Microsoft Users

Please note that they are supporting sa.me se.x marria.ge in Washington now. In good conscience, you can no longer use a Microsoft product. Yes, there are alternatives to Microsoft. Ubuntu or another Linux distribution is a good place to start and it is free!  Macs are a real alternative too if you must have expensive software. There is NO reason to support this company any longer.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501465_162-57363121-501465/microsoft-calls-for-same-sex-marriage-in-washington-state/

Filed under: General Stuff

Integrity

 

I believe, Mr. Santorum, you were elected, in some part, on your pro-life convictions, therefore, you should have stood up and said that you would not vote for a budget that funded any sort of abortifacient birth control and voted no, it’s called INTEGRITY.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyFSXGVX73s&feature=player_embedded

Filed under: American Liberties, Catholic, General Stuff

{pretty, happy, funny, real}

~ Capturing the context of everyday life ~

round button chicken

Today I am linking up with Rosie from Like Mother, Like Daughter for {pretty, happy, funny, real}

{pretty}

Sister Joseph Marie

This past weekend, I wen to Birmingham, Alabama for a retreat with the Sister Servants of the Eternal Word. While there, I was able to visit with a family friend, Sister Joseph Marie. Joshua has known her since she was just a child! It was fun to catch up with her!

{happy}

Chocolate Chip pancakes in honor of the Feast of the Presentation of our Lord!

They made everyone happy!

{funny}

Can’t get these kids to smile all at once. (Or even the baby to show up for pictures!) 🙂 This is the kids waiting for the pancakes to be done. Karol helped them all get dressed this morning. His shirt is askew and inside out, Caecilia’s dress is on backwards and Margaret’s shirt it stained. 🙂

{real}

Yesterday, my friend Margaret came over so we could make spaghetti sauce for our parish’s fundraiser, which is tonight. Our job was to make sauce using 10 pounds of ground beef (that’s each). This here is what fat from 20 pounds of ground beef looks like.

Besides throwing it away, any ideas of what I can do with it? It is almost pure fat.

Filed under: General Stuff

Lofty Thoughts…

….just wondering….

 

If you really want to have another baby and “everything” is in place to have another one (think health, money, house, job security, good wages, other children out of diapers.) then why not have another one?

I don’t, I don’t, I DO NOT, get it when a woman goes around moaning about wanting to have another baby, but then says she is done having children…then goes on to talk about being jealous of women with babies.

Just have another baby already.

#ireallyneedasoapboxtab

Filed under: General Stuff

Santorum and Just War

Reading through the quotes and information from and about Rick Santorum regarding his position on war, I saw that he supported the sending of troops in to Iraq. (H.J.Res. 114; Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002. The administration would be required to report to Congress that diplomatic options have been exhausted before, or within 48 hours after military action has started. Every 60 days the president would also be required to submit a progress report to Congress.)

Blessed John Paul II spoke out against actions in Iraq in an address on 12 January 2003 “War is never just another means that one can choose to employ for settling differences between nations” and reiterated that “war cannot be decided upon . . . except as the very last option and in accordance with very strict conditions.”  Address of His Holiness, Pope John Paul II to the Diplomatic Corps

He also stated in his Angelus on Sunday, 16 March 2003, “There is still time to negotiate; there is still room for peace, it is never too late to come to an understanding and to continue discussions.”
Then Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict,  said of the use of military force in Iraq:
Pope John Paul’s position on the war to be “the thoughts of a man of conscience occupying the highest functions in the Catholic Church” and “the appeal of a conscience enlightened by the faith.”  And “reasons sufficient for unleashing a war against Iraq did not exist,” in part because: “proportion between the possible positive consequences and the sure negative effect of the conflict was not guaranteed. On the contrary, it seems clear that the negative consequences will be greater than anything positive that might be obtained.”
If you still think that Santorum takes just war seriously, according to the mind of the Church and her Magisterium, please make a real argument based on fact.
Filed under: General Stuff

I Need a Soapbox Tab

soapbox {Informing people about our religious freedoms being eroded and the United States Constitution being ignored is far more important then Catholic Schools Week and the lame-o activities that surround it.

That is all.

Oh, wait, one more thing….when attempting to promote vocations in a diocese, via social media, you might want to actually do that and not promote crappy music and coffee houses. Just sayin’.

Now I am done. } soapbox

*and yeah, I’m talking to you a certain central Ohio diocese*

Filed under: General Stuff

Bishop Hartmayer vows to fight conscience rights ruling

+ Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv., Bishop of Savannah has issued a letter regarding the HHS mandate that all employers required to provide health insurance to its employees under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), must provide health coverage that includes sterilization, abortion-inducing drugs, and contraception. Here is the letter read in many, if not all the parishes in the diocese this past weekend:

 

My dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I am writing to you on a matter of grave moral concern — freedom of religion and freedom of conscience. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced last week that almost all employers, including Catholic employers, will be forced to offer their employees health coverage that includes sterilization, abortion-inducing drugs, and contraception.  Almost all health insurers will be forced to include those “services” in the health policies they write.  And almost all individuals will be forced to buy that coverage as a part of their policies.

