Please click here to vote for us in the Catholic New Media Awards 2009 - thanks!

Archive for May, 2007



24
May

Different worlds

I’m heading to the Middle East next week for a month for work. Amid trying desperately to learn Arabic phrases and trying to find suitable headscarves, I’ve been thinking about what a fraught time it is – if you believe the media anyway – between Christians and Muslims.

I refuse to fall into the belief that Islam is an evil religion, and I hope to learn a lot more about it while I’m there. More importantly, in my book anyway, is the people.

I’m going to be spending a lot of time with Iraqi refugees of all religious persuasions. I hope to be able to say, proudly and openly, that I am Catholic, and to receive respect. At precisely the same time, I hope that the way I conduct myself conveys respect and love towards their religion – whatever it may be.

My attitude going in is that differences should be embraced where they essentially further the Kingdom of God. Jesus’ love knows no bounds, and I hope my work while I’m there reflects that.

23
May

and other strange fauna

Traffic wardens and tow truck drivers wouldn’t usually make my Christmas card list, if I had one, but thanks to the unknown towie of yesterday morning…

I was driving over the Newmarket flyover behind a towtruck with a police car on his trailer, and musing how disconcerting the low-riding, oncoming face of the police car would be if the towie merged in front of you, when one of the axles snapped off the trailer!

A trail of sparking metal sprayed over my windscreen (and this from a safe following distance) but the towie calmly thrust his arm out the window and motioned the er, less than considerate, beamers in the next lane out of the way, as he flicked on the hazards and gradually stopped.

It was easy to imagine (hey, I had been beforehand) a slightly different outcome.

We’re continuously reminded to consider all of the things we take for granted – parents, food, shelter, work, love – but it’s incredible when events demonstrate how much we also rely on the faceless around us.

As we sit in the traffic, surrounded by thousands, we trust everyone to follow the conventions, to drive as safely as we do… and most of the time, they do.

And maybe, if we apply that realisation to other facets of our lives, we can see the myriad positives in our society, instead of dwelling exclusively on the few negatives.

22
May

Tony, Tony, Tony…

I used to be a fan of US Evangelical evangelist Tony Campolo, a man who has spoken many times in NZ.

Thus I was saddened to read about his new book “Letters to a young evangelical”; in which he now appears to have rejected sound Christian doctrine in favour of left-wing ideologies.

His new book espouses some really strange ideas about abortion, gay marriage and sex outside of marriage.

Very sad really; Tony used to be a leading light in the Evangelical movement, and he encouraged the need for spiritual conversion and social concern (the latter is often lacking in Evangelical evangelists).

Tragically it seems that on many important issues the secular culture of today has become more important to Him than the Gospel.

You can read a very good article about his new book here (from the best magazine ever – First Things).

21
May

I choo-choo-choose you!

I feel that I should probably copy-and-paste my previous request for civility and charity when discussing the topic I’m about to introduce. :)

I’ve always classified myself as a pro-life person. My upbringing was always pretty clear on why this is important, and the teaching of the Church has stuck by me to where I am today. I think euthanasia is wrong and so is abortion. Simple (from where I sit anyway).

But I was just thinking to myself the other day, while reading the story about Amnesty International’s new policy to lobby for abortion, how have we come to label the two sides of this coin “pro-life” and “pro-choice”? I mean, if one side is called being “pro-life”, isn’t the opposite of that “pro-death” or “anti-life”?

Call me naive but this seems to me to be simple English speak. :)

I suppose that some might say that the opposite of “pro-choice” is “anti-choice” or “pro-…not choice?” But that doesn’t make sense, because the pro-life stance still allows people to make choices – choosing to give birth, choosing to adopt out, choosing to live etc. – and is very much in favour of promoting those choices. And there can be no fighting the fact that the choices promoted by the “pro-choice” side of the fence are definitely promoting death, right?

I feel like a lawyer here – “these are the facts of the case…”.

Anyway, I was just thinking about such labels and wondering if the people on the pro-death/choice side of things have actually ever stepped back and wondered where the bounds lie on their philosophy?

Take abortion as an example. I hear (over, and over again) that it is about the woman’s right to choose to abort because it is her body and she can do what she wants with it, because that’s her human right. What’s more, the law says she can kill her unborn baby if there is a threat to her physical or mental wellbeing…or some such wording.

But it’s not just her body we’re talking about here – it’s the baby’s as well. And when we’re talking about an abortion of convenience (i.e. “I forgot to take my pill and now I’m pregnant…whoops!”), we’re talking about an act being carried out by one person on another because the other is inconveniencing the other. That’s a pretty dangerous precedent, isn’t it? Can I terminate my neighbour because he smokes and his smoke is a threat to my health? Or can I terminate my boss because I’m not “mentally ready to take on the responsibility” that that new project is going to bring into my life? It’s my body, after all.

I’m just interested to know where the proponents of this line of thinking draw the line for themselves?

(NB: here’s a link for those who don’t get the reference in the title)

20
May

Living with Wonder

Have we lost our sense of wonder? Have we lost our sense that extraordinary things are happening all around us, through the faith of people and the love of God? Our sense that the Holy Spirit is working all around us? Our sense that there are so many exciting things in the world to wonder at?! (Sorry that was quite a few questions! :-) )

I think we sometimes get bogged down in rationalising, and simply occupying ourselves, and we forget to be open to the mystery of faith all around us. Not everything can be comprehended and rationalised, as much as the human race tries to do this.

