| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
I was shocked and chagrined to see a Fox
survey that said only 14% of Catholics make political decisions based on
their faith and 25% of Catholics sometimes doubt the existence of God.
How did we get into this mess?
Also, I didn't understand your reference
last week to epichaia. Isn't that a figure of speech, or
a province of Northern Greece, or something?
Your friend,
Guy L. Less

Dear Guy,
Oddly enough, all three of your points
are tied in to each other.
Let me begin with epichaia,
or perhaps better spelled “epikeia.” Epikeia
is a Greek word meaning reasonableness or clemency. I was told that in
its root meaning it had something to do with jumping over, but I am unable
to verify this.
I
remember long lectures about epikeia back at Watsamata
U., given by the eminent Dr. Samuel Dreck on the subject. Dr.
Dreck taught classes in moral philosophy and home economics. He brilliantly
combined his two passions in an essay on Immanuel Kant's favorite recipe
for apple strudel.
He also maintained that Martin Heidegger's
preference for potato dumplings was the inevitable result of his phenomenology.
Apparently they have more “being” than other forms of the dumpling.
Where was I ? Oh, Yes....
Dr. Dreck delighted to point out that clement
and reasonable interpretation of the law meant that, when compliance with
the law demands heroism and effort out of proportion to the purpose of
the law, epikeia may be used and that when particular circumstances
unforeseen by the legislator would indicate that it was not in his mind
or intention to bind a person, epikeia may be used. (I have
lifted these last two phrases directly from the New Catholic Encyclopedia.)
He rarely emphasized that these dispensations
only apply to laws made by men and not laws made by God. For instance,
if a person is ill and in the hospital, the communion fast may be abrogated
under certain circumstances, but we are still not supposed to covet our
neighbor’s ox, as the Ten Commandments tells us.
Dr. Dreck was not happy with the Church's
restatement in 1968 on the traditional ban on artificial contraception.
I’m not sure that he ever said it, but he certainly seemed to believe
that it was just a silly human law and was thus subject to epikeia.
Further, he was fond of pointing out that
to commit a truly mortal sin one needed complete freedom and a complete
turning of the will, and who in this modern world is truly free?
In fact, much of the moral theology taught
at Watsamata U. and many other colleges was designed to help us young progressives
think our way around artificial birth control. And, if you can think
way around one sin you can think your way around any sin.
This was very handy at the time. It was
the late sixties. Ah, bright college days, the summer of love, the dawning
of the Age
of Aquarius! You try telling a lot of arrogant college students
who have been told that they are the new generation to whom the torch has
been passed that they have the right, nay the duty to judge the law.
You'll be amazed at the mayhem!
Well, the summer of love brought us forty
years of sexually transmitted diseases, divorce and single parent homes.
We used the above mentioned torch to burn down the civilization, and now
the bill has come due. Thank you Dr. Dreck.
I suspect that what we learned was partly
the cause for the horrors and scandals that have rocked the church over
the past years. If you believed that you were superior to the law, what
horrible things would you do?
The
repudiation of Humanae
Vitae, Pope Paul VI’s encyclical restating God’s teaching
about the sacred privilege of transmitting human life, is responsible for
the other two points you mention. If we are the judges of law and we come
to believe ourselves superior to the law, it is a short jump from superiority
to merely human laws, to deciding what parts of the Scripture are divine
and what parts are merely human and therefore subject to epikeia.
God no longer has anything to say about
politics or morals or anything. And, when we make God mute we don’t hear
Him speak.
St. Paul says in his first letter to the
Corinthians, “Brethren when you were heathens
you were led astray to mute idols.”
How are we to believe a god who we refuse
to hear?
It seems that we have returned to mute
idols.
When, on July 25, 1968, Pope Paul VI reminded
the world what God had said about marriage and family life, the world told
God to just shut up and mind His own business. We would make our own decisions,
be they political, moral, economic, or whatever.
Besides it wasn't God speaking it was just
some silly old celibate Italian bishop who doesn't have any idea how tough
we have it here in America. Did he have any idea how stressful it can be
to pack our 2.3 children into the Hummer and go to the mall. Designer gym
shoes aren't cheap you know. We will do as we please.
God's job is to help us, not to make our
lives more difficult!!!
The American Church reminds me of Dr. Dreck
teaching that, when the law demands heroism, epikeia allows
us to mitigate the law's demands. When the going gets tough, jump for epikeia.
Dr. Dreck and his colleagues began the process of de-heroizing the American
Catholic Church and after 40 years it seems they have done a fine job of
it.
No wonder the churches are empty and we
regularly vote for politicians who claim to be “pro abortion Catholics.”
That’s like going to dinner with a cannibal who claims to be a vegetarian.
Be careful. You may be the dessert course.
Perhaps it's time to quit the American
Catholic Church and return to the Roman Catholic Church.
Rev. Know-It-All

The
Question Was
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What has happened
to the Catholics in America? |
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