Hearing is believing. Most commentators so far have interpreted the
Senate hearings with Dianne Feinstein and Dick Durbin
as  verging on being anti-Catholic. This line of reasoning
does not go nearly far enough. It is anti-religion.
 
Best reaction for anyone to take?  I'm being sarcastic but  let  me
suggest that you wring your hands, dismiss it all as a fluke,
and pretend that there is nothing really wrong. Besides, 
"I don't know about religion stuff and all I need to know
about religion is what I pray about on Sunday at church."
 
After several months attending a Nazarene church here in Eugene
my disillusionment with at least one form of Evangelical faith
is pretty much complete. Not because Nazarenes or other
Evangelicals are evil, the exact opposite is the case, these are
good and decent and loving people who, from what I can tell,
have sincere faith in Christ.
 
However, this is all some kind of  joke. That is  to note  the naivete,
ignorance, ineffectiveness, etc. of all too many Evangelicals  and their
all-out retreat from any kind  of moral witness in the world. This is 
anything but limited to the Nazarenes. Much the same thing exists 
at a non-denominational Evangelical church I sometimes attended 
a few years ago and  which can been seen on Evangelical TV 
on different channels.
 
Maybe call it "Joel Osteen's disease,"  to refer to his feel  good
version of Christianity that ignores any kind of Biblical imperative
to be informed, to use one's critical thinking skills, and to take
genuine  -heartfelt-  moral stands.
 
"Well, I have prayed about the unborn, my responsibility has been
fulfilled" seems to be as far as it goes.
 
But the Apostle Paul attacked homosexuals uncompromisingly?
O, O. O,  well maybe he did, but we all know that Evangelicals
habitually ignore all that stuff and change the subject
as soon as it comes up, or use evasions so that Paul's
truths can safely be ignored.
 
Basically I am really fed up with such nonsense in the name of   Jesus.
 
Sure, by some standards I'm not much of a Christian because I am so
over-the-line unorthodox,  but it seemed necessary to express
my sincere revulsion at "feel good Christianity."  It is luke  warm 
Christianity, run-away-from-the-world Christianity, guaranteed
to bring failure to Christian faith.
 
And now one form of Christian faith is being openly attacked
from the floor of the US Senate.
 
Does this matter to anyone?
 
 
Billy
 
 
-------------------------------------------
 
Dianne Feinstein  Attacks Judicial  Nominee’s Catholic  Faith


by  ALEXANDRA DESANCTIS September 6, 2017

http://www.nationalreview.com
 
by  ALEXANDRA DESANCTIS September 6, 2017 5:40 PM @XAN_DESANCTIS
 
 This  afternoon, during a confirmation hearing for 7th Circuit Court of 
Appeals  nominee Amy Coney Barrett, Democratic senator Dianne Feinstein 
attacked the  nominee for her Roman Catholic faith. Barrett is a law professor 
at 
the  University of Notre Dame who has written about the role of religion in 
public  life and delivered academic lectures to Christian legal groups. 
Drawing on some  of these materials, Feinstein launched a thinly veiled attack 
on Barrett’s  Catholic faith, asserting that her religious views will prevent 
her from judging  fairly. “When you read your speeches, the conclusion one 
draws is that the dogma  lives loudly within you,” Feinstein said. “And that
’s of concern when you come  to big issues that large numbers of people 
have fought for for years in this  country.” 
 
Feinstein  is clearly hinting here at the Supreme Court decision in Roe v. 
Wade, a ruling  that Feinstein supports so vociferously that she has even 
called it a  “super-precedent.” Here’s the video footage of Feinstein’s 
comment: Feinstein  issued this highly unnecessary and evidently anti-Catholic 
comment in spite of  the fact that Barrett said earlier in the hearing, “It 
is never appropriate for  a judge to apply their personal convictions whether 
it derives from faith or  personal conviction.” Other Democratic senators 
took issue with Barrett over her  faith as well. 
 
Senate  minority whip Dick Durbin criticized Barrett’s use of the term “
orthodox  Catholic,” insisting that it unfairly maligns Catholics who do not 
hold certain  positions about abortion or the death penalty. (Durbin himself 
is a  Catholic who abandoned his previous pro-life position.) “Do you 
consider  yourself an orthodox Catholic?” he later asked Barrett point blank. 
And 
Hawaii  senator Mazie Hirono snarked, “I think your article is very plain in 
your  perspective about the role of religion for judges, and particularly 
with regard  to Catholic judges.” These criticisms echo a report from the 
left-wing Alliance  for Justice, which alleged that as a judge Barrett “would 
put her personal  beliefs ahead of the law.” 
 