In so ruling, the Obama Administration has cast aside the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, denying to Catholics our Nation’s first and most fundamental freedom, that of religious liberty.  And as a result, unless the rule is overturned, we Catholics will be compelled either to violate our consciences, or to drop health coverage for our employees (and suffer the penalties for doing so).  The Administration’s sole concession was to give our institutions one year to comply.

I stand in unity with Catholic bishops throughout the United States and other religious leaders vowing to fight this mandate.

Along with my brother bishops and other religious leaders, I insist that this is a direct attack on our religious freedom and our First Amendment rights.  I will work with the bishops, other religious leaders and our fellow Americans to remove this unjust regulation. 

If the Administration will not rescind this violation of our First Amendment rights, we must call on our elected leaders to do so.  I ask you to pray that wisdom and justice may prevail, and work together to restore our religious liberty.

Please join me in continuing to follow the development of this important issue and contacting our elected representatives to seek a just resolution.

Through the Southern Cross, diocesan and Georgia Catholic Conference websites and other media, I will keep you up to date on the progress of this important issue.

Sincerely yours in Christ,
+ Gregory J. Hartmayer, OFM Conv.
Bishop of Savannah

Filed under: General Stuff

 

From the Diocese of Arlington, VA:

ARLINGTON, VA (January 24, 2012) – The Most Reverend Paul S. Loverde, Bishop of Arlington and spiritual leader of Northern Virginia’s nearly half million Catholics, today commented on the decision by the Obama Administration to mandate sterilization and contraceptive coverage, including abortifacients, in health insurance plans offered by religious institutions, such as colleges and hospitals. He released the following statement:

“The decision by the Department of Health and Human Services is a direct attack against religious liberty. This ill-considered policy comprises a truly radical break with the liberties that have underpinned our nation since its founding. I have just returned from Rome, where I and my brother U.S. bishops discussed with Pope Benedict XVI and other Vatican officials the vital importance of religious liberty to human freedom and the proper functioning of a just society. While there, I was deeply troubled to learn of this terrible lapse in judgment by our civil leadership here at home.

“I am absolutely convinced that an unprecedented and very dangerous line has been crossed that goes to the heart of the freedom of religion, and that this action does intolerable violence to our First Amendment rights. Catholic hospitals, charitable organizations, colleges and other Church-affiliated entities, as well as individual Catholic employers who seek to follow their consciences in the provision of healthcare to their employees, will be required to cover sterilizations and artificial contraception, including abortifacients, in insurance plans, violating the clear teachings of the Church. The meager religious exemption grudgingly allowed by the Obama Administration is structured so narrowly that any Church institution that serves a considerable number of non-Catholics would not be protected, directly harming our various ministries throughout the community.

“I will speak out consistently in the weeks and months ahead on this gravely important struggle for the freedom to practice our faith as full citizens of this great nation. I urge the faithful of Northern Virginia and all citizens of good will to understand what is at stake in this unavoidable confrontation, which has been thrust upon us, and to be prepared to engage in a strong defense in the civil arena of the basic human right of religious liberty. I have been gratified to see the strong reaction so far against this outrageous decision in newspapers and among Americans of all faiths. For now, we should all be united in prayer that President Obama and Secretary Sebelius will reconsider the action they have taken.”

Filed under: General Stuff

Why We Aren’t Crazy

Of course, as I’m sure you readers know, a lot of the talk that happens around here (for about the last 6 months or so) is about the Republican primaries, the candidates and the issues.

Most often, this conversation consists of a mix of amazement and frustration. On one hand, it is hard to believe that the views of good people in our Catholic world can be so disparate when our Faith provides us with the most solid base of doctrine and sound guidance that exists anywhere. Why is it that every Catholic man who lives and cherishes his Faith does not agree on the best candidate for the presidency?

Besides the obvious answer – the darkness of intellect caused by Original Sin – which, in this case would also happen to be no answer, I think there are two things to keep in mind:

  1. The things which are most important to us engender the most powerful of emotional responses which go well to support our intellectual decisions, and
  2. Along with the gift of solid doctrine and magisterial authority (and, indeed, before it) our Lord gave us the give of free will.

In the case of a primary race for Presidential candidacy backed by one party of a (sadly) two-party political machine, the issue of free agency plays an ultimate role.

