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All you need is love, isn’t it? As long as it reaches the Catholic Church’s approval

Posted on Saturday, February 02, 2013 at 09:17 AM

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Archbishop of Westminster Vincent Nichols (David Rose)


Love, real and enduring love, is exceptionally hard to find. It’s a miraculous flowering that happens in this otherwise coldly indifferent world.

It’s what we live for, love. It’s what creates many of us, it’s what ultimately defines us and it’s certain it’s all that remains of us.

For one reason and another, I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about love. Decades of my time, actually, contemplating it. The fate of love, in particular, has always fascinated me above anything else.

Let’s face it -- most of life is like a visit to a dentist’s office. There are the impersonal stares of all the strangers around us, the receptionist’s interest in making sure we pay, and there’s the internal battle to remain positive faced with the faint dread of what could happen. This is how most of us live.

Given that it is, it’s no wonder we spend so much time in pursuit of a deeper connection.

Not everyone shares my enthusiasm about love, I realize. This week I read that the archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, announced that if employees want to keep their jobs as teachers in Catholic schools in Britain, they should not marry divorcees, or get married in registry offices, or enter into any other kind of legal civil ceremonies (such as civil partnerships) that do not meet with the Catholic Church’s approval.

Apart from its bracing fundamentalism, that directive is remarkable for its cruelty. Does the archbishop actually believe there is such a surfeit of love in this world that we can cheerfully prescribe how we encounter it?

This stark directive from the archbishop takes aim at both heterosexuals and homosexuals and tells them bluntly that falling for a divorcee or marrying in a borough hall or signing a civil union will not only be disapproved of, it will now get them fired.

A spokesman for the archbishop told the Sunday Times, “The expectation is that school leaders and those who aspire to leadership positions will make substantive life choices that are in conformity with the gospel and the teaching of the Catholic Church.”

Well that’s tidy, isn’t it? Just conform to the church’s increasingly rigid interpretation of the gospel and make the life choice to say goodbye to the person you happen to love.

It’s what Jesus would ask of you, we feel certain. Who could possibly object to that? 

I object, but I know there are a lot of people who feel differently. There are many people who put fidelity to an idea, or faith in a theology, over the untidy realities of our daily lives.

They prefer biting rules to wiggle room. They reject what the poet Michal Longley calls the drunkenness of things being various in favor of the sobriety of a command.

These people fascinate me. In particular their search for clarity, their search for order, at the expense of the complicating insights of their head and heart, at the expense of human experience itself, fascinate me.

All my life I have watched the myriad ways in which otherwise principled people end up saying no to life. Saying no, that is, to the very thing that will save them.

Because their salvation came at the wrong time, or because the person that offered it was the wrong race, or they had the wrong social or religious background, or the wrong gender, or they once said the wrong thing.

Saying no to life, saying no to love, is no small thing. It takes very considerable effort.

It is an exceptionally hard bargain that many people make in anticipation of a later reward (perhaps as late as after life). Once you’ve done it, once you’ve said no to life, which is also saying no to love, both life and love tend to say no right back to you. Often till the end of your days.

This is inevitable, because, as I said, there is so very little love in the world to begin with.

I’ve watched it happen. I have seen people around me possessed by an idea at the expense of own their head and heart.

They will exchange what they think and feel for something they have been told and then tell others. Believing they can do no harm, because they stand for good, they can make loveless wastelands of their own lives.

And here’s one of the things I have learned from watching them -- the hallmark of freedom is generosity, just as the hallmark of love is kindness.

If you can’t find either in the way you’re living or in the way that someone is asking you to live, that’s your first clue you’re going in the wrong direction.

