Yesterday we looked at
the word “falsely” in this beatitude. Today we will look at the word “persecuted”.
Scripture for
meditation: Matthew 5:12-13
Blessed are you when men revile you and persecute you and
utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad,
for your reward is great in heaven, for so men persecuted the prophets who were
before you.
Thoughts on The
Five Stages Of Religious Persecution.
By: Msgr. Charles Pope (http://blog.adw.org/2012/11/some-thoughts-on-the-five-stages-of-religious-persecution/)
It is rare that a respected segment of American life
would become vilified and hated overnight. The usual transformation from
respect to vilification goes in stages which grow in intensity. And hereby the
Church, once a respected aspect of American life, along with the Protestant
denominations has become increasingly marginalized and hated by many. It may
help us to review these stages of persecution since it would seem that things
are going to get more difficult for the Church in the years ahead. Generally
there are distinguished five basic stages of persecution.
By way of giving due credit I want to say that these
stages were recalled to me by Johnette Benkovic, of Women of Grace EWTN. She spoke at a recent fundraiser here in
DC for WMET 1160 AM, Our Catholic
Radio Station in the Guadalupe Radio Network. She gave a wonderful talk and a
summons to courage. And among the things she set forth was a sober vision of
how we have come to this current place where the culture is increasingly
hostile to Christians and to Catholics particularly. The stages are from her
talk, the commentary is my (meaning Msgr. Pope) own.
Here then are the Five stages:
I. Stereotyping the targeted group - To
stereotype means to repeat without variation, to take a quality or observation
of a limited number, and generalize it of the whole group. It involves a
simplified and standardized conception or view of a group based on observation
of a limited sample.
And thus as the 1960s and 70s progressed Catholics and
Bible-believing Christians were often caricatured in the media as Bible
thumpers, simpletons, as backwards, mentally simple, haters of science,
hypocrites, self-righteous, old-fashioned and so forth.
Catholics in particular were also accused of having
neurotic guilt, hatred or aversion of sexuality, of being in a sexist
institution, of it being stuck in the past, with too many rules, being
authoritarian, of having clergy who were sexually repressed, homosexuals or
pedophiles.
Basically as the stereotype goes, Catholics
and Bible believing Christians are a sad, angry, boring, backward and repressed
lot. To many who accept the stereotyping we are a laughable, even tragic group,
caught in a superstitious past, incapable of throwing off the shackles of
faith.
To be sure, not everyone engages in this stereotyping to
the same degree, but here are the basic refrains of it. And the general climate
of this sort of stereotyping sets the foundation for the next stage.
II. Vilifying the targeted Group for alleged crimes or
misconduct, - As the stereotyping grows in intensity, Catholics and
Christians, who did not toe the line in the cultural revolution were
described as, close-minded, harmful to human dignity and freedom, intolerant,
hateful, bigoted, unfair, homophobic, reactionary and just plain mean and
basically bad people.
The History of the Church is also described myopically
as little more than bad and repressive behavior as we conducted
crusades, inquisitions, and hated Galileo and all of science. Never mind that
there might be a little more to the story, or that the Church founded
universities, and hospitals, was the patron of the arts, and preached a Gospel
that brought order and civilization to divided and barbarous time in the
aftermath of the Roman Empire. Stereotyping will hear little of that, or, if it
does, it will give the credit to anything or anyone but the Church and the
faith….
Yet all of this has the effect of creating a
self-righteous indignation toward believers and of making
anti-Catholic and anti-Christian attitudes a permissible bigotry for many
today.
III. Marginalizing the targeted group’s role in
society - Having established the (untrue) premise that the Church and
the faith is very bad, and even harmful to human dignity and freedom, the next
stage seeks to relegate the role of the Church to the margins.
To many in secularized culture, religion must go.
They will perhaps let us have our hymns etc. in the four walls of our churches,
but the faith must be banished from the public square.
In this stage it becomes increasingly unacceptable and
intolerable that anyone should mention God, pray publicly or in any way
bring their Christian faith to bear on matters of public policy. Nativity sets
must go, out with Christmas trees, even the colors green and red at “holiday
time” are banished from many public schools.
Do not even think of mentioning Jesus or of
publicly thanking him in your valedictorian address, you could very well have a
Circuit Court judge forbid you under penalty of law. You can thank the Madonna,
but only if you mean the singer.
The LGBT club is welcome to set up shop and
pass out rainbow colored condoms at the high school, but Christians better hit
the road, no Bibles or pamphlets better see the light of day anywhere in the
school building…separation of Church and state you know.
IV. Criminalizing the targeted group or its works – Can
someone say HHS mandate?
But prior to this egregious attempt to violate our
religious liberty there have been many other times we have had to go
to court to fight for our rights to openly practice our faith. Increasing
litigation is being directed against the Church and other Christians for daring
to live out our faith.
Some jurisdictions have sought to compel Catholic
hospitals and pro-life clinics to provide information or referrals for
abortion, to provide “emergency contraception” (i.e. the abortifacient known as
the morning after pill), Several branches of Catholic Charities have been
de-certified from doing adoption work because they will not adopt children to
gay couples. The State of Connecticut sought regulate the structure,
organization and running of Catholic parishes in 2009. And recently a number of
Christian valedictorians in various states have suffered legal injunctions when
it was discovered that they would dare to mention God and Jesus in their talk.
(More HERE)
Many of these attempts to criminalize the faith have
been successfully rebuffed in the courts, but the frequency of
lawsuits, and the time and cost involved with fighting them is a huge burden.
It is clear that attempts to criminalize Christian behavior is a growth sector
in this culture and signals the beginnings and steady erosion of religious
liberty.
Many indeed feel quite righteous, quite
politically correct in their work to legally separate the practice of the faith
from the public square.
V. Persecuting the targeted group outright - If
current trends continue, Christians, especially religious leaders, may not be
far from enduring heavy fines and jail.
Already in Canada and parts of Europe Catholic
clergy have been arrested and charged with “hate crimes” for preaching Catholic
Doctrine on homosexual activity.
In this country there are greater provisions for free
speech but, as we have seen, there is a steady erosion in religious liberty
and many Catholic dioceses are well familiar with having to spend long periods
in courts defending basic religious liberty. The trajectory points to
suffering, lawsuits, fines, desertification, and ultimately jail.
Unlikely you say? Alarmist? Well, stages one
through four are pretty well in place. One may wish to whistle past the
graveyard but it looks like we’re pretty well set for Stage V. You decide.
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