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The Socialist Myth: Igor Shafarevich and Modern Nihilism

By Prof. Thomas Heinrich Stark on Nov 04, 2021 11:00 pm
Comprehensive ideological systems, which determine the prevailing world view in societies and cultures, are based on so-called “grand narratives”.1 Such grand narratives are mostly of a religious nature. In earlier phases of human cultural development, [...]
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Why equity, diversity, and inclusivity are not absolute values

By Bishop Robert Barron on Nov 04, 2021 10:45 pm
In the wake of the French Revolution, the triplet of “liberty, equality, fraternity” emerged as a moral compass for the secular society. Something similar has happened today in regard to “equity, diversity, and inclusion.” For [...]
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Archbishop Gomez addresses rise of ‘wokeness’, social movements in US

By Catholic News Agency on Nov 04, 2021 07:00 pm
Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles speaks at the USCCB's fall meeting in Baltimore, Md., Nov. 11, 2019 / Christine Rousselle/CNA

Denver Newsroom, Nov 4, 2021 / 17:00 pm (CNA).

On Thursday, Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles discussed the rise of new secular ideologies and movements for social change in the United States during a virtual address to the Congress of Catholics and Public Life in Madrid. 

He asserted that it is “important for the Church to understand and engage these new movements—not on social or political terms, but as dangerous substitutes for true religion.” 

“Today’s critical theories and ideologies are profoundly atheistic,” Gomez said Nov. 4. “They deny the soul, the spiritual, transcendent dimension of human nature; or they think that it is irrelevant to human happiness.”

Gomez’ thesis, he said, is that the new social movements that exist in the U.S., such as “social justice,” “wokeness,” “identity politics,” “intersectionality,” or “successor ideology,” should be understood as “pseudo-religions, and even replacements and rivals to traditional Christian beliefs,” and can result in tribalism. 

“They reduce what it means to be human to essentially physical qualities—the color of our skin, our sex, our notions of gender, our ethnic background, or our position in society,” he said during the address.

“With the breakdown of the Judeo-Christian worldview and the rise of secularism, political belief systems based on social justice or personal identity have come to fill the space that Christian belief and practice once occupied,” Gomez said. 

Gomez approximated today’s social movements to that of Marxism and noted that they resemble other heresies found in Church history. 

“Like the Gnostics, they reject creation and the body,” Gomez said. “They seem to believe that human beings can become whatever we decide to make of ourselves.”

“These movements are also Pelagian, believing that redemption can be accomplished through our own human efforts, without God,” he said.

Gomez criticized groups of people involved in social movements for prioritizing a “global civilization, built on a consumer economy and guided by science, technology, humanitarian values, and technocratic ideas about organizing society,” and that they have “no need for old-fashioned belief systems and religions.” 

Gomez also noted a “shrinking space” that Christians, Church institutions, and Christian businesses are allowed to occupy with the social changes at work.

“We recognize that often what is being canceled and corrected are perspectives rooted in Christian beliefs — about human life and the human person, about marriage, the family, and more,” he said in the address. 

His message, which was delivered in three parts, discussed the global movement of secularization and de-Christianization, and the impact of the pandemic; a spiritual interpretation of the social justice and political identity movements in the U.S.; and evangelical priorities for the Church.

The COVID-19 pandemic, Gomez said, accelerated the pace at which social issues are being addressed, but it was not the pandemic that caused these movements. He referenced the murder of George Floyd as a tragedy that “became a stark reminder that racial and economic inequality are still deeply embedded in our society.”

“The new social movements and ideologies that we are talking about today, were being seeded and prepared for many years in our universities and cultural institutions,” he said. “But with the tension and fear caused by the pandemic and social isolation, and with the killing of an unarmed black man by a white policeman and the protests that followed in our cities, these movements were fully unleashed in our society.” 

Gomez said that, while there are unique conditions in the United States, “similar broad patterns of aggressive secularization” can be seen in Europe. He called those who are active in such movements “an elite leadership class” that “has little interest in religion and no real attachments to the nations they live in or to local traditions or cultures.” 

He suggested that social movements offer an explanation for events that occur in the world, along with a sense of meaning or purpose—space previously occupied by the Christian worldview. 

“Like Christianity, these new movements tell their own ‘story of salvation,’” Gomez said. 

Gomez presented the Christian story of salvation in contrast to what he called the “woke story,” which “draws its strength from the simplicity of its explanations—the world is divided into innocents and victims, allies and adversaries,” he said. 

“Clearly, this is a powerful and attractive narrative for millions of people in American society and in societies across the West,” Gomez said. “In fact, many of America’s leading corporations, universities, and even public schools are actively promoting and teaching this vision.”

