Cardinal Mahoney is still feeling very sorry for himself
by David Atkins
Cardinal Mahoney, member of one of the most judgmental institutions on the planet, continues the pity party on his blog:
I can’t recall a time such as now when people tend to be so judgmental and even self-righteous, so quick to accuse, judge and condemn. And often with scant real facts and information. Because of news broadcasts now 24/7 there is little or no fact checking; no in-depth analysis; no context or history given. Rather, everything gets reported as “news” regardless of the basis for the item being reported–and passed on by countless other news outlets.
We have ended up with a climate in which it’s the norm to instantly pass judgement on one another, taking in and repeating gossip, sharing someone else’s judgment as the truth, no regard for other people who may be harmed. Whatever happened to the norm of giving others the benefit of a doubt until hard evidence proves otherwise?
Witness the hatred which has boiled up across the Middle East and other conflicted parts of the world, and the deep emotions which do not allow for understanding or love to emerge at all.
But Jesus calls us to something far different and much more difficult: we are to love our enemies, pray for those who persecute us. In today’s world, to follow Jesus and his Gospel message means to “be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect.” That’s a really high bar for all of us, and certainly for me.
My daily prayer list includes both loved ones/friends, as well as those who dislike or even hate me. One prayer group involves those suffering from cancer and other illnesses, those who have been sexually abused by clergy and others in our Church, those who can’t find a decent job, those in danger of losing their homes, our immigrants who live in the shadows of society.
But another prayer group includes individuals who cannot forgive me for my past hurts or offenses, those in the media who constantly malign me and my motives, attorneys who never focus on context or history in their legal matters, groups which picket me or otherwise object to me, and all those who despise me or even hate me.
If I don’t pray for all of these people, then I am not following Jesus’ specific discipleship demand.
The narcissistic hubris of Mahoney, a man who deliberately misled police to cover for pedophile priests, in praying for those who can’t quite forgive him for his actions is amazing.
But it’s not altogether different from the unapologetic austerity peddlers who have wrecked Europe’s economy while wining and dining at Davos and tut-tutting over those nasty, angry populists in Italy. Or the media elite in Washington who wag their finger at the American public for not wholly embracing cuts to Social Security even as 1% of the nation controls almost 50% of the wealth.
Elites at nearly every stratum of society have lost touch with reality and failed. Their response to that failure has not been to apologize and recalibrate, but rather to double down and wallow in judgmental petulance.
Cardinal Mahoney is merely a symptom of a much larger disease.
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