Month: January 2006

Current Events, Media, Perspective

Holy Fools —“ OK, Nuts —“ out

I was reading the postings at Orthodixie in regard to Vassula. For those not familiar, Vassula Ryden allegedly has conversations with Jesus which she reports on.

She came to the fore recently when the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles uninvited her and a Christian Unity conference to be held in their Cathedral. This from a diocese that prides itself on ugly architecture, never meeting a militant homosexual they didn’t like, and whatever other blatantly liberal inventions they can dream up.

Since there is a dearth of comments on my blog, I decided to comment on her. You see, her adherents love to browse around the Internet looking for comments about her. They then prolifically comment on the comments.

I figured, wow, I can get bunches of comments just by talking about this woman.

The name Vassula reminds me of bibbidi-bobbidi-boo, the ‘magical’ song from Disney’s Cinderella.

My name’s Vassula, I speak with Jesus, bibbidi-bobbidi-boo!

From her website comes the following —quote— featured prominently:

“My Vassula, My Word is like a lamp to give light and shine so that every soul may see Me, feel Me and return to Me, see? I wish to remove this darkness which lies heavily in this world. I am giving you My lamp so that you place It on a lampstand and not under your beds.” (Jesus – August 28, 1989)

Vassula is very good at paraphrasing scripture and applying it to her messianic delusions. She can also quote lyrics from the Who (read the plot line – you’ll laugh).

I’m glad Jesus gave her this message, but unfortunately for her it is not exclusive. It is the same message he gives to everyone. While you are indeed special in His eyes, you do not have exclusive revelation. In addition please remember that you are responsible to God when you lead others into sin.

I would highly recommend that you choose the Church you would like to join, whether Roman Catholic or Orthodox, and hie yourself over to your local parish weekly. By the way, wear a veil, sit in back, and listen to God’s Word from those charged with bringing it to you.

Another interesting aside falls well into the lies and misdirection column: Vassula’s website claims the endorsement of the Pope, albeit when he was the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. You can read the convoluted logic at her website yourself. Basically it is a letter from Card. Ratzinger giving a heads-up to local ordinaries, and in a polite way, telling them to watch out.

The commenting may now begin…

Current Events, Media, Perspective

The EC-USA and Why the Book of Daniel Works (for them)

I previously commented on the TV series the Book of Daniel. I was able to watch the show thanks to my wife who caught it on the DVR.

The show is neither theologically or morally sound, but is does come off as the perfect farce. I found it very funny, and was most impressed by the fact that the farce of the show is perfectly in line with the farce of the church it represents, the Episcopal Church (EC-USA).

Over the weekend I read how the EC-USA supports abortion. I said to myself —“ this is interesting, how could this be true? I was going to comment on it, but upon doing some research, found that this support for murder has been a consistent policy of the EC-USA. I figured, why comment? Gene Robinson is merely the head of a very large serpent.

I need not comment further. The Pontificator covers it very well in the article: Living in the Darkness: Episcopalians and the Ethics of Abortion.

Current Events

A sad day

The modernist culture of death prevails again, but I fear evil not, for I know that Christ has overcome evil and has opened the gates of heaven to all who choose Him.

Fr. Martin Fox at Bonfire-of-the-Vanities makes a good point about states’ rights. However, regardless of man made rights, the right to kill another must be seen in light of the natural law, the deposit of faith, and God’s commands. Surely it must be restricted to self defense (only when proportionate) and national defense (again, when proportionate).

Our rejoicing in our own power over life and death, whether that of the unborn, the elderly, sick, and incapacitated, or ourselves will turn to tears when we finally see the blood on our own hands.

California executes oldest condemned inmate
Convicted murderer Allen, 76, was blind, nearly deaf and in a wheelchair

SAN FRANCISCO – California executed its oldest condemned inmate early Tuesday for arranging a triple murder 25 years ago to silence witnesses in another killing.

Clarence Ray Allen was pronounced dead by lethal injection at 12:38 a.m. at San Quentin State Prison, less than an hour after his 76th birthday ended at midnight.

Allen —” who was legally blind, nearly deaf and in a wheelchair —” was the second-oldest put to death nationally —” since the Supreme Court allowed capital punishment to resume in 1976.

Allen’s heart stopped in September, but doctors revived him and returned him to San Quentin Prison’s death row.

Oh, see, we done good… Now for part 2:

Supreme Court Upholds Oregon Suicide Law
By GINA HOLLAND

WASHINGTON (AP) – The Supreme Court on Tuesday blocked the Bush administration’s attempt to punish doctors who help terminally ill patients die, protecting Oregon’s one-of-a-kind assisted-suicide law.

It was the first loss for Chief Justice John Roberts, who joined the court’s most conservative members – Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas – in a long but restrained dissent.

The 6-3 ruling could encourage other states to consider copying Oregon’s law, used to end the lives of more than 200 seriously ill people in that state. The decision, one of the biggest expected from the court this year, also could set the stage for Congress to attempt to outlaw assisted suicide.

Justices have dealt with end-of-life cases before, most recently in 1997 when the court unanimously ruled that people have no constitutional right to die. That decision, by then-Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, left room for states to set their own rules.

