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Catholic Blogs Aim To Purge Dissenters

RACHEL ZOLL   10/24/10 11:02 AM ET   AP

Catholic Blogs
In this Monday, Oct. 11, 2010 picture, Michael Voris holds a sword used when he records for RealCatholicTV.com in a studio in Ferndale, Mich. Pressure is on to change the Roman Catholic Church in America, but it's not coming from the usual liberal suspects. A new breed of theological conservatives, including Voris, has taken to blogs and YouTube to say the church isn't Catholic enough. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Pressure is on to change the Roman Catholic Church in America, but it's not coming from the usual liberal suspects. A new breed of theological conservatives has taken to blogs and YouTube to say the church isn't Catholic enough.

Enraged by dissent that they believe has gone unchecked for decades, and unafraid to say so in the starkest language, these activists are naming names and unsettling the church.

_ In the Archdiocese of Boston, parishioners are dissecting the work of a top adviser to the cardinal for any hint of Marxist influence.

_ Bloggers are combing through campaign finance records to expose staff of Catholic agencies who donate to politicians who support abortion rights.

_ RealCatholicTV.com, working from studios in suburban Detroit, is hunting for "traitorous" nuns, priests or bishops throughout the American church.

"We're no more engaged in a witch hunt than a doctor excising a cancer is engaged in a witch hunt," said Michael Voris of RealCatholicTV.com and St. Michael's Media. "We're just shining a spotlight on people who are Catholics who do not live the faith."

John Allen, Vatican analyst for the National Catholic Reporter, has dubbed this trend "Taliban Catholicism." But he says it's not a strictly conservative phenomenon – liberals can fit the mindset, too, Allen says. Some left-leaning Catholics are outraged by any exercise of church authority.

Yet on the Internet and in the church, conservatives are having the bigger impact.

Among Voris' many media ventures is the CIA – the Catholic Investigative Agency – a program from RealCatholicTV to "bring to light the dark deeds of evil Catholics-in-name-only, who are hijacking the Church for their own ends, not the ends of Christ."

In an episode called "Catholic Tea Party," Voris said: "Catholics need to be aware and studied and knowledgeable enough about the faith to recognize a heretical nun or a traitorous priest or bishop when they see one – not so they can vote them out of office, but so they can pray for them, one, and alert as many other Catholics as possible to their treachery, two."

The blog "Bryan Hehir Exposed" is aimed at a top adviser to Boston Cardinal Sean O'Malley, the Rev. J. Bryan Hehir, who is the former head of national Catholic Charities and a professor at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government. Among the bloggers' claims is that Hehir is a Marxist sympathizer who undermines Catholic teaching on abortion and marriage.

Hehir, who has advised church leaders for four decades, hasn't responded to any accusations and neither has O'Malley, a Capuchin Franciscan friar known for his humility. However, O'Malley said in April on his own blog that Hehir "inspires us with his compassion, vision and fidelity to the work of the Church." In August, O'Malley blocked access from archdiocesan headquarters to one of the critical blogs, the anonymously penned Boston Catholic Insider.

"The lack of civility is very disturbing," said Terrence C. Donilon, the archdiocesan spokesman.

The work of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is another frequent target.

Activists and bloggers, including Bellarmine Veritas Ministry of Texas, have been investigating the bishops' Catholic Campaign for Human Development, a national grantmaking program created in the 1970s to support community organizing and economic development.

The activists concluded that some of the grantees back same-sex marriage, artificial contraception or abortion rights. As part of the push, activists accused the director of the bishops' national social justice office of serving on the board of a nonprofit while it advocated for gay marriage and abortion. The claims against him were shown to be unfounded.

Still, the bloggers had an impact.

The bishop who oversees the anti-poverty grants said that a few, but not all, of the accused grantees had indeed taken positions contrary to church teaching and had been defunded. Since the controversy erupted, 10 of the 195 U.S. dioceses have suspended or dropped annual parish collections for the program, and the bishops are reviewing their grant policies.

Thomas Peters, who runs the popular "AmericanPapist" blog, said fellow orthodox Catholics have embraced the Web because they feel they finally have a platform that can compete with well-established liberal Catholic publications, such as the National Catholic Reporter. (Some conservative bloggers call the paper "the National Catholic Destroyer.")

Peters, 25, considers himself on the more positive side of the orthodox Catholic blogosphere, although some targets of his commentary disagree.

He condemns the vitriol he sees online, and promotes a blog feature called "bishops with backbone," in praise of church leaders who rein in dissenters. He also added an online function to send thank you notes when leaders take tough stands, recently generating 500 letters in one day for Archbishop John Nienstedt of St. Paul and Minneapolis who refused Holy Communion to gay rights protesters at a recent Mass.

"All of these things that we say in public are meant for the best good of the church," said Peters. He began his blog several years ago and now works for the American Principles Project, a conservative advocacy group founded by Princeton University scholar Robert George.

