Monday, February 2, 2009

I wonder how many have the mandatum?

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50 Catholic U.S. Lawmakers Call for Direct Repudiation

Irrespective of the fact as to whether or not these people are "Catholics" is the question as to whether or not they have ever read the Bill of Rights.

  • "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech. . . ."

Washington Post: Fifty Catholic members of Congress have written Pope Benedict XVI, asking him to directly reject the views of British-born Bishop Richard Williamson, who has denied the scale of the Holocaust. Benedict last week reinstated Williamson and three other bishops who have rejected the church's teachings from the second Vatican Council. An excerpt:

"We understand that . . . you do not share in his views. And we welcome your recent statement expressing 'full and indisputable solidarity' with the Jewish people. But this is too sensitive an issue to be handled without a direct repudiation of Bishop Williamson's views. As a spiritual leader and the head of the Catholic Church, we believe it is vital that you publicly state your unequivocal position on this matter so that it is clear where the Church stands on one of the most consequential events of the 20th century. To neglect to do so is to allow others to portray it as they wish and impede the progress made over so many years toward harmony and reconciliation."

2 comments:

Fr. Andrew said...

Fifty Catholic members of Congress have written Pope Benedict XVI, asking him to directly reject the views of British-born Bishop Richard Williamson, who has denied the scale of the Holocaust.

Too late he already did.

Also, what if Pope Benedict wrote 50 Catholic members of the U.S. Congress and asked them to reject views contrary to the Gospel? Oh, right.

Anonymous said...

And these 50 politicians presume to lecture the Pope about rectitude? Why they cannot so much as spell the word, much less give pointers on it.

--William