Preaching Even When It’s “Out of Season”

Preaching-priest-1160x480There is a paradox in the exhortation of Saint Paul in his second letter to Saint Timothy: “Preach the word; be diligent in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.” When “in season,” Christian preaching is plentiful, accepted and easy. It is in the “out of season” time, however, when it is rejected, that Christian preaching is most difficult and most needed.

Today, I will look at marriage as a case study involving huge social attitude changes over the past few years and the task we face in the future. I will look at mistakes that have been made, the impact that rapid changes in the social order have had on society and individuals and I will suggest an approach for preaching on marriage when it is “out of season.”

WORLD TURNED UPSIDE DOWN

Before 1997 the place of traditional marriage in the United States appeared assured. The sole controversy, and a brief one at that, was over polygamy in the 19th century when Congress allowed the admission of Utah as a state so long as it prohibited polygamy. In 1997, however, an Alaska judge ruled Alaska’s marriage law unconstitutional because it allowed only marriage between heterosexuals. Several Alaska legislators, in reaction to the court decision, proposed a constitutional amendment declaring simply that marriage in Alaska was between one man and one woman.

An organization was formed to campaign for a “yes” vote. The reaction of many to our efforts then was “why bother” with such a campaign. Support for traditional marriage was surely a no-brainer and the amendment would pass easily. Indeed, the opposition was lightly funded. There were a few newspaper ads by liberal clergy plus a letter-writing campaign and some opinion columns in the local newspaper, but little money. On election day 68 percent of voters approved the amendment and Alaska was the first in the country (and would soon be followed by 30 states through either legislation or the ballot box) to ensure that traditional marriage was the law of the state.

Fast-forward to today, a mere 17 years later. Everything has been reversed. The homosexual marriage movement is aggressive and well funded. State legislatures have enacted same-sex marriage laws; states which had adopted traditional marriage laws have reversed course; and, most importantly, the judiciary has moved aggressively to trump any democratic decision by the people, imposing homosexual marriage on the nation by judicial fiat. Polls show the rapid change in public attitude, leading many public leaders to “evolve” from their previous support of traditional marriage and follow the new trend.

Now the liberty of individuals, business and churches is being challenged. Laws have been enacted and more have been proposed in the name of tolerance to suppress any objection to same-sex behavior. Those who support traditional marriage or disapprove of homosexual activities, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church does, are labeled bigots. In a world turned upside down, a no brainer in 1998 is bigotry in 2015.

SILENCE HAS CONSEQUENCES

This brings me to the second part of this case study. In 2012 Anchorage residents had to vote on a ballot initiative that aimed to enshrine sexual orientation as a prohibited discrimination classification to the Anchorage civil rights law, placing it on the level of race and religion. Proponents, who gathered thousands of signature to place the proposal before voters, falsely claimed that churches would be unaffected by the change. Ten days before the election, the polling margin of those in support of the change shrank from over 20 points to just 9 points in favor. Then on election day the initiative was voted down by a 14-point margin — a 23-point switch in just 10 days.

As this case illustrates, we see rapid and contradictory shifts in public attitudes on issues involving legal acceptance of homosexual behavior. A vital factor has been the relentless pressure of post-modern culture. The culture has vigorously adopted a libertarian view of sex, totally divorced from and opposed to traditional standards of sexual responsibility and fidelity, which was accompanied by a clear set of rules passed on from generation to generation. We, and particularly our children, have been bombarded with a broken notion of sexuality dressed up as liberation.

But homosexual “marriage” is not, by itself, what is destroying marriage. Homosexual marriage merely contributes to the rapid deconstruction of society’s most basic institution. Consider the changes that have long been underway. In 1970, 95 percent of all births were to married couples — last year that had dropped to only 59 percent. Less than half of all kids today (46 percent) live with traditional married parents in their first marriage, down from 73 percent in 1960.

Let me issue an indictment against the churches, the Catholic Church in particular. I can count on the fingers of one hand the times I have heard a homily on marriage or the Christian principles of sexuality in the last 40 years. In truth, the debate over marriage was conceded to the post-modern culture by simply not showing up. We have been living on accumulated moral capital, assuming it would hold, only to see it run out. The silence has had severe negative consequences. In the public sphere it is difficult for the laity to make the case for the church’s teaching on marriage and the family.

More importantly, the failure to transmit Christian moral teaching is a disaster for family and social life. The devastating impact falls on children for whom the family is created in order to provide stability and transmit to them spiritual life.

COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWN

It has been my privilege for the last 26 years to be on the board of Covenant House Alaska, an international Catholic charity for runaway and thrown-away youth ages 13 to 20. Most of these youth have never had parents to teach and mentor them for adulthood. They don’t know how to be parents, but someday they will be and their children will grow up without having acquired that spiritual life which is so necessary for the healthy life of families and nations.

We have a brand new building for our at-risk youth, but it can’t heal the culture that they come from. Preaching on marriage and fidelity, however, can reach people who are aware — thanks to their lived experience — that the culture’s promise of glamour and happiness is false.

For the larger picture, I am pessimistic. There is no standard today by which rival moral claims can be judged. Our modern culture has divorced faith from reason and eliminated the transcendent as the final standard, leaving reason as the sole means of coming to any moral agreement. Although the moral language used today sounds like the old moral tradition, the words have been emptied of their former meaning. Moral decisions — if you can still call them that — are made by autonomous individuals. All that is left to resolve public moral disputes is power, including, the fiat of an activist judiciary and, to suppress dissent, the use of law and public pressure.

ABUSE OF POWER

As you know, the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to decide the marriage question sometime this summer. Overwhelmingly, the federal courts, including in Alaska, have ruled against traditional marriage. It is likely the U.S. Supreme Court will decide 5 to 4 that traditional marriage laws are unconstitutional because they violate the equal protection clause.

Equal protection became part of the Constitution in 1868 as part of the 14th Amendment, one of the three reconstruction amendments adopted after the Civil War. Congress enacted a Civil Rights Act to outlaw the black codes adopted by southern states to isolate and deny rights to the newly freed slaves. Congress feared that the law would be found unconstitutional as beyond the power of the federal government, hence the 14th Amendment.

The Equal Protection clause is now 147 years old. Only in the last few years have some imagined that it now or ever could be used to redefine civil marriage to include same-sex couples. The Constitution has been reduced to an historical document. It has nothing to do with constitutional law today. So the Constitution is created, re-created, changed and altered beyond description by five unelected lawyers. With this case you have four liberals on one side and four conservatives on the other. The fifth vote is Anthony Kennedy who has been the leader in this revolution.

A PREACHER’S POWER

Despite the long odds, there remains a sliver of optimism. Earlier, I described the swift, unexpected changes in public consensus surrounding the Anchorage sexual orientation ballot initiative. Two significant things happened just before that election day in 2012. The archbishop of Anchorage wrote a letter to all parishes along with a newspaper column that carefully explained the church’s position and the dangers that the sexual orientation initiative posed to religious liberty. After the election people told him that he had clarified the issue for them. They believed the ballot measure was wrong but couldn’t express why. Proponents had repeatedly claimed that sexual orientation discrimination was the new civil rights issue. Just before the election, eight prominent black pastors held a news conference. They denied that this issue had any connection with the historic civil rights movement and urged a “no” vote. People still listen to religious leaders. But you can’t influence minds if you don’t speak.

The laity fit in by engaging the culture in the myriad of ways, in ordinary professional and family life and in the public sphere. I would add another duty — pester your pastors. Tell them we need and want preaching on the family, sexuality, responsibility and fidelity. It works. Recently one of our great friars at Holy Family Cathedral in Anchorage preached on the family. I complimented him and he said he remembered my complaint about hearing little such preaching in the last 40 years.

So I end where I began: “Preach the word; be diligent in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.” (See “Preaching Even When It’s “Out of Season” HERE)

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More Victims, Planned Murders: More Harrowing Details Emerge in the Case of the Kidnapped Amish Girls

amish16n-6-web-620x4001-620x400-620x400By Tamar Auber. Last summer, two little Amish girls were taken from a roadside farm stand, shackled and sexually assaulted before being dropped off miles from their home a day later.

Their kidnappers were quickly captured thanks to information the girls were able to provide to investigators.

Now, both federal and local prosecutors have offered the callous couple behind the assault a deal to plead guilty to the charges stemming from the horrific crime.

Stephen Howells, 39, and girlfriend Nicole Vaisey, 25, both currently in federal custody, were presented with a deal last week in order to spare the little Amish girls – ages 7 and 12- the pain of reliving their terror at a trial.

The deal would see the couple spending the rest of their lives behind bars for a laundry list of federal and local charges. (Read more from “More Victims, Planned Murders: More Harrowing Details Emerge in the Case of the Kidnapped Amish Girls” HERE)

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‘I Was in a Master-Slave Relationship’: Woman Who Kidnapped Amish Girls Tries to Avoid Full Blame

By Tamar Auber. The woman who kidnapped two little Amish girls in upstate New York says that it is not entirely her fault that it happened; she was in a master-slave relationship with her boyfriend.

