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Pace Repeats View That Gay Sex Immoral

Gen.
Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, caused a stir at a
Senate hearing
Wednesday when he repeated his view that gay sex is
immoral and should not be condoned by the military.

The General will probably be punished and ridiculed for expressing his belief that certain activities, whether heterosexual or homosexual. are wrong.  He again expressed his view that gay sex is immoral. I find it commendable that General Pace has the character to state his belief and not take the political  way out.  None of the ‘I personally think it is wrong but don’t want to tell others that they can’t do it’ that we often hear from those in the public sphere.

I agree with the General that their are wonderful Americans who  are homosexual and continue to serve the country.  But I also agree that we as a nation cannot condone immoral behavior.  I am not sure what Sen. Harkin was trying to accomplish by bringing this up during the Senate Appropriations hearing; maybe just trying to score some points with the political left!

Poinsettias at Christmas?

Here is a posting from Musings from a Catholic Bookstore that you all need to read before you order you poinsettias this Christmas!  It is a good idea to know who you are buying your flowers from.

Finding Happiness

Discipline and balance equal joy. An odd combination.

Or at least one we don’t think of very often.

When we think of intense happiness, we think of family. We think of good times. We think of Christmas morning.

And joy there is at such times.

But long-lasting, continual joy comes by way of spiritual discipline, it comes in exaltation of the Cross, which brings balance and brings us closer to the love and Mind of God.

You can go from “drug” to “drug”: from money and sex and vacations and consumerism and indulgent eating to every form of past-time and entertainment and you will not find yourself content in a permanent fashion until the inside is purged and there is an evenness in your life that opens the door to grace.

Often, we commit excesses — we are out of balance — because we are trying to fill an inner void.

Read more of this great article at Spiritdaily

Bishop Finn Celebrates Traditional Latin Mass

Kansas City Catholic has a detail post about Bishop Finn, Bishop of the Diocese of  Kansas City – St. Joseph celebrating the Traditional Latin Mass.  Kansas City Catholic is reporting that the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception was full for the Mass.

Someone needs to grow up…

A Michigan man is going to court because he doesn’t think that he should have to pay child support since “he did not want the child to be born”. Mr. Dubay argues that he should have the same rights as women do under Roe v. Wade to exempt themselves from the responsibilities for a child that they don’t want.

What a loser! Now, this is the type of guy that gives men a bad name! Apparently the argument is that we should now penalize children if their father’s wanted them to be aborted. So now we take young women, many who are scared and confused, and tell them that the guys are not going to be required to help support the child because she decides to not get an abortion???

(More)

Inside Catholic

InsideCatholic is a new site from the folks at Crisis magazine that you should all check it.  It covers a lot of the topics about Faith, Culture and Politics that I try to cover in this blog.  Although the writing seems to be a little better.  :)

The Ten Great Myths in the Debate Over Stem Cell Research

from Rev. Tadeusz Pacholczyk, Ph.D. and the National Catholic Bioethics Center

1. Stem cells can only come from embryos. In fact stem cells can be taken from umbilical cords, the placenta, amniotic fluid, adult tissues and organs such as bone marrow, fat from liposuction, regions of the nose, and even from cadavers up to 20 hours after death.

2. The Catholic Church is against stem cell research. There are four categories of stem cells: embryonic stem cells, embryonic germ cells, umbilical cord stem cells, and adult stem cells. Given that germ cells can come from miscarriages that involve no deliberate interruption of pregnancy, the church really opposes the use of only one of these four categories, i.e., embryonic stem cells. In other words, the Catholic Church approves three of the four possible types of stem cell research.

3. Embryonic stem cell research has the greatest promise. Up to now, no human being has ever been cured of a disease using embryonic stem cells. Adult stem cells, on the other hand, have already cured thousands. There is the example of the use of bone marrow cells from the hipbone to repair scar tissue on the heart after heart attacks. Research using adult cells is 20-30 years ahead of embryonic stem cells and holds greater promise. This is in part because stem cells are part of the natural repair mechanisms of an adult body, while embryonic stem cells do not belong in an adult body (where they are likely to form tumors, and to be rejected as foreign tissue by the recipient). Rather, embryonic stem cells really belong only within in the specialized microenvironment of a rapidly growing embryo, which is a radically different setting from an adult body.

4. Therapeutic cloning and reproductive cloning are fundamentally different from one another.
The creation of cloned embryos either to make a baby or to harvest cells occurs by the same series of technical steps. The only difference is what will be done with the cloned human embryo that is produced: will it be given the protection of a woman’s womb in order to be born, or will it be destroyed for its stem cells?

5. Somatic cell nuclear transfer is different from cloning.
In fact, “somatic cell nuclear transfer” is simply cloning by a different name. The end result is still a cloned embryo.

6. By doing somatic cell nuclear transfer, we can directly produce tissues or organs without having to clone an embryo. At the present stage of research, scientists are unable to bypass the creation of an embryo in the production of tissues or organs. In the future it may be possible to use chemicals, hormones or even elements from the cytoplasm of a woman’s egg to “reprogram” a somatic cell (like a skin cell) into a stem cell, without ever creating an embryo. This is called “de-differentiation,” and if this becomes feasible, there would be no moral objections to such an approach to getting stem cells.

