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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

A Pontiff Who Does Not Pontificate


With five simple words, Pope Francis stopped us in our self-regarding, self-important tracks.
“Who am I to judge?” Francis asked, when queried about gay priests. “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?”
Ruth Marcus
An editorial writer specializing in politics, the budget and other domestic issues, she also writes a weekly column and contributes to the PostPartisan blog.
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Um, the pope? The infallible one?
To be clear, on the issue of homosexuality, the new pope’s stance is more recasting than revelation. The difference between Francis and his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, involves their language about supposed sinners, not their shared conviction that the behavior is a sin.
Benedict issued a document describing homosexuality as “a strong tendency ordered toward an intrinsic moral evil” and an “objective disorder,” adding, for good measure, that men with “deep-seated homosexual tendencies” should not enter the priesthood. He didn’t have a problem with judging.
But Francis seems determined to take the pontiff out of the pontificating business. He carried his own bag to Brazil, and thought it was no big deal. “It’s normal to carry a bag,” he said. “I’m a bit surprised that the image of the bag made its way around the world. Anyway, it wasn’t the suitcase with the codes for the nuclear bomb.”
Having begun his first international trip by announcing he did not do interviews, he ended with an hour-and-20-minute midair news conference that would have been remarkable for a politician, no less a pope.
Francis announced, disappointingly, that the no-girls-allowed sign would remain on the priestly clubhouse — Pope John Paul II, he said, had definitively stated “that door is closed” — but softened that stance with more inclusive language.
“It is not enough to have altar girls, women readers or women as the president of Caritas,” he said, referring to the Catholic charity. “The role of women doesn’t end just with being a mother and with housework . . . we don’t yet have a truly deep theology of women in the church.”
This was the papal version of the Straight Talk Express — and about as effective, even seductive, for the reporters on board as was John McCain’s openness on his campaign bus. Benedict required questions in writing, in advance, and his advisers selected which ones he would deign to answer. Francis thanked a reporter for an impertinent question about the Vatican’s gay lobby.
But the lasting phrase from his news conference, one with resonance for Catholics and non-Catholics alike, will no doubt be, “Who am I to judge?” This is not a common question in the modern age. We live in an American Idol culture in which judging is celebrated and judges are celebrities. The harsher, even crueler, the judging, the higher the judge’s profile. “So You Think You Can Dance?” “You’re Fired!” “Chopped.”
The audience is riveted by the buildup to the moment of judgment, by the prospect that those being judged will lash out or, better yet, dissolve in tears. We sit at home, simultaneously playing judge ourselves and feeling relief that we are not among the judged.
Yes, we as a society are less inclined to moral judgments, and that is, for the most part, a happy development. What once was a source of shame — unwed motherhood, for example — is now, if not a point of pride, at least a marker of normalcy. Check out that celebrity with her baby bump.
But if we are less willing to make moral pronouncements, we seem ever more willing to judge others for just about everything else, and to revel in the certitude of our judgments. You be the judge.
This may seem a strange argument, coming as it does from someone who gets paid to pronounce judgments. In my line of work, hubris is a job requirement; we judge presidents and politicians, justices and juries, never having worn their shoes. The more stiletto-sharp the judgment, the higher the number of online page views, the greater the deluge of television invitations. There is no profit in mealy-mouthed uncertainty.
Francis’s admonition about humility called to mind Justice Robert H. Jackson’s famous quote about the Supreme Court, in the 1953 case of Brown v. Allen, “We are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final.”
Most of us are neither justices nor popes, with infallibility conferred by the Constitution or an even higher authority. But the humility of the supposedly infallible is a valuable lesson to the merer mortals among us. “Who am I to judge” is always a good place to begin.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/ruth-marcus-pope-francis-doesnt-pontificate/2013/07/30/4bd30dae-f951-11e2-b018-5b8251f0c56e_story.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions

Religious toleration (From Wikipedia's Article, "The Parable Of The Wheat And The Tares")

The weeds or "tares" were probably darnel.
The Parable of the Tares has often been cited in support of various degrees of religious toleration.
In his "Letter to Bishop Roger of Chalons", Bishop Wazo of Liege (c. 985-1048 AD) relied on the parable [8] to argue that "the church should let dissent grow with orthodoxy until the Lord comes to separate and judge them".[9]
Martin Luther preached a sermon on the parable in which he affirmed that only God can separate false from true believers and noted that killing heretics or unbelievers ends any opportunity they may have for salvation:
"From this observe what raging and furious people we have been these many years, in that we desired to force others to believe; the Turks with the sword, heretics with fire, the Jews with death, and thus outroot the tares by our own power, as if we were the ones who could reign over hearts and spirits, and make them pious and right, which God's Word alone must do. But by murder we separate the people from the Word, so that it cannot possibly work upon them and we bring thus, with one stroke a double murder upon ourselves, as far as it lies in our power, namely, in that we murder the body for time and the soul for eternity, and afterwards say we did God a service by our actions, and wish to merit something special in heaven."
He concluded that "although the tares hinder the wheat, yet they make it the more beautiful to behold". [10]

Roger Williams, a Baptist theologian and founder of Rhode Island, used this parable to support government toleration of all of the "weeds" (heretics) in the world, because civil persecution often inadvertently hurts the "wheat" (believers) too. Instead, Williams believed it was God's duty to judge in the end, not man's. This parable lent further support to Williams' Biblical philosophy of a wall of separation between church and state as described in his 1644 book, The Bloody Tenent of Persecution.[11]
John Milton, in Areopagitica (1644), calling for freedom of speech and condemning Parliament's attempt to license printing, referred to the parable:[12]
(I)t is not possible for man to sever the wheat from the tares, the good fish from the other fry; that must be the Angels' ministry at the end of mortal things. 

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