Nicole Vaisey, 25, did not speak at a hearing this week where she was denied bail for kidnapping the girls.

Through her lawyer, though, she made it clear that she intends to argue the bulk of the blame should go to her ‘master’ and co-conspirator Steven Howells.

“She was in a master-slave relationship,” her attorney Bradford Riendeau said yesterday. “I believe she’s not as culpable as he is.”

Riendeau also said that Vaisey should be considered a victim as well. “I am currently researching on what happens when prisoners of war go through enhanced interrogation,” he said. “What torture has done to her personality to determine just how compliant she was? Was it really voluntary? Can you really give consent to be tortured?” (Read more from this story HERE)

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The Challenge of Fetus Fatigue

1sadwomanThe dialogue between the two injured men, each dancing on the doorstep of death, sticks with you. In the movie Black Hawk Down, a hard-charging Army Ranger pauses to rally a stunned soldier in the midst of a ferocious firefight.

Colonel: Get into that truck and drive.

Sergeant: But I’m shot, Colonel.

Colonel: Everybody’s shot! Get in and drive.

I thought of this exchange when I heard the horrifying news of a seven-month-old baby in Colorado who was cut out of her mother’s womb and later died. According to the Washington Post, Dynel Lane attacked Michelle Wilkins and her unborn daughter when Wilkins came to her home in response to a Craigslist posting about baby clothes. Lane knifed the baby out of Wilkins’ body before depositing her in the bathroom. Soon after, the baby died.

Lane has been charged with eight felonies, including unlawful termination of a child. She was not charged with murder of the fetus, however. The Boulder County Coroner’s office had this to say by way of explanation: “At this time neither the autopsy or the investigation have provided any evidence that the baby exhibited any signs of life outside of the womb, therefore the circumstance is not being considered a live birth.”

There are certain moments in life that clarify the evil that slithers through our world. Because the baby was not brought into the world through a “live birth,” her death does not constitute a murder. Unless she lived on her own outside of the womb, by state law she is not considered a viable person, and thus Lane committed no murder.

At times, life in a culture of death makes you question whether you are sane. It also leaves you susceptible to spiritual exhaustion. Cases like this cry out for justice, but an abortion-loving society often makes true justice hard to come by. Pro-life people may feel a sense of “fetus fatigue.” The odds are great. Pro-life work is despised. Maybe it’s better to go dig a well or build a house. No one hates us for that, after all.

Instinct for Justice

The instinct of the human heart for justice does not switch off. This is especially true for men and women who know that human life is the special creation of Almighty God (Gen. 1:26-27; Mic. 6:8). Dignity and worth owe to divine creation, which sets humanity apart from the animals.

We may feel like the battle is too great for us. We may be tired of the bitterness involved in standing against pure wickedness. We are all tired. We have collectively taken hits for the cause of the unborn. There is no one else to fight this battle. We cannot give up. There is no one else to drive.

We have seen many pro-life gains in recent decades, yet there is much more ground to take. We will only build on the momentum of the heroic pro-life movement in this country if we match and exceed the zeal of proponents of abortion. This will come naturally to us, for like our creating God, we love life and we exude hope. Hope is not theoretical for us. It entered the world through a promise (Gen. 3:15), it refigured the world through a cross (Matt. 27), and it testifies even now to the world through an empty tomb (1 Cor. 15).

This kind of divine dynamism does not succumb to any form of ethical tiredness like “fetus fatigue.” We are weak, yes, but God is strong in us (Rom. 8:37). We are more than conquerors in Christ, who has raised us to life by his own triumph over the grave.

We are not raised for ourselves, though. Life is not about us. It is a doxological undertaking. This instinct calls us afresh to the defense of those who have no voice. It leaves us champions of a culture of flourishing and a body of policy that will protect the unborn and bring to justice those who would destroy them.

We have not been shot, but we are wearied by wickedness. The death of Michelle Wilkins’s baby reminds us that now is the time to get in and drive. (See “The Challenge of Fetus Fatigue”, originally posted HERE)

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You’ll Never Guess Which State is Most Likely to Attend Church

churchA recent Gallup poll confirms previous reports that Alaska is one of the nation’s least religious states.

According to the most recent poll, nearly three out of four Alaskans say they do not attend weekly religious services and almost 60 percent say they seldom or never attend religious services.