Scalia said in his dissent that the court’s ruling “is perhaps driven by a feeling that the subject of assisted suicide is none of the federal government’s business. It is easy to sympathize with that position.”

At the same time, Scalia said federal officials have the power to regulate doctors in prescribing addictive drugs and “if the term ‘legitimate medical purpose’ has any meaning, it surely excludes the prescription of drugs to produce death.”

He was joined in the dissent by Thomas and Roberts. Roberts did not write separately to explain his vote. Thomas also wrote his own dissent.

Oregon’s law, which was passed by voters, covers only extremely sick people – those with incurable diseases and who are of sound mind. At least two doctors must agree the ill have six months or less to live before they can use the law.

Just like the Netherlands where its degraded into the killing of children.

“For Oregon’s physicians and pharmacists, as well as patients and their families, today’s ruling confirms that Oregon’s law is valid and that they can act under it without fear of federal sanctions,” said state Solicitor General Mary Williams.

The ruling backed a decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which said Ashcroft’s “unilateral attempt to regulate general medical practices historically entrusted to state lawmakers interferes with the democratic debate about physician-assisted suicide.”

The court’s ruling was not a final say on federal authority to override state doctor-assisted suicide laws – only a declaration that the current federal scheme did not permit that. However, it still could have ramifications outside of Oregon.

“This is a disappointing decision that is likely to result in a troubling movement by states to pass their own assisted suicide laws,” said Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice, which backed the administration.

The case is Gonzales v. Oregon, 04-623.

Current Events, Media

Joy for Judas?

I read of this while perusing the Remnant Newspaper. I like the Remnant for its critical eye toward modernism. I especially agree with their calling to mind what many ‘conservative’ Roman Catholics engage in these days —“ papolatry (pope worship —“ hey he’s the pope, what he says must be true, and isn’t he nice, great, kind, loving, always smiling).

Anyway, before I go off on a rant, I would love your perspective on this.

It does in fact make me sick to think that such a thing is even being considered. Now I love intellectual debate as much as the next cleric, but this stuff just supports the evil of the age. There is no God, there is no right and wrong (just do what makes you feel good —“ and don’t hurt anyone), there is no evil, and people cannot possibly knowingly participate in or make evil choices.

Judas the Misunderstood
From Richard Owen, in Rome for the Times of London

Vatican moves to clear reviled disciple’s name

JUDAS ISCARIOT, the disciple who betrayed Jesus with a kiss, is to be given a makeover by Vatican scholars.

The proposed —rehabilitation— of the man who was paid 30 pieces of silver to identify Jesus to Roman soldiers in the Garden of Gethsemane, comes on the ground that he was not deliberately evil, but was just —fulfilling his part in God’s plan—.

Christians have traditionally blamed Judas for aiding and abetting the Crucifixion, and his name is synonymous with treachery. According to St Luke, Judas was —possessed by Satan—.

Now, a campaign led by Monsignor Walter Brandmuller, head of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Science, is aimed at persuading believers to look kindly at a man reviled for 2,000 years.

Mgr Brandmuller told fellow scholars it was time for a —re-reading— of the Judas story. He is supported by Vittorio Messori, a prominent Catholic writer close to both Pope Benedict XVI and the late John Paul II.

Signor Messori said that the rehabilitation of Judas would —resolve the problem of an apparent lack of mercy by Jesus toward one of his closest collaborators—.

Yes, yes, Jesus is all merciful —“ we can all agree on that. But His mercy has a requirement, conversion and repentance.

He told La Stampa that there was a Christian tradition that held that Judas was forgiven by Jesus and ordered to purify himself with —spiritual exercises— in the desert.

Of course the Gospels differ. But I like this one…

In scholarly circles, it has long been unfashionable to demonise Judas and Catholics in Britain are likely to welcome Judas’s rehabilitation.

Father Allen Morris, Christian Life and Worship secretary for the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales, said: —If Christ died for all —” is it possible that Judas too was redeemed through the Master he betrayed?— The —rehabilitation— of Judas could help the Pope’s drive to improve Christian-Jewish relations, which he has made a priority of his pontificate.

Looks like under Anglican auspices England has become the new Las Vegas —“ anything goes. I’m OK, you’re OK; there is no sin. Thanks Gene Robinson and the rest of the heretics. For my part I believe what happens in England should stay in England.

Some Bible experts say Judas was —a victim of a theological libel which helped to create anti Semitism— by forming an image of him as a —sinister villain— prepared to betray for money.

In many medieval plays and paintings Judas is portrayed with a hooked nose and exaggerated Semitic features. In Dante’s Inferno, Judas is relegated to the lowest pits of Hell, where he is devoured by a three-headed demon.

The move to clear Judas’s name coincides with plans to publish the alleged Gospel of Judas for the first time in English, German and French. Though not written by Judas, it is said to reflect the belief among early Christians —” now gaining ground in the Vatican —” that in betraying Christ Judas was fulfilling a divine mission, which led to the arrest and Crucifixion of Jesus and hence to man’s salvation.