The rise in lay conservative fervor comes at a time when the need for activism would seem less urgent. The U.S. hierarchy has seen a wave of retirements in recent years that has swept out leading liberals. The men taking their place are generally more traditional and willing to take a harder line against disobedient Catholics, from politicians to parishioners.

But even with these changes, bloggers say too few prelates speak out. The activists also say that since the 1970s, after the modernizing reforms of the Second Vatican Council, liberals have filled the bureaucracy of the church, hiding dissent from the bishops they serve.

"There's an old saying: Once you become a bishop you never get bad news or a bad meal," said Carol McKinley, 53, a Boston-area blogger who named her site "The Tenth Crusade." "Not a single bishop will look at the whole. They enjoy their ignorance."

Critics of the bloggers contend the activists are motivated mostly by politics, not theology. The blogs feature nearly as many attacks on President Barack Obama as church leaders. McKinley's site, until recently, was called "Throwthebumsoutin2010," in anticipation of the midterm elections.

The late Saul Alinsky, the father of modern community organizing, is also a common topic on the conservative Catholic blogs. Activists complain that many groups that receive grants from the Catholic Campaign for Human Development use the tactics of Alinsky, a hero of the political left and a preoccupation of the political right since the 2008 election. When Obama was a community organizer in Chicago, he worked with people trained by Alinsky.

However, the conservative Catholic activists insist their faith, especially church teaching on abortion, inspires all their work.

Catholic officials are struggling to come to terms with the bloggers and have organized several recent media conferences on the topic, the latest at the Vatican this month. The U.S. bishops' conference issued social media guidelines in July calling for Christian charity online.

Still, no one expects the Catholic blogosphere to change tone anytime soon. Many of the conservatives most active online had spent years raising the alarm about dissent on their own in their local dioceses without much effect. Now, they feel they are finally being heard online.

"There's a general sense among many faithful Catholics that no matter how much they write their bishops, no matter how much they go to the pastors, all of these unfaithful things keep getting taught," Voris said. "I think enough Catholics are saying, 'That's it. I've had it.'"

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Pressure is on to change the Roman Catholic Church in America, but it's not coming from the usual liberal suspects. A new breed of theological conservatives has taken to blogs and YouTube to say the c...
Pressure is on to change the Roman Catholic Church in America, but it's not coming from the usual liberal suspects. A new breed of theological conservatives has taken to blogs and YouTube to say the c...
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12:46 PM on 11/16/2010
As a woman who was raised Catholic and a "blogger" myself in matters of Spirituality and the human Spiritual journey, it would be nice to see the mirror image of this story - all the "Catholic bloggers" who are not ultra-conservative or taking a terroristic approach to our fellow Catholics. It would be nice to see a story about Catholics who are still hoping to see the fruition of the Vatican II Council, who value the traditions of our faith while honoring the mystical tradition that grew up alongside orthodoxy and who seek to work toward unity. If the media is interested in exploring that side of the Catholic experience, count me in!

Lauri Lumby
Authentic Freedom Ministries
http://yourspiritualtruth.com
Benjacomin Bozart
Jefferson-better to eat bacon at home than to rule
11:46 AM on 11/01/2010
On All Saints Day I remember most of the most beloved Saints were community organizers. Mother Theresa organized people to bring the sick and dying off the streets of Calcutta. St Francis called the Church to help the poor. We follow the Prince of Peace and pray to the God of live. I don't see the Catholic church of Jesus in these sites. I don't hear it on the lips of many Catholics but they have been led astray and the hierarchy is putting false power ahead of Christ's Gospel and the Church is paying the price of their evil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gregory57
Micro-bio, was one of my favorite classes.
01:05 PM on 10/31/2010
"bring to light the dark deeds of evil Catholics-in-name-only, who are hijacking the Church for their own ends, not the ends of Christ."

