Senators criticize Catholic nominee for her faith
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Amy
Coney Barrett is a law professor at Notre Dame. She also clerked for
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. Now she has been nominated by
President Trump to serve on the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh
Circuit.
Here's the problem: she's a Catholic.
Barrett
is the mother of seven, including a special needs child and two
children adopted from Haiti. She is also a very public Christian. She told
the 2006 Notre Dame Law School graduating class, "If you can keep in
mind that your fundamental purpose in life is not to be a lawyer, but to
know, love, and serve God, you truly will be a different kind of
lawyer."
She
has also written that Catholic judges should not impose their faith on
others. In rare cases, they should recuse themselves when their
religious conscience prevents them from applying relevant law.
Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein wasn't satisfied, protesting
during Barrett's confirmation hearing that "dogma lives loudly within
you." Sen. Al Franken compared her speech before a religious freedom
organization to giving a speech to Pol Pot, the genocidal Cambodian
dictator. Sen. Dick Durbin asked her, "Do you consider yourself an
'orthodox Catholic'?"
This
despite Article VI of the Constitution, which specifically states that
"no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any
Office or public Trust under the United States." But in the minds of
these senators, it's apparently acceptable to be a Christian in America
only if you don't tell anyone.
Richard John Neuhaus noted that in our culture, "the only good Catholic is a bad Catholic," which, as Eric Metaxas explains,
is "someone who doesn't live as if his faith were actually true."
Imagine what would happen to America if such a privatized version of
Christianity were to prevail.
Consider this USA Today headline:
"Faith groups provide the bulk of disaster recovery, in coordination
with FEMA." Consider the fact that people who frequently attend
religious services give far more
to charity than those who do not. Consider the billions of dollars in
charity care provided by religious hospitals or the millions of hours in
community service volunteered by church members.
Yale history professor Kenneth Scott Latourette said
of Christianity, "More than any other power in history it has impelled
men to fight suffering, whether that suffering has come from disease,
war or natural disasters. It has built thousands of hospitals, inspired
the emergence of nursing and medical professions, and furthered
movements for public health and the relief and prevention of famine."
I
am grateful for "salt and light" Christians like Amy Coney Barrett
(Matthew 5:13–16). And I am praying for Christians across our
post-Christian culture to join her in courageous and gracious witness
for our Lord. Will you join me?
"To come to grips with the problems in the catholic church, they need illegal aliens. They need illegal aliens to fill the churches. It's obvious on the face of it. They have an economic interest in unlimited immigration." - Steve Bannon, 60 Minutes interview that aired in full Sunday night.
ReplyDeleteAnd you are quoting Bannon why?
ReplyDelete