Perhaps someone at the Vatican has a financial interest in the book? No, that couldn’t be true.

Mgr Brandmuller said that he expected —no new historical evidence— from the supposed gospel, which had been excluded from the canon of accepted Scripture.

But it could —serve to reconstruct the events and context of Christ’s teachings as they were seen by the early Christians—. This included that Jesus had always preached —forgiveness for one’s enemies—.

Lets be exact here —“ not forgiveness, but love and prayer.

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your heavenly Father, for he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust. For if you love those who love you, what recompense will you have? Do not the tax collectors do the same? And if you greet your brothers only, what is unusual about that? Do not the pagans do the same? So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect. (Matt. 5:43-48)

Oh, and by the way, its a little hard to write a gospel while you’re hanging from a tree with your guts spilling out on the ground. Now, on with the article

Some Vatican scholars have expressed concern over the reconsideration of Judas. Monsignor Giovanni D’Ercole, a Vatican theologian, said it was —dangerous to re-evaulate Judas and muddy the Gospel accounts by reference to apocryphal writings. This can only create confusion in believers.— The Gospels tell how Judas later returned the 30 pieces of silver —” his —blood money— —” and hanged himself, or according to the Acts of the Apostles, —fell headlong and burst open so that all his entrails burst out—.

Some accounts suggest he acted out of disappointment that Jesus was not a revolutionary who intended to overthrow Roman occupation and establish —God’s Kingdom on Earth—.

In the Gospel accounts, Jesus reveals to the disciples at the Last Supper that one of them will betray him, but does not say which. He adds —Woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been better for that man if he had not been born.—

But he also —” according to St Matthew —” acknowledged that Judas had a divine function to fulfil, saying to him during the arrest, —Friend, do what you are here to do— and adding that —the prophecies of the Scriptures must be fulfilled—.

The —Gospel of Judas—, a 62-page worn and tattered papyrus, was found in Egypt half a century ago and later sold by antiquities dealers to the Maecenas Foundation in Basle, Switzerland.

Michael J. Natt, publisher of The Remnant had this to say:

The following article, published under the title “The Priest and the Present Crisis in the Church”, was written by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (RIP) and appeared as a Remnant exclusive in June, 1972. In the wake of the mind-blowing news out of Rome this week that the Vatican’s Pontifical Committee for Historical Science has proposed some sort of bizarre process of —rehabilitation— for Judas Iscariot (no, I’m not making it up! [full story]), it seems somehow apropos to revisit the predictions of universal ecclesial crisis that Archbishop Lefebvre was warning against some 35 years ago. As the Vatican embarks on this surreal quest to recast in a more favorable light the betrayer of our Savior and the one whom Christ Himself said would have been better off had he never been born, three things become clearer: 1) A reprieve for Catholics longing for an end to this 40-year nightmare is evidently not in the offing; 2) The need for traditional Catholic resistance to this Modernist madness is greater now than ever before; 3) A significant number of the Catholic hierarchy have taken leave of their Catholic senses.

Everything Else

Quartet Meme

I’m taking up the challange from Fr. Jim Tucker at Dappled Things.

Four Jobs I’ve had in My Life

1. Baskin Robbins Ice Cream scooper.
2. Produce stocker.
3. Business Manager in a Not for Profit organization.
4. Chief Enforcement Officer for a government agency.

Four Movies I Could Watch Over and Over and Have

1. Kelly’s Heros
2. The Cardinal
3. Desire
4. Star Wars or Star Trek Movies (all)

Four Places I Have Lived

1. Buffalo, NY
2. Ogdensburg, NY
3. Albany, NY
4. Voorheesville, NY

Four TV Shows I Love to Watch
(I really do not watch TV so “love” doesn’t really apply)

1. Star Trek (Voyager, TNG, original)
2. Looney Tunes
3. Extreme Makeover —“ Home Edition
4. Good Morning America

Four Places I Have Been On Vacation

1. Miami, FL
2. Rzeszów, Poland
3. Honolulu, HI
4. Boise, ID

Four Websites I Visit Daily

1. The blogs in my blogroll
2. Buffalo News
3. Albany Times Union
4. Our Parish Website (bvmc.org)

Four Favorite Foods
(My favorite foods number in the hundreds, so here are four random ones)

1. Most anything Polish
2. Most anything Italian
3. Bread
4. Most any fish

Four Places I Would Rather Be Right Now

1. Church
2. Poland, visiting my fiends.
3. Hosting a dinner party for friends and family
4. Caribbean

Four People Whom I Tag Next

Any blogger reading this may consider himself or herself tagged, with my compliments.

Anyone wondering what a meme is – look here…

Saints and Martyrs

January 15 – St. Paul the Hermit (Św. Paweł)

Święty Pawle, największy z pustelników, któryś porzucił świat i w samotności od ludzi zapomniany służyłeś całe życie Bogu, – uproś nam te łaskę, ażebyśmy za twoim przykładem umartwiali ciało, unikali zwodniczych rozkoszy światowych, i we wszystkim szukali chwały Bożej i własnego uświątobliwienia dla nadziei wiecznego żywota. Amen.