Gomez said that people who buy into these social movements are often motivated by noble intentions and “want to change conditions in society that deny men and women their rights and opportunities for a good life.” 

“We all want to build a society that provides equality, freedom, and dignity for every person,” Gomez said. “But we can only build a just society on the foundation of the truth about God and human nature.”

To address the social movements, Gomez said, the Church needs to “proclaim Jesus Christ. Boldly, creatively.” 

“We should not be intimidated by these new religions of social justice and political identity,” he said. “The Gospel remains the most powerful force for social change that the world has ever seen.” 

Gomez said that the Church has “been ‘antiracist’ from the beginning,” but has “not always lived up to our beautiful principles, or carried out the mission entrusted to us by Christ.”

“The world does not need a new secular religion to replace Christianity,” Gomez said. “It needs you and me to be better witnesses. Better Christians. Let us begin by forgiving, loving, sacrificing for others, putting away spiritual poisons like resentment and envy.”

Gomez said he draws inspiration from the lives of U.S. figures such as Dorothy Day and Venerable Augustus Tolton. 

“Father Tolton once said, ‘The Catholic Church deplores a double slavery — that of the mind and that of the body. She endeavors to free us of both,’ Gomez said. “Today, we need this confidence in the power of the Gospel.”

He concluded his address by recognizing an “authentic religious awakening,” in the United States and asked for the continued intercession of Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the Americas.

[...]
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Cardinal Pell: ‘Resistance’ in the Secretariat of State cost Vatican money in London deal

By Catholic News Agency on Nov 04, 2021 07:30 am
Cardinal George Pell gives an interview to EWTN News in Rome, Italy, on Dec. 9, 2020. Credit: Daniel Ibáñez/CNA. / null Rome Newsroom, Nov 4, 2021 / 05:30 am (CNA). Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican’s former economy czar, has said that if his of... [...]
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St. Charles Borromeo and the key principles of Catholic reform

By Fr. Charles Fox on Nov 04, 2021 03:14 am
The Catholic Counter-Reformation of the second-half of the sixteenth century had many important protagonists. One of the men who did the most to advance the cause of reform on the practical level was St. Charles [...]
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Prayer and politics in a culture dominated by narratives of autolatry

By Casey Chalk on Nov 04, 2021 12:27 am
A friend who works for one of the Forbes’ “Fifty Best Employers” recently told me about the organization’s LGBTQ+ alliance, which now pushes its government-sanctioned messaging on the workforce through regular emails. One newsletter explained [...]
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Students at Catholic high school in San Francisco stage walkout protest of pro-life assembly

By Catholic News Agency on Nov 03, 2021 01:19 pm
null / Ryan Tyler Smith via Flickr (CC BY 2.0). San Francisco, Calif., Nov 3, 2021 / 11:19 am (CNA). Students at a Catholic high school in San Francisco staged a walkout last month to protest an all-school assembly which featured a pro-life spea... [...]
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On John Paul II’s 75th anniversary

By George Weigel on Nov 03, 2021 03:05 am
By any worldly measure, 1946 was an annus horribilis in Poland. With the exceptions of Cracow and Lodz, every Polish city lay in ruins. The homeless and displaced numbered in the millions. As a ruthless [...]
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Tradition and traditionalism

By James Kalb on Nov 02, 2021 10:56 pm
“Traditionalism” mostly has a bad name among commentators. Critics often quote a comment by historian Jaroslav Pelikan: Tradition is the living faith of the dead; traditionalism is the dead faith of the living. Tradition lives [...]
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What’s in (and isn’t in) the bishops’ draft document on the Eucharist?

By Catholic News Agency on Nov 02, 2021 07:25 pm
Archbishop Paul Coakley of Oklahoma City (Left) and Bishop James Wall of Gallup (Right) pray before the afternoon session of the 2019 USCCB General Assembly, June 12, 2019. / Kate Veik/CNA Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Nov 2, 2021 / 17:25 pm (CNA).... [...]
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A secretary of Padre Pio remembers the indefatigable Saint

By Father Seán Connolly on Nov 02, 2021 02:52 pm
Most of us know the saints through written accounts of their lives. Many of the saints became saints themselves by reading the lives of saints. In a letter to her aunt, Saint Thérèse wrote: “I [...]
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Twelve bishops under investigation by Church in Mexico for covering up sexual abuse 

By Catholic News Agency on Nov 02, 2021 11:20 am
null / Daniel Ibanez/CNA. Mexico City, Mexico, Nov 2, 2021 / 15:20 pm (CNA). Archbishop Franco Coppola, the apostolic nuncio to Mexico, said that to date there are 12 bishops being investigated by the Catholic Church for allegedly covering up ca... [...]
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All Souls’ Day brings together many crucial themes of Christian theology

