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William Murchison
William Murchison
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How not to Appraise a Pope

Comment

Church-state separation never seems more a reality in America than when the media begin to appraise both the qualifications for a new pope and the challenges he — whoever "he" turns out to be — must face.

The idea arises quickly on these occasions that the cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church are choosing a chief executive like the president of General Mills or, for that matter, the president of the United States.

Thus what we need (it seems) is a genial man with obvious people skills. A spiritual Bill Clinton? We may or may not need a European. It seems to depend on whether the church needs to reflect in its supreme head the changing ethnic nature of Roman Catholicism.

We need, apparently, a forward-looking pope, as well, someone who listens keenly to the faithful as they anticipate and express their needs. Calls go out for the church to open the priesthood to women, abolish priestly celibacy and step back from the gigantic task of declaring and enforcing the Christian attitude on sexuality. This makes democracy an element in the choice.

The church needs also — and most important of all, according to many — a pope who will do something (just what isn't apparent), about the pedophilia scandal before it injures more young lives and undermines the church's prestige.

It's the whole sexual question again: the bodily-expression question. We leave it aside long enough to note that around the body revolves, in human terms, practically all that matters. Whatever successor of Peter deals successfully with the church's earthly postures and procedures will earn the acclaim of the world. Provided, of course, that the popular chorus has it right concerning the job of a pope and the church he leads.

If a well-wishing Episcopalian may step sidewise into the debate, half-right seems about the right way to judge current appraisals of the church's stake in who becomes pope.

The deeper realities of the faith tend not to emerge in media treatments of the church's needs.

After all, if the Wall Street Journal or (less likely) Chris Matthews came out in favor of the re-spiritualization of American life, a great clamor would arise from many quarters. Religion? What in the world would that have to do with the world we live in?

Not much, according to the secular terms in which we commonly address secular needs. These needs — knowledge, wisdom, comfort, well-being, love - commonly find themselves embedded in political action programs tailored to the amassing of votes on election day.

The spiritual realm that popes and prelates and preachers and plain people of one kind and another address — when allowed the freedom to do so by the secular media — is of a different character. Within it, by report, lie the ultimate destinies of human beings, whatever their race or sex.

Sex, for instance, contrary to what modern culture maintains, isn't a problem to be adjusted through legislation, regulation, court cases and so on. In religious terms — the terms in which popes commonly traffic — sex is an element of the human condition: sometimes abused in practice, nevertheless a reality of a keenly spiritual sort, with responsibility for practice and action owed to the God who reportedly launched the whole male-female enterprise.

The papacy's worldly critics make an irrefutable case against carelessness in sex — as exemplified by the abuse of children at the hands of ordained men. Yet which is likelier to make a difference, defrockings and lawsuits or moral and spiritual reform based on careful explanation of the divinely based relationship between the members of both sexes?

"Divinely based" may or may not cut the mustard in a place and time seemingly self-liberated from obligations outside the purely human sphere. Thus the purely human practice of portraying popes as purely human CEOs to be credentialed and judged on their purely human traits and abilities.

Oh well, the Pope Watch ends in just weeks. Maybe then the Lord can pick up the slack.

William Murchison, author and commentator, writes from Dallas. To find out more about William Murchison, and to see features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.Creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM



Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;... I guess they decided to pick a good example... God knows they need one... Why they allow themselves democracy and do not allow us democracy is what I would consider a real good question to have answered...Still whether they allow us democracy or not, we vote by being good in our own way, on our own time, in the world as we see it...
I don't know a single person who has left the church thinking the church was too good for them... I have always been happy to be in the company of any crowd trying to be better than when they got there... But; it is easy to grow sick of the politics of a place that should be free of politics... It is easy to feel the offense of people when they do not hide it if you should dare judge your church in any fashion...There are many who do not realized that the church was on the cutting edge of modern about a thousand years ago, and has not progressed much since...
We have the individual, and all the laws that follow from that concept because of the Catholic Church... We have individual equality, not so much from them, as what they did with the Roman Law of Nations that saw all nations as equal... And we do have what Nietzsche hated St. Paul the most for, in the suggestion that all men are equal in the sight of God...What a terrible thing to say, and what slight reason to hate... But they really have not done much since...
When is the last time you heard of the church standing up for human rights... They are always on the other side.. The church knows money lies at the end of support for people with money... People have very often given their lives and bargained their souls on the exploitation of humanity, and they have buttered their bread with human misery; but who does the church refuse??? If you want to leave your money some where it will never see the pockets of the poor, then give to the church and they will pray over your bones, and bury you in hallowed ground... Who knows what good it does...
I personally believe people are better without a reward... When they see what they sent around coming around, they have learned all that philosophy and religion can teach... The good we do may be lost with those who feel it, but the evil we set in motion goes on and on... People who need an eternal reward to do good are missing the point, and trading a life of meaning for no life at all... So it is with Good Popes, that very often more good has come of bad men in that office than from good men...
Inevitably they are corrupted if not already corrupted... Jesuits are a class among themselves, and that is what I would have been if caught by the church... But let's see... After Pius, John the 23 was such a relief to people, and I can remember when he died, and that my whole town resounded with church bells from every steeple, on every church... Good people are so rare that all of Christendom must some times celebrate them...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Thu Mar 14, 2013 2:51 PM
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