Okay let's start with Emperor Constantine, and work our way forward.
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
04:41 PM on 11/01/2010
Next those bishops who conspired with him at the Council of Niacea
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06:56 PM on 10/30/2010
A lot of these "true Catholics" are converts from Protestant fundamentalism, attracted by idea of a more explicit and external source of authority in the Pope. They still have a fundamentalist mindset, though, and often regard those raised in and devoted to the Catholic church as not truly Catholic (just as they once viewed all Protestants who disagreed with them as not truly Christian). Creates a funny twist on the joke "Is the Pope Catholic?" though, since he very well might not be Catholic enough to some of these groups.
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
04:44 PM on 11/01/2010
if i remember correctly isn't there already a conservative splinter faith of the catholics that still practices pre vatican 2 style catholicism, latin masses the works.
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johnnybic
Seeking to impose the gay agenda since 1971
01:11 PM on 11/04/2010
You are correct. In previous times, they were called "heretics." Mr. Voris and his ilk, including some of the bishops he praises, are dangerously close to the heresy of Rigorism. The Church has a long history of having to deal with reactionary "holier-than-thou" fringe groups. This era is no different from the time of the Albigensians, the Manichees, the Gnostics--all of whom claimed to be the standard-bearers of the "Truth." In this era, the not-so-hidden agenda of these troglodytes and Luddites is to diminish and undo the teachings of Vatican II. Even with a sympathetic pontiff, they will ultimately fail.
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01:47 AM on 11/06/2010
There are several, in various degrees of craziness. The biggest is the Society of St Piux X (SSPX), which had a controversy over a holocaust-denying bishop recently.
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Patrick Brennan
Happy Reg Dem 80% Disabled Retired Army Liberal
05:32 PM on 11/14/2010
You are ABSOLUTELY RIGHT on that one...
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Max Headroom
Your micro-bio is empty
05:47 PM on 10/30/2010
Nobody expects the BLOGGING INQUISITION!

Tie him to THE COMFY CHAIR!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Redwood Eagle
Treehugging, Hippy, Druid Grandfather
04:49 PM on 10/30/2010
Henry VIII's daughter, Queen "Bloody" Mary, would be proud.
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Ioan Lightoller
Proud Gay Pagan Man, Living Happily With Husband
06:03 PM on 10/31/2010
Indeed she would. So sad that things are at this pass, but this is only to be expected in the current atmosphere.
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04:18 PM on 10/30/2010
Christians wielding something that looks like a Roman Gladius. That's just strange.
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Max Headroom
Your micro-bio is empty
05:41 PM on 10/30/2010
Is that more strange than worshiping a "Deity" nailed to a Roman torture crucifix?
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06:58 PM on 10/30/2010
No, worshiping a crucified God is much stranger, which is why the apostle Paul said it appeared to be "foolishness" to the Greeks (i.e. Greek-thinking Romans). The idea of a God revealed in weakness doesn't sit well with those who worship power.
07:00 PM on 10/30/2010
Nothing is more strange. Nothing. Quite remarkable, actually.
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Max Headroom
Your micro-bio is empty
05:44 PM on 10/30/2010
Let the games begin!
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Mag7
Smarter than the Average Dog
02:30 PM on 10/30/2010
I never knew a council to endorse economic development warranted an investigation, but then again, poor people notoriously donate very little to the Catholic coffers.
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WoodsideCraig
Author of the blog "The Weiler Psi"
01:21 PM on 10/30/2010
Such a clear demonstration as to why the Nazis and Catholic Church got along so well.
11:06 AM on 10/30/2010
Why is Justin Bieber wielding a sword?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:00 PM on 10/30/2010
Overcompensation
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Patrick Brennan
Happy Reg Dem 80% Disabled Retired Army Liberal
05:33 PM on 11/14/2010
WWJBD!
08:19 AM on 10/30/2010
I was once a catholic, but could no longer tolerate it's ancient dogma, and hypocrisy.

It is unfortunate that these people did not put this kind of effort into finding pedophile priests, and into holding the "Holy" church accountable for their abetting of these criminal priests.

The church is accountable to it's congregants, and not the Vatican (which is also is guilty of many crimes).

The church is dying, and the old, white, male hierarchy is oblivious to it's own demise.
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02:29 PM on 11/01/2010
That they didn't put serious effort toward justice shows how far from God they have fallen, and how far away from their own flock they have wandered. The Church is in dark days spiritually. Maybe worst than they've been in a long time. And it's from top to bottom, with a few reasonable hearts and good souls here and there.
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
06:58 AM on 10/30/2010
That will aid recruitment. Not.
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BeBop33
bob's yer uncle
07:36 PM on 10/29/2010
And why would anybody with a functioning brain stem take seriously any fiats from the anyone
representing the gang at "Boyz R' Us"?
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BeBop33
bob's yer uncle
07:31 PM on 10/29/2010
Inquisition, heal thyself...
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bigmacha
Truth through research.
05:03 PM on 10/29/2010
Heresy is a serious subject, and the Catholic Church did/does not fool around, so there is ample precedent for these on-line inquisitors.
Some background (Wikipedia):
A 1578 handbook for inquisitors spelled out the purpose of inquisitorial penalties: ( Translated from the Latin)"… for punishment does not take place primarily and per se for the correction and good of the person punished, but for the public good in order that others may become terrified and weaned away from the evils they would commit."
Historians distinguish four different manifestations of the Inquisition:
1. the Medieval Inquisition (1184–1230s)
2. the Spanish Inquisition (1478–1834)
3. the Portuguese Inquisition (1536–1821)
4. the Roman Inquisition (1542 – c. 1860 )

We can now add to that:

1. The Blogging Inquisition of 2010

"Where knowledge ends, religion begins."

- Benjamin Disraeli