I read an essay by Fr David Ranson recently. It emphasised the importance of having a sense of wonder. He describes a sense of wonder as “essentially an opening attitude – an awareness that there is more to life than one has yet fathomed.” Jesus placed importance on a sense of wonder with his special regard for little children. He said “unless you become like little children you cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven”.

So do we take from this that we should be a bit detached from reality? I don’t think so! I think maybe the meaning Fr Ranson was getting at was that the ordinary things of life often are extraordinary. Maybe we have to experience what is all around us more.

David Ranson comments that we must be attentive to the ordinary things of life all around us, and through prayer we can see these things in new ways. He further comments that “Our true desire for God does not take us out of life, but it inserts us more into life. It enables us to live with a greater and greater sense of reality.”

I hope this isn’t really confusing!! I just found it an interesting and true thought.

19
May

Get Your Hands Off Our Ovaries!

I was flicking through the New York Times the other day and found a multimedia presentation about the proposed introduction of a contraceptive pill that will allow women to stop their periods indefinitely to accommodate for women with busy lifestyles who simply do not have the time to deal with the ordeal that is ‘the time of the month’. I appreciated the comments of one of the woman who opposed the introduction of the contraceptive pill asserting the effects of the medication are relatively unknown. I’m in total agreement. Since the introduction of the contraceptive pill, women have basically been reduced to lab rats; all those hormones being pumped into our bodies, time will be the best judge of the effects. Actually, we are already beginning to see the fruits with scientific research linking the use of contraception with cancer as well as blood clotting.

Marginalisation of women is also occurring with regards to the likes of cloning, foetal tissue experimentation, and IVF. For instance, the extraction process needed for cloning experimentation and IVF has been described as invasive and uncomfortable, requiring several visits and multiple injections of hormones. The short-term effects of the procedure include, pain associated with intramuscular injections, hot flushes, bloating, moodiness, headaches, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, respiratory difficulties, and weight gain.

Additionally, often the extraction process requires the extraction of more than one egg. There is increasing evidence that what is coined the “super-ovulation process” is associated with serious health risks. Up to 10% of women who undergo the process experience a serious condition known as ovarian hyper stimulation syndrome. When this occurs thirty or more eggs start to develop simultaneously, fluid leaks out of the blood vessels and collects in the abdomen. Sometimes this condition can lead to death and six women are known to have died from it in the UK alone. More serious symptoms can require hospitalisation and include unintended pregnancy, renal failure, intrauterine polyps, ovarian cysts, thromboembolism, adult respiratory distress and haemorrhage from ovarian rupture, and future infertility.

Also, there is evidence of negative long-term effects of this treatment. Dr. Suzanne Parisian, a former chief medical officer of the US Food and Drug Administration and researcher in genetics and developmental biology, asserts ‘many of the drugs used during these procedures have not been adequately studied for long-term safety…This is not widely understood and has led to significant misunderstanding about the risks involved for women who donate eggs,’ whether for reproductive purposes or for research cloning. Clinical reports also associated infertility with ovarian cancer.

Succintly, women are being marginalised at the expense of profit. To be frank, there’s a lot of money in the reproductive rights industry and as we all know morality is often sacrificed for profit. Reproductive rights are sold through the media as promoting the freedom of women to do what they want with their bodies. Yet in reality what is driving the introduction of contraceptives, the push for the use of women’s eggs, and experimentation on foetal tissue is, put simply, cash.

This isn’t freedom; it’s objectification at its best. Once women finally wake up, truly the era of “reproductive rights” will be historically viewed as a very dark time for women where marginalisation had reached its peak. Once again, I say it loudly (you may have to vividly imagine as the medium doesn’t really permit sound) GET YOUR HANDS OF OUR OVARIES!

18
May

The Power of Love

Not the horrible Celine Dion version, but the excellent 80′s guitar driven synth rock of Huey Lewis in the fantastic 80′s classic about a time travelling 80′s car. How does this tie into anything? Well…

I thought about a hard hitting and controversial blog for this Friday. Something that would stir up the crowd. But seeing as how it’s the day after the Budget, and bearing in mind we’ve had a couple of weeks of debate worthy topics on the blog already, I felt something lighter would be more appropriate.

With that decided, I’ve shelved my planned blog for today titled ‘Women priests should be allowed to participate in Just War to liberate Africa from Condoms.’ I did have second thoughts, but then I realised that on the blog this week we’ve already had Peter talking about Feisty Fawn (sounds dirty) and something called Ubuntu (must be named after an African species of pig). So I can be justified for an off the Catholic topic ramble.

If you’re looking for intellectually stimulating discussion on a Friday I suggest you stop reading now. I’m about to talk about time machines. Yes, time machines. How cool would it be to have, or use a time machine? Oh. My. Goodness. And not just use it the way Bill and Ted used it. Imagine the disruption in the time continuum they would have caused by plucking all those historical figures away. What would Doctor Emmett Brown say?

But yes, time machines. I’d like to go back and see who built the pyramids, the Sphinx. Find out who shot JFK. Was a T-Rex really a dirty brown / green colour or was it more mottled pink and yellow? Was there a Tower of Babel? When did humans as we know them come about? So many great mysteries and so much time!

Oh and don’t forget to go forward in time too! I can finally see how long it will actually take me to grow a wispy beard.

So to summarise for this Friday, ‘The Power of Love’ is a great song to go time travelling with.