This  and other claims contained in the report are completely 
unsubstantiated, much  like the charge levied by Feinstein. In fact, Barrett 
has 
explicitly written  that “judges cannot — nor should they try to — align our 
legal 
system with the  Church’s moral teaching whenever the two diverge.” She has 
also insisted that  judges ought to recuse themselves in situations when 
their faith conflicts with  their judicial responsibility. One would think 
these arguments would resolve  Democrats’ concerns, but it seems that those on 
the left are indeed willing  to take issue with Barrett’s determination that 
Catholic judges should recuse  themselves if personal convictions stemming 
from their faith would impede their  ability to do their job. 
 
Feinstein’s  comments this afternoon revealed that anti-Catholic bigotry is 
still alive in  the U.S., even, and perhaps especially, among those 
leftists who are the  first to decry prejudice and discrimination against other 
minorities. Update  09/07/17, 12:30 p.m.: Feinstein and Durbin have both 
responded to requests  from National Review to further clarify their comments 
from 
yesterday’s  confirmation hearing. Here is the statement Feinstein’s press 
secretary gave  National Review this morning: “Professor Barrett has argued 
that a judge’s  faith should affect how they approach certain cases. Based 
on this, Senator  Feinstein questioned her about whether she could separate 
her personal views  from the law, particularly regarding women’s 
reproductive rights.” 
 
Feinstein’s  office also included the following information and quotes from 
Barrett’s past  speeches and articles as “background” for Feinstein’s 
comments:  Speaking to the 2006 Notre Dame Law School graduating class, Barrett 
said:   “Your legal career is but a means to an end, and . . . that  end is 
building the kingdom of God. . . . [I]f 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.”  
 
Admittedly,  this is about lawyers and not about judges, but it speaks to 
her views on a  legal career in general. In a December 2015 piece for the 
University of Notre  Dame Alumni Association, Barrett wrote that “[l]ife is 
about more than the sum  of our own experiences, sorrows, and successes. It’s 
about the role we play  in God’s ever-unfolding plan to redeem the world.” 
She  continued: “That sounds lofty, but it’s about taking the long view.   
Do we see success through the eyes of our contemporaries, or through the eyes 
of  God? Do we focus only on what God does for us, or also on what God can 
do  for others through us.” And this is a line from Catholic Judges in 
Capital  Cases that indicates that Barrett believes religion should affect  an 
individual judge’s decisions vis-à-vis capital cases, even as it confirms she  
doesn’t believe religion should impact our overall legal system. “Judges 
cannot  — nor should they try to — align our legal system with the Church’s 
moral  teaching whenever the two diverge.  They should, however, conform  
their own behavior to the Church’s standard.  
 
Perhaps  their good example will have some effect.” [Emphases added by 
Feinstein’s  office.] Durbin likewise denied being motivated by the belief that 
a nominee’s  religious views might disqualify her from serving as a judge. 
Here’s Durbin’s  statement to National Review: I prefaced my remarks by 
saying that going into a  person’s religion is not the right thing to do in 
every circumstance. But she’s  been outspoken. As a law school professor at 
Notre Dame she has taken on the  tough challenge of how a person with strong 
religious beliefs becomes a judge  and looks at American law. So I think she 
has fashioned herself somewhat of an  expert and I didn’t feel uncomfortable 
asking that question. Durbin’s  communications director also pointed to Texas 
senator Ted Cruz’s line of  questioning yesterday, in which Cruz asked 
Barrett, “I’ve read some of what  you’ve written on Catholic judges and in 
capital cases and, in particular, as I  understand it, you argued that Catholic 
judges are morally precluded from  enforcing the death penalty . . . please 
explain your views  on that because that obviously is of relevance to the 
job for which you have  been nominated.” 
 
Neither  of these “clarifications” gives any indication that Feinstein and 
Durbin  understand the gravity of their comments and questions yesterday. 
The quotes  provided for context by Feinstein’s office reveal the senator’s 
severe  misunderstanding and ignorance of what it means to live as a person 
of faith,  and the statement from her press secretary exposes the underlying 
issue: a  dogmatic insistence on upholding abortion rights over all else.
 
 Meanwhile,  Durbin’s statement shows that his question yesterday stemmed 
precisely from a  distrust of Barrett’s subscription to certain Catholic 
teachings as a person of  faith. Not to mention the fact that the Illinois 
senator surely would not  apply his logic consistently to every judicial 
nominee 
who has in some way  “been outspoken” or “fashioned him or herself somewhat 
of an expert.”

Read  more at:  
http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/451137/dianne-feinstein-amy-coney-barrett-senator-attacks-catholic-judicial-nominee

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Wa... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community

Reply via email to