Inevitably, we must make a distinction within this second point as well because there are two ways of approaching the role free agency plays in politics – the intentional and the unintentional.

The more obvious and easily seen role is free will’s unintentionality. Generally, when we act, we don’t think “I am now going to make this choice in freedom” – we just do something. In the same way, when we choose a candidate to support in a political election, we don’t choose him because we have the freedom to, we just use that freedom unintentionally. As a moral free agent, however, it is important that one generally recognize the implications of his freedom and act accordingly, so the unintentionality of free will, in the case of a strong Catholic, is guided by the general good morals he has developed in the course of his Christian formation. But, this is all obvious.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear to be obvious to many strong Catholics that the intentionality of free will is also important in a political race – indeed, that it is probably many degrees more important. This is because freedom of agency, in a social sense, does not just happen. It is always fraught with the peril of being overcome by the ambition of the powerful and being abandoned by the incertitude of the weak. The Church recognizes this, and has repeatedly taught in her social doctrine that governments have a responsibility, above all, to ensure the freedom of all men to act according to their consciences.

An interesting point here is that the Church leaves moral action to the agent – each man has the obligation to determine his actions according to his conscience! This does not mean that he is always correct, or that the Church is under the illusion that there is some magical social omega point at which, if enough people have real social freedom, the world will become a utopia.

The Church is not naive.

Rather, She realizes that, for any man to attain beatitude, he MUST do so through free action. It is only by free choice to accept the Law of God (through the Natural Law and, more specifically, through Revelation) that man receives sanctifying grace (whether through Sacramental means or by direct Divine offering, depending on the circumstance). Because of this, She knows that it would be fruitless for governments to compel their citizens to “act morally”. In fact, such an idea is oxymoronic – one cannot be forced to moral action. In fact, the more force that government has in our lives, the less freedom we have to choose to do good in particular circumstances! Civil liberty equals the opportunity for moral liberty!

A distinction must be made between forcing a man to do “something good” and forcing him to not hurt others. In this matter, the Church urges governments to take necessary steps. So, the dilemma we face is knowing where this distinction draws the line in politics and law. This is left up to the sphere of the laity, of course, as it is not the role of the Church to charter constitutions and write civil laws.

This elections cycle, the dilemma is compounded by the fact that we actually have a candidate running the primaries who is not woefully status-quo. (We had the same choice last election cycle for a very brief period…alas!) He is pitted against several other candidates who are woefully status-quo, as evidenced by their political records. On one hand, we have the choice of big-government Republicans who will continue creating and enabling an atmosphere of extreme power, which is most likely to become extremely corrupt. Even considering the possibility that their lip-service to the pro-life cause, cutting spending, reducing government interference and forcing a moral society is actually heartfelt (which I don’t believe for a minute), the fact that they are creating more big-government is a serious problem for freedom in society. Even if these candidates are benificent (which I mostly don’t believe for a minute), what happens when they leave office and turn us over to those more corrupt and prone to evil interference. (Consider what this has done for us already – we’ve got Roe v. Wade, Obamacare, continuous illegal and unjust wars, etc, in exchange for allowing establishment Republicans enlarge the scope of the Federal Government. Just to name a few.)

On the other hand, we have a man who stands, often alone and chastised, for getting the government out of our lives so that we have the opportunity to make decent laws at a more local level (where people are real and sane). We have a man who stands for protecting life in a way that’s much more likely to work in the short run (let states establish laws against killing babies, which the majority would do very quickly) and in the long run (by working toward an amendment to the constitution that prohibits killing anyone after conception). We have a man who wants to help protect our children by giving the right to education back to parents…who wants to help families by stopping the government from stealing our hard earned money and using it for immoral or silly purposes…who wants to make the Constitution of the United States once more the foundation of how our government operates, so that it operates to protect our freedoms rather than protecting the government and big business when they intrude and conspire against real people.

In the end, I’m sure this article, though heartfelt, will convince no-one new to actually pay attention to Ron Paul and what he really says (which, by the way, is not what the media say that he says.) I’m sure these Facemyers will continue to be labeled “Paul-bots” along with other mindless epithets, by the masses who are continually wooed by the empty promises of the establishment Republicans. Fine – do what you like, but these Catholics are firmly convinced that the best way to a moral and healthy society is not by big government, or more wars, etc. And to get there, we need the only man available who has the breadth of knowledge and wisdom to see the political landscape clearly, and the continual record of doing what is right by fighting big government so that the people may continue to live freely.

We aren’t crazy – unless by crazy you mean wanting to love God, the Church and our family as fully as possible, and being allowed to do so in real freedom – moral and civil. And as far as we see it, Dr. Ron Paul is a bright beacon of hope for freedom in a sullied landscape.

Filed under: General Stuff