True Religion, False Religion

Wow! Father Andrew Stephen Damick sure knows stumbled onto how to drive up blog traffic!

The Contemporary Christian Music equivalency tables probably say “If you like Eminem, you might like  .” Said Bethke perpetrated a YouTube rap/rant titled “Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus.” It seems that 12,000,000 people have consented to watching it. De gustibus non est disputandum.

Continue reading “True Religion, False Religion”

Insouciant Radicals

I have mentioned fairly recently the work of Evangelical Daniel Clendenin in understanding Orthodoxy and explaining it to his fellow Evangelicals. I discovered Sunday afternoon that I actually had retained a copy of  (and a link to) his “Why I’m Not Orthodox” article in Christianity Today, and that I had inaccurately recalled the exact words of his conclusion on why he remains Evangelical. Continue reading “Insouciant Radicals”

Do not trust the press on religious topics

The Pope thinks the family is based on the marriage of a man and a woman. He is against divorce. He is against intentional marital infertility. He is against adultery.

I don’t have links, but could probably find proof that he is against polygamy and deliberately having children out of wedlock as a sort of lifestyle choice. All in all, not a fun guy by today’s insane standards.

So there’s the setup.

Now: suppose he give a speech touching on civil unrest, economic problems, religious freedom and family. And suppose that in that speech, he says this:

Blessed John Paul II stated that “the path of peace is at the same time the path of the young”, inasmuch as young people embody “the youth of the nations and societies, the youth of every family and of all humanity”. Young people thus impel us to take seriously their demand for truth, justice and peace. For this reason, I chose them as the subject of my annual World Day of Peace Message, entitled Educating Young People in Justice and Peace. Education is a crucial theme for every generation, for it determines the healthy development of each person and the future of all society. It thus represents a task of primary importance in this difficult and demanding time. In addition to a clear goal, that of leading young people to a full knowledge of reality and thus of truth, education needs settings. Among these, pride of place goes to the family, based on the marriage of a man and a woman. This is not a simple social convention, but rather the fundamental cell of every society. Consequently, policies which undermine the family threaten human dignity and the future of humanity itself. The family unit is fundamental for the educational process and for the development both of individuals and States; hence there is a need for policies which promote the family and aid social cohesion and dialogue. It is in the family that we become open to the world and to life and, as I pointed out during my visit to Croatia, “openness to life is a sign of openness to the future”. In this context of openness to life, I note with satisfaction the recent sentence of the Court of Justice of the European Union forbidding patenting processes relative to human embryonic stem cells, as well as the resolution of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe condemning prenatal selection on the basis of sex.

(Emphasis added, but read the whole thing as carefully as you like.)

How does Reuters report it?

Gay marriage a threat to humanity’s future: Pope.

Indeed, “some of his strongest comments against gay marriage.”

Do not trust the press on religious topics.

(Huge HT to GetReligion.com)

Courts decide cases

There’s been considerable buzz about Newt’s dissing of the courts. Here, here and here are three not entirely random examples. I’m annoyed that some critics think it unnecessary to quote what he actually said or to provide context. The closest I can readily come now is this.

When I first heard of Newt’s comments, I thought, “he has half a point, and a venerable precedent, but this is demagogic campaign material” (or something that distills to that).

I’m not going to try to whitewash what he said. I’m not going to try to track down the exact quote. I’m instead going to utter a truth that too few people know: Courts decide cases.

Huh?! Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?! What’s unusual about that?

Well, let me digress a minute. I caught all kinds of flack a few years ago when our local newspaper editorialized that the Bill of Rights was the heart of the Constitution and I replied – accurately, and I stand by it still – that the heart of the Constitution was the establishment of our polity: three branches, separation of powers, how Congressmen and Senators were to be elected and all that boring stuff.

I then made the mistake of visiting the paper’s website, where the self-confidence is high, the IQs incredibly, depressingly low. I found myself roasted there (by people who couldn’t have discovered fire on their own) for being right-wing (a little lame, but reality-based) and stupid (utterly wrong).

Well, just as the Bill of Rights has captured the imagination of people who couldn’t tell you what the “Bill of Rights” was, let alone any of its history, but who are confident that “like, free speech and freedom from religion and stuff” are the heart of the constitution, so has precedent and constitutional law captured the imagination of the public as being what courts do.

Wrong, wrong, wrong. Courts decide cases.

