sex outside of marriage leading to children without supporting fathers is a bad thing for society against the charge that people who went down this wrong path should be hated and ostracised from society.Itās not that there were some bad attitudes or that a minority of individuals felt this way. By all accounts this was the prevailing attitude in Ireland. Claiming that the Church tried and failed to counter this attitude would be akin to claiming that the Church is completely incapable of influencing the Irish people (untrue, as we saw with attitudes surrounding abortion). In circumstances where people rebel against Church authority (e.g. contraception, homosexuality, abortion) we note that there is a motivating factor for that rebellion.
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This is another example of you not distinguishing. There is a difference between recognising something is bad for society and organising a hate campaign against the people who behave such a way. Regarding the first situation, yes the CC was completely correct in pointing out what every long term successful society in the world has found out. Sex outside of marriage leading to children without supporting fathers is detrimental to society. Of course it is. Of course the CC were correct in pointing this out. Just as they pointed out many other actions and behaviours are bad for society.In this case we arenāt so lucky. Let me ask you this question. Why were the Irish so vehemently opposed to pregnancy outside of marriage it wasnāt for the Church in Ireland? Are you saying that itās complete coincidence that the Irish strongly opposed behavior that was strongly opposed by the Catholic Church? These attitudes had to come from somewhere.
Again there is a world of difference between influencing and controlling.Either youāre claiming that the most powerful, influential institution in Ireland was incapable influencing the attitudes of its members on an issue of sexual morality or youāre forced to concede that the Church failed to act in the interest of a marginalized segment of Irish society.
Good for you!! Something like this true or not true, can bring the good out of some and gossip out of others. God Bless, MemawThis issue has inspired me to begin training as an Advocate for a pregnancy crisis center our parish is sponsoring.
Would be nice if we all wait till the truth comes out before we prejudge anyone. Times were different then. Babies and small children died here in America too at about the same rate because of many sad conditions, epidemics, etc. We in America have no room to criticize, because we kill millions of babies in the most grotesque way by abortion and most seem to care less. God have Mercy on us all. MemawThank you for sharing this. We in America like to think these things donāt happen. They do, and they did. We find our own babies in dumpsters behind abortion clinics. If people from every culture and nation respected one another, were not ashamed of their pregnant daughters, and were not made to feel damaged, shunned and unwanted, none of these things would happen in any country, much less a Catholic one. I donāt believe there is any nation can withstand the relentless finger pointing.
One day, weāll learn to actually practice Gospel values.
Forgiveness. Itās always about forgiveness.
God bless.
Isnāt that basically what I said?Would be nice if we all wait till the truth comes out before we prejudge anyone. Times were different then. Babies and small children died here in America too at about the same rate because of many sad conditions, epidemics, etc. We in America have no room to criticize, because we kill millions of babies in the most grotesque way by abortion and most seem to care less. God have Mercy on us all. Memaw
Amen.Would be nice if we all wait till the truth comes out before we prejudge anyone. Times were different then. Babies and small children died here in America too at about the same rate because of many sad conditions, epidemics, etc. We in America have no room to criticize, because we kill millions of babies in the most grotesque way by abortion and most seem to care less. God have Mercy on us all. Memaw
She said in her day, there were nuns, but Iām having difficulty finding more info on that. And yes, the baby was given up for adoption and her family was in court for four years to get the child back.The decline of Long Lane from an institution with high hopes of providing a home away from home for troubled girls to a catch-all facility for kids with as diverse problems as pregnancy to larceny charges was well noted in the local and state press. wesleyanargus.com/2013/09/23/long-lane-pt-2/
Seems some one always has to throw this up in the face of the Church no matter what the subject. How do you think this makes the good and holy priests feel? The Church is made up of many sinners including us. So we shouldnāt constantly throw stones donāt you think??? Even tho there are many sinners included in the Church, we can trust the Teaching Authority of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church to bring us through every crisis as She has done so in the past. Like Jesus said, ā Let those without sin, cast the first stone!ā God Bless, MemawI think we need to find out what the authorities uncover in their investigation.
Do I think that all the stories are lies,no.I do think there is truth to them .
So we should err on the side of caution. However nothing would surprise me,since one can see how far reaching the child sex abuse scandal is in the Church.
Sad but true. So many comments under the article mentioned by the OP are saying that the Catholic church is now ācovering upā the original story. There seems to be an awful lot of anti Catholicism in Ireland these days, not only in the media but amongst many Irish people in general.The story may be false, but the damage is done.
carolinefarrow.com/2014/06/07/tuam-breaking-800-babies-were-not-dumped/