7. Every body cell, or somatic cell, is somehow an embryo and thus a human life. People sometimes argue: “Every cell in the body has the potential to become an embryo when we do cloning. Does that mean that every time we wash our hands and are shedding thousands of cells, we are killing life?” The problem is that this overlooks the basic biological difference between a regular body cell, and one whose nuclear material has been fused with an unfertilized egg cell, resulting in an embryo. A normal skin cell will only give rise to more skin cells when it divides, while an embryo will give rise to the entire adult organism. Skin cells are not potential adults. Skin cells are potentially only more skin cells. Only embryos are potential adults.

8. Because no sperm is used in cloning, the resultant embryo can’t be a human being and it must be OK to destroy it for its stem cells. Normally when sperm and egg join, each provides half the DNA to make the full complement in the embryo. That embryo then grows to become an adult. When you do cloning, you avoid the first step of mixing parental DNA, obtaining the full complement instead from the nucleus of the regular body cell that is transferred inside the woman’s egg. That cloned embryo then grows to become an adult. Because Dolly the Sheep was made without sperm, this does not imply that she was some kind of being other than a sheep. Similarly, a human embryo made without sperm is not some kind of being other than a human. Cloning simply provides a workaround for the first step of fertilization, producing a genuine human who should never be destroyed for his or her stem cells.

9. Because frozen embryos may one day end up being discarded by somebody, that makes it morally allowable, even laudable, to violate and destroy those embryos. The moral analysis of what we may permissibly do with an embryo doesn’t depend on its otherwise “going to waste,” nor on the incidental fact that those embryos are “trapped” in liquid nitrogen. If we imagine a coal mine with miners who are permanently trapped inside through no fault of their own, with the certainty that they are all going to die, that would not make it okay to send a remote control robotic device to harvest organs from those miners and cause their demise.

10. Because large numbers of embryos generated during intercourse are lost from the woman’s body and die naturally, that makes it permissible for us to destroy embryos in research. What Mother Nature does and what man may do are two distinct realities that should never be confused. If Mother Nature sends a tsunami that claims thousands of human lives, that does not make it morally permissible for me to take a machine gun and shoot into a stadium filled with thousands of people.

Love thy Neighbor!

I read an article earlier tonight on the San Diego Union Tribune website concerning the settlement between the Diocese and victims of abuse.  What really struck me as disturbing was the amount of hatred toward Catholicism and Catholics on the comments to the article.  I thought that I would share my contribution to the discussion. 

I can’t believe all the hatred towards Catholicism and Catholics on this board!

Granted there were many Priest who are guilty of these crimes
against these victims. And there are members of the hierarchy which
failed to act to protect further victims either through their own
incompetence, neglect or as a result of bad counsel from professionals
who said that the perpetrators were “cured”. These folks should be held
accountable.

These type of settlements do not result in that accountability, only
an awarding of $$ to the alleged victims and various attorneys. In some
cases, this is exactly what is needed to allow the victims to get
appropriate counseling, obtain closure and to move forward. In other
cases the $$ are going to go to individuals who may not have been
victimized and/or to Lawyers who have made a career of suing the
Catholic Church. I would suggest that the good that results from
helping the victims out ways the harm in “awarding” $$ to non-victims
and that nothing positive can come out of trying to paint the lawsuits
as “all about the money”.

With that being said, I find it appalling and unconscionable that
many on this board are using this opportunity to validate their hatred
and/or distrust of Catholics and the Catholic Church. As with other
faiths, Catholics have a long history of standing up for and providing
assistance to those in need. These services are provided through
shelters, hospitals, schools and other charities. These are the areas
that are going to be impacted by the large judgments. So please, do not
encourage folks to stop supporting their Church. There are still many,
many good men and women doing Christ’s work through the Catholic
Church.

Please join me in praying for the victims that they may find the
peace in their hearts to heal and get past this, for the perpetrators
of the abuse so that they will repent and make peace with God before it
is too late and for the good work that the Church has done in the past
and that it will continue into the future.

God Bless,

How religious is…

Here is a chart from Pew Research showing how the public rates each of the leading Presidential candidates on whether they are religious or not.  It seems that the leading candidates on both the Republican and Democratic side are not considered very religious.  Surprised or not?

More abortion news from Kansas….

Lifenews is reporting a couple more stories out of Kansas concerning Dr. Tiller and his friend in the Attorney General’s office. A Kansas pro-life group has turned in almost 8000 signatures requesting that a grand jury be convened to investigate how many illegal abortions were done at Tiller’s facility in Wichita. The good doctor is currently under indictment for 19 misdemeanor counts of performing illegal abortions but is suspected of performing many more.

In a related story
, Kansas Attorney General Paul Morrison is upset that a legislative panel is examining the state’s late-term abortion law and how it is being enforced. The panel is reviewing a DVD that quotes a leading psychology professor from John Hopkins University as saying that none of the abortion files that he reviewed compiled with the state law because the abortions were done for non-medical reasons.