What do I mean by that? First, that there has to be a beef between/among two or more people. If there isn’t, you can’t get into court. You and your buddy can’t go to the court and say, “Hey, we were wondering about the meaning of Indiana Code 30-5-3-4(b) and wondered if you could explain it.” One of our problems  nationally has been to put too much stock in court decisions where the parties were, if not in collusion, sharing a lot of presuppositions that were dubious. Think, for instance, of the recent spate of liberals refusing to vigorously defend laws they don’t like — Proposition 8 in California, DOMA at the Federal Level. Excuse me, but I’m not going to prostrate before a decision where one of parties threw the game, (“Say it ain’t so, Jerry.”)

Second, that most case are not appealed and not reported. They set no “precedent.” But after the time for appeal has run, the judgment is final and precludes most re-opening of the dispute between the parties. There’s no precedent set. There’s no constitutional law invoked or made.

Third, let me illustrate with some abbreviated history. When the United States Supreme Court (you do know that each state has a Supreme Court too?) decided the notorious Dred Scott case, it became a bone of contention between Lincoln and Douglas, and on June 26, 1857, Lincoln set forth his position:

And now as to the Dred Scott decision. That decision declares two propositions—first, that a Negro cannot sue in the U.S. Courts; and secondly, that Congress cannot prohibit slavery in the Territories. It was made by a divided court—dividing differently on the different points. Judge Douglas does not discuss the merits of the decision; and, in that respect, I shall follow his example, believing I could no more improve on McLean and Curtis, than he could on Taney.
He denounces all who question the correctness of that decision, as offering violent resistance to it. But who resists it? Who has, in spite of the decision, declared Dred Scott free, and resisted the authority of his master over him?
Judicial decisions have two uses—first, to absolutely determine the case decided, and secondly, to indicate to the public how other similar cases will be decided when they arise. For the latter use, they are called “precedents” and “authorities.”
We believe, as much as Judge Douglas, (perhaps more) in obedience to, and respect for the judicial department of government. We think its decisions on Constitutional questions, when fully settled, should control, not only the particular cases decided, but the general policy of the country, subject to be disturbed only by amendments of the Constitution as provided in that instrument itself. More than this would be revolution. But we think the Dred Scott decision is erroneous. We know the court that made it, has often over-ruled its own decisions, and we shall do what we can to have it to over-rule this. We offer no resistance to it.

There you have it: “Judicial decisions have two uses—first, to absolutely determine the case decided, and secondly, to indicate to the public how other similar cases will be decided when they arise.”

Lincoln gave absolute deference to the Supreme Court’s determination of poor Dred Scott’s fate: “Who has, in spite of the decision, declared Dred Scott free, and resisted the authority of his master over him?” (That’s called a rhetorical question, you denizens of newspaper comboxes, and the implied answer is “Nobody, stupid!”) Dred Scott was, more’s the pity, a slave.

But Lincoln did not bow to the precedent, the court’s indication “to the public how other similar cases will be decided when they arise.” Rather, he promised to seek overruling of the precedent.

So far, so good. Few who understand jurisprudence would disagree.

Now I’m going to take it one step further, into territory where people with IQs higher than the Farenheit thermometer on an August Hoosier day might disagree. I think that when an elected official vows to uphold the constitution – and they all do – it is legitimate to ignore a precedent – a prediction of how similar cases will be decided henceforth – where the official has a deep-seated and defensible view of the constitution contrary to what the precedent implies.

The vow, after all, is to uphold the Constitution – not to bow to the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation thereof, let alone to the interpretation of some lower court.

I thought there was a hint in Newt’s original remark, now lost in a fog of bombast, that he might actually understand that point. And I thought of the Dred Scott precedent.

But whether or not Newt gets it, you now should, gentle reader.

* * * * *

After I wrote this, and even after my first “dawn’s early light” revision of something I “put to bed” last night (I inserted the requirement of a real legal beef), Newt got a defense on the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal. E.g.,

Congress routinely asks executive branch officials outside the White House to testify about their decisions. It occasionally subpoenas them to compel attendance, and arrest would be a last resort. It’s unclear why applying the same rules to the judicial branch threatens the separation of powers, especially if done in the context of considering judicial reform proposals like Mr. Gingrich’s.

I’ve got a problem with that. Courts already explain their decisions, officially, in writing. That’s why they call them “opinions.” That’s why one Judge/Justice may write an “opinion” that “concurs in the result” but offers a materially different rationale. I fear the only reason for asking judges to explain their decisions to Congress is to badger and grandstand.

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Standing advice on enduring themes.

Sheer Delight!

A Polish Duo plays what they believe to be one of the world’s largest glass harps, and believe me, they’re real musicians and real technicians.

It wouldn’t be difficult for you to ferret out this stuff for yourself once I gave you one link, but I’ll give you several imbedded videos, starting with one quite seasonal.

Or how about a little Bach?