See more: Irish Voice


51 comments

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Excellent article... How people cannot see through the Catholic Corporation is beyond me.
I guess if you don't believe what the RC says you must you should select another employer. If the RC schools are the monopoly in a country, citizens should see that is changed, in any case the purported high level scholarship of some such schools is belied by comments seen on IC. BTW, can any of the Bible quoting scholars post what is mentioned in the Good Book about torture and abuse of children, illegal imprisonment and enslavement.
I guess if you don't believe what the RC says you must you should select another employer. If the RC schools are the monopoly in a country, citizens should see that is changed, in any case the purported high level scholarship of some such schools is belied by comments seen on IC. BTW, can any of the Bible quoting scholars post what is mentioned in the Good Book about torture and abuse of children, illegal imprisonment and enslavement.
I guess if you don't believe what the RC says you must you should select another employer. If the RC schools are the monopoly in a country, citizens should see that is changed, in any case the purported high level scholarship of some such schools is belied by comments seen on IC. BTW, can any of the Bible quoting scholars post what is mentioned in the Good Book about torture and abuse of children, illegal imprisonment and enslavement.
And all along, we thought that it was only in the United States that a private employer would be verbally abused for living up to the private organization's standards. Looks like Cahir has thrown his net back to Britain, too.
Sure explains why Sunday mass attendance is down throughout the Britain.
The usual smarmy, overly-emotional hogwash from Cahir. Son, love doesn't have to equate with sex. The love that meant in theological writings is non-corporeal love of spirit, not the lust of the flesh, or the hedonism so dearly embraced by most of the secular crowd. And just for the record, while you may not love Mother church, she still loves you, Cahir.
Well said, Cahir. Judging by some of the comments you have aroused the zealots and their sharia-like dogma.
Cahir, as we already know only too well, wouldn't know the difference between love and lust if it hit him square in the face in a high wind. Oh, and song title in his banner is....well, not exactly Catholic. It was coined by four Brits famous for self-adoration, not proper adoration. But Cahir couldn't be expected to know that either.
Duh, good buddy that's a 10-4. The Catholic church does not believe in a 187 to its system. Jesus the Christ spoke in parables and not in gibberish as our present incumbent. According to the Greek langauge, there are various types of love. The Catholic Church stands for the maximum. That is why the Virgin was maximized and not given the due of 100.00 per game NFL cheerleaders. Our culture is failing because of the destruction of motherly love and the "Culture of Death" talked about by JPII. True autism is the rejection of the male fetus/baby with most male homosexuals having the same cause. Hillary and the bois can wax most eleoquent on that one.
@Citizen, There always been a primeval urge in both men and women from the beginning of time to bond together and procreate. That is why the Creator has endowed each gender with the necessary mental,hormonal and complementary reproductive attributes for this natural activity. The Natural Law encapsulates this reality and thus trumps any posivist laws which try to reverse or undermine it. As the great Roman poet Horace put it: 'You can drive Nature out with a pitchfork, but she'll always come back.'
Alone among primates, humans do not have estrus, the period of sexual heat in females that calls for sex and procreation. Evolution's elimination of estrus in humans freed humans from sex strictly for procreation. Instead sex could be primarily for creating tender, loving relation ships between two adults. Now what does the the invented theory of Natural Law, supposedly based on reason, say about that? Of course by reason the catholic Church means logic from certain first principles, devised entirely in one's head, ignoring science, ignoring human experience, and having nothing to do with the Bible.
Jesus had a lot to say about men who dare to stand in judgement of their fellow men. "Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! You are like whitewashed tombs, which appear beautiful on the outside, but inside are full of dead men's bones and every impurity." Matthew 23:27.
The killing of an innocent human being just like the slaying of the child in the womb, was regarded as gravely sinful and the moral code against the taking of innocent life was re-iterated in Exodus 20:13, Matthew 19:18, Romans 13:9. So the Catholic religion far from being the man-made cult as you disparagingly call it, is very much in tune with biblical values and will continue to expound them, even if it discomforts some to hear it.
The killing of an innocent human being just like the slaying of the child in the womb, was regarded as gravely sinful and the moral code against the taking of innocent life was re-iterated in Exodus 20:13, Matthew 19:18, Romans 13:9. So the Catholic religion far from being the man-made cult as you disparagingly call it, is very much in tune with biblical values and will continue to expound them, even if it discomforts some to hear it.
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