Showing posts with label Catholics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catholics. Show all posts

February 28 – Congress Bans Diplomatic Relations...With the Vatican?!

Posted on February 28, 2019

There is a pretty huge number of Catholics in the United States, and they are pretty much entirely accepted as equal and worthy citizens, just like everyone else...thank goodness!

The founding documents of the U.S.
make sure that there is no state religion
and that, indeed, the government is
specifically forbidden to favor one
religion over any other.
And the U.S. is supposed to be unconcerned with people's religious beliefs, or lack of religious beliefs - it's right there in the Constitution's First Amendment! 

That founding document would seemingly ensure that Catholics were indeed treated equally with Protestants and people of all other faiths.

But, you probably already know, founding documents don't necessarily erase fear and hatred and bigotry. And throughout the history of the U.S., some people have been bigoted against others based on religious differences. 

Anti-Semitism is the name for the all-too-common fear of / hatred for Jews, which seemed to me to be utterly eliminated in the post-WWII years...but now, sadly, has risen up again here and there. There has been quite a lot of fear / hatred toward Muslims, unfortunately, especially since 2001, and there has always been prejudice against pagans and other small religious groups - and perhaps the most fear and hatred of atheists and other non-believers. 
There should be more tolerance of religious beliefs,
but we are doing better these days than many
societies have in the past.


But it might surprise young people to realize how much anti-Catholic sentiment there has been in the U.S. Like, since colonial times, and stretching all the way to the 1980s!

There were two major threads of anti-Catholic feelings. One was supposedly based on theology (beliefs about God and proper religious worship) but was at least partly based on memory of all the religious wars in Europe. To some extent, much of North America was settled by religious minorities seeking a place for their Protestant beliefs. France and Spain were hugely dominated by Catholics and Catholic rulers; Britain had not only fought many wars against both of these nations, but had also itself gone back and forth between being ruled by Catholic kings and queens and ruled by Anglican / Church of England monarchs. Ireland was very much divided mostly along religious lines: Catholics vs. Protestants.

Europe suffered through centuries of relgious wars.

The other thread of anti-Catholic feelings was the sort of anti-immigrant, anti-"foreigner" thing we still see among some folks in the U.S. today. Most immigrants from Ireland, Italy, Latin America, and Poland were Catholic - and the prejudices against these various peoples extended not just to their languages and customs, but also to their religious preference.


On this date in 1867, Congress passed a law that there would be no funding for diplomatic missions to Vatican City (basically, no ambassadors or diplomatic visits to the Pope).

Mary Surratt and others were hanged
after the assassination.
This uptick of negativity to the Catholic Church was caused partly by the fact that Mary Surratt and her son, both of whom were Catholics, were involved with John Wilkes Booth in plotting to assassinate President Lincoln. But - notice! - the actual assassin, Booth himself, was Protestant,  and nobody suggested taking action against Protestant churches because of this one individual Protestant!

Anyway, I was surprised to read that, when these diplomatic relations between Vatican City and the U.S. were cut in 1867, they were not reestablished again until 1984! (??!) 

It turns out that most presidents since Franklin D. Roosevelt (including FDR) sent personal envoys to see the Pope and discuss humanitarian issues, and most presidents since
Eisenhower personally visited the Pope as well as had personal envoys in touch with the Pope. So it wasn't as grim as there being no contact at all through all those decades. Finally, in 1984, under Reagan, formal diplomatic relations were reestablished. It's interesting to note that there was pretty much no opposition to this among Protestants or anyone else.



By the way, it's interesting to note that there was still a lot of horrific bigotry against Catholic people in 1960, when John F. Kennedy (a Catholic) was running for president. Note that 
the first of these cartoons assumes that a Catholic president would be a puppet of the Pope. Shockingly, the second cartoon indicates that the Ku Klux Klan would "save" Americans from supposedly evil Catholics (notice the beastlike hand marked "Rome"; the headquarters of the Catholic Church, the Vatican, is located inside Rome).



