Popes' conservatism and the pendulum's swing
Charles F Moreira, Malaysiakini, May 4, 2005
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia -- Regarding Pope Benedict XVI and the Roman Catholic 
Church's conservative policy on issues like women priests, homosexuality, etc, 
one has to realise that while Roman Catholicism is the oldest Christian 
denomination, one must also be able to see the wood for the trees and realise 
that not every Roman Catholic rite, ritual, practice or belief is necessarily 
the result of the word of God or the essence of Christ's teachings.



I haven't read the Bible cover to cover and I'm a freethinker rather than a 
Christian. But I would agree with Theresa Marie Clare Nochera in saying that if 
one does not agree with the practices, rules, regulations, culture, doctrine, 
etc of Roman Catholicism, they are free to switch to another of the over 2,000 
other Christian denominations worldwide. 

At the same time, there's room within Roman Catholicism to debate issues not 
mentioned in the Bible, which can be deemed man-made, rather than the word of 
God.

And whatever limited leeway there is to question what's written in the Bible 
should include questions on the authenticity or accuracy of certain statements 
which could be the result of mistranslation, alteration or omission over the 
several millennia of the Bible's (Old and New Testaments') existence.

However, whatever denomination or religion one embraces, its fundamentals are 
immutable and can't be changed at whim.

For some background. My father and most of his siblings were Methodist, while 
my mother and all her siblings were Thai and Buddhist.

Most of my school days were spent in Roman Catholic mission schools like La 
Salle, St John's Institution, St Michael's and St Xavier's, where I attended 
Catechism classes.

In 1967, the young Roman Catholic Brother conducting the 'inquiry' class for 
non-Catholics taught us some radical theology including the acceptance of the 
theory of evolution, that Hell was a state of mind rather than a hot place and 
to rely on one's conscience as a moral guide.

At my Roman Catholic cousin's wedding in 1972, the priest told him and his wife 
to rely on their conscience on matters of contraception and birth control.

Well, that was the 1960s and early 70s in the wake of the sexual revolution 
sweeping the world. But things don't proceed in straight lines but rather swing 
back and forth like a pendulum and the conservatism of Pope Benedict XVI is the 
other end of the pendulum's swing.

>From 1971 onwards, I took a keen interest in the study and practise of 
>Theravada Buddhism, especially from Sri Lankan monks and within the last few 
>years have taken a more neutral position between Buddhism and Christianity.

However, through that experience, I learned to differentiate between the rites, 
rituals and superstitions practiced by Buddhists and Christians on the one 
hand; and the essence of Buddha's and Christ's teachings on the other.

Due to their long existence, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism and the Catholic 
branches of Christianity have acquired many rites, rituals and beliefs which 
are not part of their essence.

However in general, most religions either don't allow woman priests or subject 
them to severe restrictions in relation to male priests.

In the broader context, I tend to believe that the Sept 11, 2001 attacks on the 
World Trade Centre and Pentagon in the US marked the end of that liberal period 
which began in the 1960s with everything becoming tougher, more restrictive and 
with relations between people and nations becoming more tense as has been borne 
out in the past three and a half years.

Where liberals and the left marched together against the Vietnam War, today one 
is more likely to find the far right and far left marching against the US 
occupation of Iraq, while the liberals and social-democratic left justify their 
support of it based on 'humanitarian' grounds or for 'democracy', 'freedom' etc.

Well, for all their conservatism at least the late Pope John Paul II - like 
Pope Benedict XVI - opposed US aggression and its continued occupation of Iraq.

Welcome to the second millennium and the 21st century and it ain't the Age of 
Aquarius - well, at least, not yet.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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