By Peter M.J. Stravinskas on Nov 02, 2021 03:05 am
As we put together a Mass schedule for the St. Gregory Foundation for Latin Liturgy for years, our members repeatedly asked that we always include All Souls’ Day among the observances. That request has always [...]
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Doctors blow the whistle on vaccine deaths and injuries

By Joseph M. Hanneman on Nov 01, 2021 10:35 pm
After suffering life-changing and debilitating side effects they claim are from COVID-19 vaccines, 11 physicians are going public with their stories in hopes other doctors and the federal government start taking vaccine safety more seriously. [...]
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Should Catholics talk to their dead loved ones? 

By Catholic News Agency on Nov 01, 2021 08:30 pm
null / Sherry V Smith via www.shutterstock.com Denver, Colo., Nov 1, 2021 / 18:30 pm (CNA). In the 2017 Disney-Pixar movie “Coco,” the main character, Miguel, accidentally passes over into the land of the dead on Dia De Los Muertos (Day of the D... [...]
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A fearless Saint for All Saints’ Day: Blessed Rupert Mayer

By Dawn Beutner on Nov 01, 2021 12:04 pm
On All Saints’ Day, the Church invites us to remember every man, woman, and child who has entered Heaven before us, not just those who have been granted the title of “saint” or “blessed”. Surely [...]
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The Solemnity of All Saints and the pursuit of holiness

By Peter M.J. Stravinskas on Nov 01, 2021 09:00 am
Several years ago I was having a mild altercation with one of my high school students. He ended his presentation with this thought: “The reason I hate Catholic school is that you priests and nuns [...]
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“We are the Protestants! But our traditions are equally valid!”

By Thomas J. Nash on Oct 31, 2021 10:46 pm
The Rev. Hans Fiene has a knack for addressing Christian teachings and events in a humorous way, and he’s honest enough to poke fun at the divisive nature of the Protestant Reformation, even if he [...]
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Spanish bishop critical of Joe Biden’s claim that pope said he can receive Communion

By Catholic News Agency on Oct 31, 2021 09:49 pm
Pope Francis meets President Joe Biden on Oct. 29, 2021. / Vatican Media/CNA Denver Newsroom, Oct 31, 2021 / 19:49 pm (CNA). Bishop José Ignacio Munilla of San Sebastián, Spain, harshly criticized President Joe Biden’ claim that Pope Francis per... [...]
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On November: All Souls and the “Permanent Things”

By James V. Schall, S.J. on Oct 31, 2021 07:00 pm
I. A seminary in Ireland, now closed, was dedicated to the training of priests for foreign missions, for strange places such as California. It was called “All Hallows”, that is, All Saints, November 1. Oxford [...]
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Communion, communications, and (more) Vatican confusion

By Christopher R. Altieri on Oct 31, 2021 11:43 am
The kerfuffle over Pope Francis’s putative remarks to US President Joe Biden has kicked up a good bit of dust in Catholic circles – understandably – but it has also uncovered some of the dysfunction [...]
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Archbishop Cordileone: Look deeper to see the ‘spiritual reality’ of the Eucharist, the unborn, and unhoused

By Catholic News Agency on Oct 30, 2021 12:50 pm
Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San Francisco. / Dennis Callahan, Archdiocese of San Francisco. San Francisco, Calif., Oct 30, 2021 / 10:50 am (CNA). In just two weeks, the bishops of the United States will come together to debate and vote on... [...]
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SCOTUS, U.S. Appeals Court deal setbacks to vaccine-mandate foes

By Joseph M. Hanneman on Oct 30, 2021 10:09 am
The U.S. Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court late Friday dealt major blows to opponents of coercive COVID-19 vaccine mandates who object to inoculations based on religious-liberty. The Supreme Court denied an emergency [...]
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Does the Catholic Church owe an apology for the conquest of the New World?

By Matthew Cullinan Hoffman on Oct 30, 2021 01:27 am
Mexico’s socialist president Andrés Manuel López Óbrador is on a crusade, or perhaps better put, an anti-crusade, to obtain an apology from Spain and the Catholic Church for the conquest and colonization of the Americas. [...]
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Vatican declines to comment on whether pope told Biden to keep receiving Communion in ‘private conversation’

By Catholic News Agency on Oct 29, 2021 06:52 pm
Pope Francis meets President Joe Biden on Oct. 29, 2021. / Vatican Media/CNA Vatican City, Oct 29, 2021 / 10:52 am (CNA). The Vatican declined to comment Friday on U.S. President Joe Biden’s statement that Pope Francis encouraged him to keep rec... [...]
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