Like in science, the conclusion one reaches depends on the assumptions made at the beginning. The beliefs of each religion and the rules supposed to be God-given suffer from this same limitation.

In this article the author makes the argument that the rules of the Catholic Church, i.e. no abortion, no condoms, and no gay marriage, would not advance mankind because their change would separate the sex act from its primary intention, thereby causing injury to mankind.

The fact not considered is that all three prohibitions would lead to a smaller population. The assumption not considered is that this fact might be a good thing. Providing a growing Catholic population has always been the self-serving policy of the church. For centuries, this policy gave an advantage to the human race. However, this advantage is rapidly decaying away as population grows at a compounding rate. How many more people must suck the resources out of the earth before the Church changes its policy? I suggest that even science can not mediate the damage if population grows at a sufficiently rapid rate.

Ed

Grimer wrote:
I thought this was a rather intelligent article which some
Vorts might appreciate, i.e. those that believe that objective
truth is not merely confined to science.    ;-)


Why progressive Westerners never understood John Paul II By Mark Steyn (Filed: 05/04/2005)

If I were Pope - and no, don't worry, I'm not planning a mid-life career change - but, if I were, 
I'd be a little irked at the secular media's inability to discuss religion except through the prism 
of their moral relativism. That's why last weekend's grand old man - James Callaghan - got a more 
sympathetic send-off than this weekend's. The Guardian's headline writer billed Sunny Jim as a man 
"whose consensus politics were washed away in the late 1970s". Is it possible to have any 
meaningful "consensus" between, on the one hand, closed-shop council manual workers 
demanding a 40 per cent pay rise and, on the other, rational human beings? What would the middle 
ground between the real world and Planet Zongo look like? A 30 per cent pay rise, rising to 40 per 
cent over 18 months or the next strike, whichever comes sooner?



By contrast, the Guardian thought Karol Wojtyla was "a doctrinaire, authoritarian pontiff". That 
"doctrinaire" at least suggests the inflexible authoritarian derived his inflexibility from some ancient 
operating manual - he was dogmatic about his dogma - unlike the New York Times and the Washington Post, which came 
close to implying that John Paul II had taken against abortion and gay marriage off the top of his head, principally to 
irk "liberal Catholics". The assumption is always that there's some middle ground that a less 
"doctrinaire" pope might have staked out: he might have supported abortion in the first trimester, say, or 
reciprocal partner benefits for gays in committed relationships.

The root of the Pope's thinking - that there are eternal truths no one can change even if one wanted to - is completely incomprehensible to the progressivist mindset. There are no absolute truths, everything's in play, and by "consensus" all we're really arguing is the rate of concession to the inevitable: abortion's here to stay, gay marriage will be here any day now, in a year or two it'll be something else - it's all gonna happen anyway, man, so why be the last squaresville daddy-o on the block?

We live in a present-tense culture where novelty is its own virtue: the Guardian, for 
example, has already been touting the Nigerian Francis Arinze as "candidate for 
first black pope". This would be news to Pope St Victor, an African and pontiff from 
189 to 199. Among his legacies: the celebration of Easter on a Sunday.

That's not what the Guardian had in mind, of course: it meant "the first black pope since the 
death of Elvis" - or however far back our societal memory now goes. But, if you hold an office 
first held by St Peter, you can say "been there, done that" about pretty much everything 
the Guardian throws your way. John Paul's papacy was founded on what he called - in the title of 
his encyclical - Veritatis Splendor, and when you seek to find consensus between truth and lies you 
tarnish that splendour.

Der Spiegel this week published a selection from the creepy suck-up letters Gerhard 
Schr�der wrote to the East German totalitarian leaders when he was a West German pol on 
the make in the 1980s. As he wrote to Honecker's deputy, Egon Krenz: "I will 
certainly need the endurance you have wished me in this busy election year. But you will 
certainly also need great strength and good health for your People's Chamber 
election." The only difference being that, on one side of the border, the election 
result was not in doubt.

When a free man enjoying the blessings of a free society promotes an 
equivalence between real democracy and a sham, he's colluding in the great lie 
being perpetrated by the prison state. Too many Western politicians of a 
generation ago - Schmidt, Trudeau, Mitterrand - failed to see what John Paul 
saw so clearly. It requires tremendous will to cling to the splendour of truth 
when the default mode of the era is to blur and evade.

The question now is whether His Holiness was as right about us as he was about the Communists. The secularists, for example, can't forgive him for his opposition to condoms in the context of Aids in Africa. The Dark Continent gets darker every year: millions are dying, male life expectancy is collapsing and such civil infrastructure as there is seems likely to follow.

But the most effective weapon against the disease has not been the Aids lobby's 20-year promotion of condom culture in Africa, but Uganda's campaign to change behaviour and to emphasise abstinence and fidelity - i.e., the Pope's position. You don't have to be a Catholic or a "homophobe" to think that the spread of Aids is telling us something basic - that nature is not sympathetic to sexual promiscuity. If it weren't Aids, it would be something else, as it has been for most of human history.

What should be the Christian response? To accept that we're merely the captives of our appetites, like a dog 
in heat? Or to ask us to rise to the rank God gave us - "a little lower than the angels" but above 
"the beasts of the field"? In Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life), the Pope wrote: 
"Sexuality too is depersonalised and exploited: it increasingly becomes the occasion and instrument for 
self-assertion and the selfish satisfaction of personal desires and instincts. Thus the original import of 
human sexuality is distorted and falsified, and the two meanings, unitive and procreative, inherent in the 
very nature of the conjugal act, are artificially separated."

Had the Pope signed on to condom distribution in Africa, he would have done nothing to 
reduce the spread of Aids, but he would have done a lot to advance the further artificial 
separation of sex, in Africa and beyond. Indeed, if you look at the New York Times's list 
of complaints against the Pope - "Among liberal Catholics, he was criticised for his 
strong opposition to abortion, homosexuality and contraception" - they all boil down 
to what he called sex as self-assertion.

Thoughtful atheists ought to be able to recognise that, whatever one's tastes in these areas, the Pope was on to something - that abortion et al, in separating the "two meanings" of sex and leaving us free to indulge in one while ignoring the other, have severed us almost entirely and possibly irreparably from traditional impulses, such as societal survival. John Paul II championed the "splendour of truth" not because he was rigid and inflexible, but because he understood the alternative was a dead end in every sense.

If his beloved Europe survives in any form, it will one day acknowledge that.







Reply via email to