J
jgeorges45
Guest
I see. And if your words are taken to imply that the current San Francisco Archbishop and perhaps also his predecessor, Archbishop (and now Cardinal) Levada were not “inclined to speak out publicly in defense of the Church’s teachings,” why that’s not really what you meant at all.I’m hoping the Archbishop will be inclined to speak out publicly in defense of the Church’s teachings. If the Archbishop feels that her situation warrants excommunication, that is his decision to make. I would much rather have that occur than Pelosi continue to flout her heretical positions while claiming to be Catholic with little if any response from the Church.
I shudder to think of the number of people led away from the truth of the faith because they saw politicians standing side by side with clergy one day only to fight against the very things the Church teaches the next. I shudder to think about the number of people who’s understanding of the truth has been shaken due to the actions of those in public positions who call themselves Catholic and until recently, a saddening lack of a Church response. I’m sick of seeing so a called Catholic in Nancy Pelosi who urges the Bishops to get more involved in political matters when it suits her purposes on things like immigration reform and then tells them to stay out of politics a few months later when the issue of abortion or gay marriage comes up.
If any of that ever stops, it would indeed be lovely. And if you expected me to feel ashamed or to apologize for any of that, you have the wrong guy.
How to actually go about handling it, I will leave to the Archbishop.
A Pelosi excommunication isn’t going to happen. Bishop Cordileone has spent three years in Oakland and will probably spend longer in San Francisco. But he’s widely viewed here as someone who would like to return someday to the Vatican, where he studied for several years and worked for another seven. He’s young enough at 56 to do that. But starting a war in San Francisco wouldn’t contribute to that end.