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Spirit & Life | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| “The
words I spoke to you are spirit and life.” (Jn 6:63) Human Life International e-Newsletter Volume 01, Number 58 | Friday, March 9, 2007 |
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Sean Hannity's Gospel In an age of sophisticated dissent against Christ and His Church, the purity of the Ancient Faith needs defense so that people do not put their faith in "another gospel," says St. Paul (Gal 1:7). In the face of modern challenges to the Faith, Catholics who have a high profile in media, culture and government have a very grave responsibility to witness it correctly; otherwise, they will be held accountable in heaven for their anti-witness which affects the faith of millions. For example, last
Friday Sean Hannity took a few moments out of his afternoon radio show
to make an apology. When I heard that the rather brash Hannity was actually
going to apologize for something I was interested to find out what that
would be. At first he sounded very Well, even though
he claims to be a "good Catholic," Hannity is hardly a credible
commentator on Catholic matters. The chicken sandwich scandal was fairly
trivial in the overall scheme of his show, but it said much more about
the depth of his faith than anything else. I suspect that a great number
of Catholics live their faith in the same Just for the record, he did not commit a sin when he ate the chicken sandwich—he had no intention to violate the Church precept, and he corrected himself immediately when he realized what he did. That's not a sin, and issuing a dramatic "apology" for doing that is, well, entertainment, not witness. This, unfortunately, is what passes for a deep discussion of the Catholic Faith in the public forum nowadays. If apologies are the
order of the day, then the repentance I would like to hear out of Sean
Hannity's mouth is for his shameless—even scandalous—promotion
of birth control. Yes, I have heard him personally say, "I have no
problem with birth control. It's a good thing." (Another bit of profound
theological reasoning.) Given the size of his audience and the importance
of his status in pop culture, The moral of the story is that Catholic men and women in the media need to be truly Catholic or at least stop being hypocrites. We have enough pretenders to the title of Catholic in public life without being treated to superficial assessments of profound moral issues. Rules are important, but Lent is not about rule-breaking, it's about conversion of heart; and on the most important moral issues of our day, public Catholics like Hannity have no right to profess "another gospel," or the faith of millions—and indeed their own souls—are in serious jeopardy. Sincerely Yours in
Christ, |
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