Would you believe an Astor Piazzola tango?

There’s a whole YouTube channel. And a beautiful little website, where you can get Bach’s “Toccata i Fuga d-moll.”

Bon appetit!

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Standing advice on enduring themes.

Learning from Ebeneezer

It’s the Advent season, so of course Dickens’ A Christmas Carol gets trotted out. Our Bach Chorale Singers concert Saturday was interwoven with a reading of it.

I’m feeling a bit like a blog-obsessed (not money-obsessed) version of Ebeneezer Scrooge, and I don’t want to be visited by ghosts of blogs past, present and future warning me that “Obsessive blogger dies from lack of exercise, perspective” could be my obituary some day, while my tombstone reads “Always in the know, but never got wisdom.”

So I have just unsubscribed several blogs. Considering how many blogs I follow just for pleasure, “several” doesn’t sound like many, but the ones I dropped probably make up a third or more of my blog volume. The ones I dropped are primarily political, and we’re well into the 2012 Presidential cycle, sorry to say, so the volume is rising.

Since <stunning news> I don’t trust either party, </stunning news> it’s becoming frustrating to read one more darned angle on why serial adulterers with ADD/HD shouldn’t be POTUS even if they’ve repented, or that Mormons wear funny undies, or that the Texan hangs out with people who are fewer than three degrees removed from whacko Theocrats, or that the sane, antiwar, committed-to-the-constitution candidate can’t win because he’s out of the mainstream. (That last one’s the most disheartening, because if the Tea Party were what it’s cracked up to be, he would have a really good shot at it.)

If there’s some slightly new angle in any of this stylishly written political swill, though, I’m likely to pass it on to my readers, however trifling it may be in the grand scheme of things. Yup. It’s come to that. My OCD gene has been expressing itself. Time for cold turkey, or something close. Daily tidbit aggregations are ceasing.

So what will I do with the extra time? Well, as hinted, exercise will be part of it. I’ll multiply the saved time from that by not reblogging so many blog trifles (trifles are for Tweeting, at most). And “persepective” will be the other part.

How can I add perspective to my life while dropping voices from my daily fare? By adding older voices – the kinds of guys who write, or likelier “wrote,” books, for instance. I’ve cleared desk space and gotten a good light in my den, away from the TV (before which my wife tends to collapse deservedly after a hard day of schoolchildren on the one hand and aging, failing parents – my mother, her dad – on the other).

I’ve got a bunch of unread books, many of them classics, and that doesn’t even count re-reading the Bible with Orthodox commentaries nearby, or digital versions of the Church Fathers. I’ll read more poetry, too. It’s time especially for W.H. Auden’s “For the Time Being,” which has become a personal Advent tradition for me.

I’ve added to my Christmas list a C.S. Lewis book that I’ve inexplicably not read in 63 years: C.S. Lewis’ “The Discarded Image.” That’s likely to lead to still other books. But it also honors one of Lewis’ most important (and ignored, including by me) bits of advice: for every current book you read, read an old book, too, for the sake of perspective. A future book could give perspective, too, but future books are not in print any more. 😉 All the bloggers I read, in contrast to old authors, share a cosmology with me to a degree greater than we recognize – even if we appear, in today’s conventional terms, bitterest adversaries. I intend to find some pre-moderns, and not just Bible and Early Church Fathers, and try to get inside their heads.

But I’ve been bit by the blogging bug, so I’m not apt to disappear entirely. But I expect to be much more selective. I hope you’ll like it. And if you’ve been thinking of dropping me because of the low signal-to-noise ratio, stay tuned for an upgrade, the particulars of which remain to be determined precisely because I remain, for now, a tipsy teetotaler, and sensitively dependent on initial conditions.

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Standing advice on enduring themes.

Tofu Tidbits* 12/10/11

  1. Medical toking.
  2. Humorless, grim Soviet conservatism.
  3. I’m insular; how about you?
  4. Fashion forecast: stasis.
  5. Humanists find a god.
  6. Progressivism in 4 points.
  7. Polar political points.
  8. The heart led the head.

* Temporarily renamed in honor of the Nativity Fast, about which Mystagogy has some more information.

Continue reading “Tofu Tidbits* 12/10/11”

Tofu Tidbits* 12/9/11

  1. A single point of light.
  2. Science and Faith.
  3. Football and Faith.
  4. Decorating Politics with Slogans.
  5. Hormones and Life Savers.
  6. Civil and mature debate my way, you &#!!%^^!.
  7. Danu
  8. Othello

* Temporarily renamed in honor of the Nativity Fast, about which Mystagogy has some more information.

Continue reading “Tofu Tidbits* 12/9/11”