Friday, July 18, 2008

Stoning Catholics for World Youth Day

The ABC has led a particulalry vitriolic campaign against the Catholic Church during the World Youth Day celebrations in Sydney, digging up old abuse cases in an attempt to vilify the Church.

Here is a commentary by Andrew Bolt which I tihnk is absolutely spot-on, particularly the last couple of paragraphs.

THE reporter on the ABC’s 7.30 Report sounded sad. The Catholic Church couldn’t find enough men keen to be priests, she sighed.

Gosh. Wondered why? Then check, say, the reports the ABC’s Lateline ran to welcome the Pope and thousand of Catholic pilgrims to Sydney.

“Exclusive documents reveal church ignored abuse allegations”, “New evidence in church abuse case”, “Broken Rites president joins Lateline”, “Demonstrators oppose Catholic Church policies”, “Father of assault victims to visit Pope”. And so on.

Hmm. Now why aren’t more Australians joining up to be vilified?

It hardly needs saying that I despise pedophiles and rapists. But even as a non-Christian, I smell bigotry.

In fact, it seems much of the Left-wing media has tried furiously to make sure when we think of Catholicism, in this week of celebration of the faith, that we think not Saviour but slime.

New laws against protesters that the church never asked for were portrayed as a symbol of church oppression. A newspaper ran a competition for the best anti-Catholic T-shirt. And an ABC host urged men to bait Catholics by going naked, but for a condom.

Meanwhile his colleagues looked for a story to hit the Catholics’ most senior figure here, Cardinal George Pell. And Lateline found it in a man who said he’d been sexually assaulted by a stereotypical dirty priest.

How hard was it trying to find a stick? This victim, Anthony Jones, was 29 when he went swimming at night with a priest, who fondled him. He swam off, aroused, but returned to the priest’s bedroom, dressed in a towel.

There a sexual encounter took place. In convicting the priest for a then-illegal act, a judge later found Jones could have left had he wanted.

And all this happened 26 long years ago. So why bring it up now? Because, Jones conceded, it might at this sensitive time make the church give him $3.5 million—or $100,000, final offer. Let’s not call this blackmail.

He deserved the door. He got instead the media limelight.

Another case long dealt with has also been revived, for much the same reason, by a media that tends to be hostile to any institution that acknowledges a higher authority than the musings of the journalistic pack.

I despise it all. Of the priests I’ve known, not one deserves this casual vilification as pedophiles, or their protectors. And when I check how their church touches even my life, I see one of its hospitals, in which my children were born. I see its churchmen tackling forces that rip up homes and make our streets unsafe. I see its intellectuals preaching values I recognise as essential for the defence of our weak. And I see a faith that exhorts its—yes, fallible—believers to goodness, integrity and public service.

Such a faith deserves respect. Instead, there’s that hooting mob, brandishing cobwebbed skeletons to smash one of the few institutions still trying to civilise the barbarians.



Full article and comments

2 comments:

  1. Given the enormous number of people attending WYD events, would those who protest the event or its support consider the Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras (annual event in Sydney) and..- allow as much right for Christians to protest / abhor the GLMG - consider government support of WYD to be a better investment in terms of tourism, international recognition and goodwill- notice the response of Christians to the protestors (1 arrest, but thousands upon thousands expressing love), and compare to GLMG participants who make a big fuss and then aim to offend personally (e.g. by making a big Fred Nile float for the parade)?I guess not.

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  2. I guess you're right Greg.It's interesting that the one person taken away was released quickly (I don't think he was even charged). In any other large crowd, that situation would have rapidly turned into a riot, which is what the protesters really wanted. It's a measure of the pilgrims' true commitment to Christian values that despite provocation they mainly stayed very calm, joyful and loving.

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