Conducted in 2014, from January to December, the poll included 537 responses from Alaskans and 177,000 responses nationwide.

States with the lowest church attendance are Vermont (17 percent), New Hampshire (20 percent), Maine (20 percent), Massachusetts (22 percent), Washington (24 percent), Oregon (24 percent), Hawaii (25 percent), Colorado (25 percent), Connecticut (25 percent) and Alaska (26 percent).

But the 57 percent of Alaskans who say they seldom or never attend religious services make up the sixth highest in the nation.

This contrasts with states like Utah where slightly more than half of residents say they attend religious services every week, highest in the nation. Residents in the four Southern states of Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and Arkansas are the next most likely to attend church, with 45 to 47 percent reporting weekly attendance.

Church attendance provides an important measure of the way in which Americans view their “personal, underlying religiosity,” The Gallup report states. “In particular, the focus on the top category of ‘weekly’ attendance yields a good indicator of the percentage of each state’s population that is highly religious, and for whom religion is likely to be a significant factor in their daily lives.”

Five of the six New England states rank among the bottom 10 states for church attendance. All other states in the bottom 10 are in the West, including the nation’s three states that are as far as one can go in the northwest corner of the country — Alaska, Washington and Oregon.

Church attendance is related to “Americans’ views on life, culture, society in general and politics,” the Gallup report states. “Church attendance also provides ties that bind members to their communities, and research shows that at the individual level, those who are most religious have higher well-being than those who are less religious.”

The margin of sampling error is ±1 percentage point for the recent poll. Margins of error for individual states are no greater than ±6 percentage points, and are ±3 percentage points in most states. (See “You’ll Never Guess Which State is Most Likely to Attend Church”, originally posted HERE)

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Husband Says He Can’t Afford His Wife as a Stay-At-Home Mom and His Reasoning Adds Up. Big Time.

Photo Credit: Steven Nelms

Photo Credit: Steven Nelms

Steven Nelms has been married to wife, Gloriana — Glory for short — for three years. Together they have a two-year-old son named Ezra.

When Steven and Glory got married, Glory worked while Steven finished up school. Once their son was born, it didn’t seem financially possible for Glory to go back to work. Nelms explains to IJReview:

“With childcare costs it would’ve been a wash with her income at best. So we decided that she would stay home as long as it made sense.”

In an attempt to appreciate all of the work Glory does for the family — and put a numerical value on it — Nelms wrote a profound essay that he posted to We Are Glory.

“I’ve had this thought in my head for a while now. I’ve been thinking that I can’t afford for my wife to be a Stay-At-Home Mom. Now, I don’t at all mean to offend anyone with this post. I just have to say that for me personally, I can’t afford it… I mean that I quite literally cannot afford my wife to be staying at home. Here’s why…

My wife stays home and takes care of our son every single day. She changes his diapers, feeds him, plays with him, puts him down for his nap, and comforts him when he’s upset. And that’s just the bare minimum. A child can typically get that attention at a day-care. But on top of that, he is her only focus… Obviously, this is part of being a parent. You take care of your child and you raise your child. But let’s face it. In our day and age… there is a company ready and willing to do just about anything. So while, yes, my wife is my son’s mother and it is a natural result of being a parent to love and care for your own child, there is also a very quantifiable dollar amount that can be attributed to the services rendered. I am in no way trying to simplify, objectify, or devalue the priceless love of a mother for her child. But let’s be real. Pay day feels good for a reason. Because you’re seeing your hard work appreciated in a tangible way that lets you “treat yo self”. And this is exactly why I can’t afford my wife being a Stay-At-Home Mom. The national average weekly salary for a full-time nanny is $705. That’s $36,660 a year.

We make ends meet comfortably and are by no means scraping the bottom of the barrel… [but] the services rendered of caring for our child every single day of the year would absorb the majority of our income. Flat out, no question, game over, I cannot afford my wife to be a Stay-At-Home Mom. And that’s just the beginning of it.

(Read more from “Husband Says He Can’t Afford His Wife as a Stay-At-Home Mom and His Reasoning Adds Up. Big Time.” HERE)

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Stanford PhD Cancer Researcher ‘Poisoned’ Classmates’ Water With Carcinogenic Embalming Fluid

studentA PhD student from Stanford has been caught trying to poison her classmates by putting a known carcinogen in their water bottles.