This cartoon states, "Religious liberty is guaranteed - but
can we allow foreign reptiles to crawl all over us?"
The reptiles are marked "Roman Church" - meaning
the Roman Catholic church - and "Mormon Church."
Pretty horrific, huh?
Kennedy won despite all that bigotry, and his leadership during the presidency - and the tragedy of his assassination - may be part of the reason that anti-Catholic thought has so diminished in the latter part of the 1900s. (It's about time!!!)


August 8 – Saint Mary MacKillop Day in Australia

Posted on August 8, 2018

Mary MacKillop is unusual in two ways:

She is Australia's first Catholic saint.

And she's probably one of the few saints who was excommunicated from the Catholic Church! That means she was kicked out of the Church - for a while...

We usually celebrate people on their birthday (the anniversary of their birth), unless we do not know it. But Saint Mary MacKillop Day is the anniversary of her death. She is most remembered for her work on behalf of children, especially for her work educating poor rural kids.

Mary MacKillop's parents emigrated to Australia from Scotland, and MacKillop was born in Melbourne. She grew up poor had to go to work because her family's farm was not successful. Like her siblings, MacKillop had to work from an early age to help support the family. She worked at age 14 as a clerk in a store, but she soon left for South Australia to become a governess for some wealthy relatives.

At that point, MacKillop lived on an estate - a very successful farm - and taught her relatives' children there in the home. But there were many children of farmhands also living on the estate, and MacKillop included those kids in her lessons. 

From that early taste of educating poor children, MacKillop took on teaching at schools, opening up schools, and even starting a group of Catholic nuns dedicated to teaching in the schools. MacKillop started wearing simple brown habits, and her blood sister Lexie and the other sisters (nuns) did, too. They called themselves Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart, and others called them Josephites.

Now, why was MacKillop kicked out of the Catholic Church?

Apparently there was some bad stuff going back and forth between men who were high-up officials in the Church. Their disagreement was supposedly about education, and one of the men used another man's support of the Josephites as a way to criticize him. So...so he had to tear down the Josephites. He started ugly rumors about MacKillop and excommunicated her.

But when Church official was about to die, he left orders for her to be brought back into Church membership. He probably realized how wrong he'd been to kick her out...




 

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July 12, 2012 - Orangefest




This holiday goes by different names in different countries. In Ireland, it is often called Orangemen's Day or Orangefest, and in Newfoundland and Labrador (in Canada) it is sometimes simply called Orange Day. I know you're wondering if the day honors the fruit or the color, but in actuality it is a celebration of a military victory of the Protestant King William of Orange against the Catholic King James II at the Battle of the Boyne in Ireland.

Yikes! I am not usually one to want to celebrate bloodshed over religious differences!

However, those that celebrate Orange Day (by any name) these days point out that our modern emphasis is not on past violence or political differences between Protestant and Catholic Irish, but rather on culture and colorful traditions. People march in parades, decorate the streets with flags and bunting and banners, and light bonfires.

Unfortunately, a lot of people who are still alive well remember the Troubles between Protestants and Catholics in Ireland (from the late 1960s to the late 1990s), so I think that there is some possibility that colorful traditions could once again spill over into fighting. Let it not be so!!

Maybe we should just make the holiday all about the color and the fruit called “orange”?

Here are some of my favorite orange things:
  • Orange and chocolate, together! Yum. Whether it's candy, cake, or ice cream, chocolate is better with a dash of orange flavoring.







  • California poppies. They are so bright on the roadside, they almost seem unnatural! Like someone gave Mother Nature a box of neon bright markers or something.
  • Fresh-squeezed orange juice.
  • Orange leaves in the fall. I like the golden ones and red ones, too, of course, but the orange ones are my favorite.

  • Jack-o-lanterns. I prefer the ones with cheery faces or intricate scenes, but scary faces are fun, too.








  • Orange slices. You know, that candy shaped like wedges of orange (the fruit) with sugar crystals on the outside?


  • All the orange worn by the Dutch during national soccer games, Queen's Day, and other assorted events that call for patriotism. The color orange is a patriotic color for the Netherlands because it is the color of its royal family—which dates back to William of Orange, which brings us full circle on this discussion of Orangefest!

Also on this date:










Cryptographer Michael Ventris's birthday