Police have charged 26-year-old Xiangyu Ouyang with four felony counts of poisoning after investigators say the student put paraformaldehyde – which could cause death if consumed in large amounts – in her classmates water bottles beginning last September, according to Daily Mail.

Ouyang was at Stanford on a prestigious Agency for Science, Technology and Research scholarship that Singapore gives out to top students. She will now face up to eight years behind bars.

“I am truly sorry for what happened, but I really didn’t mean to harm people,” she told police. “It was me crying out for help.”

Ouyang was described by fellow classmates as shy and insecure, with one of her victims telling authorities that the girl “had never had a boyfriend, and envied those who had.” (Read more from “Stanford PhD Cancer Researcher ‘Poisoned’ Classmates’ Water With Carcinogenic Embalming Fluid” HERE)

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Rolling Stone Apologizes, Retracts Discredited Rape Story

Photo Credit: Fox News

Photo Credit: Fox News

Rolling Stone magazine on Sunday night apologized and officially retracted its discredited article about an alleged gang rape at the University of Virginia, and an independent review said the article may cast doubt on future rape accusations.

The review, undertaken at Rolling Stone’s request, presented a broad indictment of the magazine’s handling of a story that had horrified readers, unleashed widespread protests and sparked a national discussion about sexual assaults on college campuses.

The report from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism on the editorial process called the article a “story of journalistic failure that was avoidable.”

The article focused on a student identified only as “Jackie,” who said she was raped by seven men at a fraternity house. It also described a hidden culture of sexual violence fueled by binge drinking at one of the nation’s most highly regarded public universities.

The report found, among other things, that Rolling Stone did not try hard enough to find the person Jackie accused of orchestrating the assault. (Read more from “Rolling Stone Apologizes, Retracts Discredited Rape Story” HERE)

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Teen Forced to Undergo Chemotherapy, Denied Visit with Mom by Court [+video]

cassandrac_featuredA Connecticut teen, who was forced by a court to submit to chemotherapy because she has cancer, will not be allowed to see her mother, per a recent court order.

The teen, identified only as “Cassandra C.,” suffers from Hodgkin’s lymphoma, which is a cancer that strikes the lymphatic system.

Cassandra C. has been undergoing treatment at the Connecticut Children’s Medical Center (CCMC) since December 2014, but has not been allowed to leave.

A Connecticut Superior Court judge ruled this week that Cassandra C. must remain at the hospital in Hartford, Connecticut, and that her mother, Jackie Fortin, could not visit her.

Connecticut’s Department of Children and Families (DCF) has custody of Cassandra C. until she finishes the court-mandated chemotherapy. (Read more from “Teen Forced to Undergo Chemotherapy, Denied Visit with Mom by Court [+video]” HERE)

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12-Year-Old Boy Acted out Scenes from Fifty Shades of Grey with Girl in Local Park

FILM TITLE: FIFTY SHADES OF GREY (2015) .... HANDOUT ...A leading therapist said a 12-year-old client has confessed to acting out scenes from 50 Shades of Grey with a girl in his local park.

Addiction psychotherapist Steve Pope spoke on BBC Radio Five Live on Tuesday and said in the last 24 hours he had been “amazed” by a discussion with one of his young clients.

Talking to presenter Rachel Burden, Dr Pope described the destructive nature of pornography, particularly in regards to children and their exposure to it.

Dr Pope said: “To be blunt, we have had nightmares over the effects of 50 Shades of Grey and what children now think is normal adult sexual behaviour.

“Within the last 24 hours I have worked with a young man, a 12-year-old, who thought that 50 Shades of Grey was a normal part of sexual behaviour with a young girl.” (Read more from “12-Year-Old Boy Acted out Scenes from Fifty Shades of Grey with Girl in Local Park” HERE)

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The World Is Becoming More Religious and You Will Never Guess Which Religion Is Growing the Fastest

muslim-prayerMuslims and Christians are expected make up nearly equal shares of the global population by 2050 for the first time.

Atheists, agnostics and other people who don’t affiliate with a religion will make up a smaller fraction of the world’s population in 2050, according to a new study.

The Pew Research Center study released Thursday found that the growth of major religious groups will outpace the rise in the unaffiliated population despite trends in the United States and other Western countries, where the proportion of religiously unaffiliated people is expected to grow. By 2050, the total global population is expected to rise to 9.3 billion from 6.9 billion today.

Islam will expand [much] faster than any other major religion, according to the report. . .(Read more from “The World Is Becoming More Religious and You Will Never Guess Which Religion Is Growing the Fastest” HERE)

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