Monday, January 13, 2014
The Smoke of Satan in the Church
a letter by Mario Palmaro
What follows is a little unusual, but
as it is a central topic in the life of the Church and of our work, we
offer it to you knowing well that it requires a considerable effort by
those who want understand things thoroughly. Mario Palmaro, a well-
known writer to the readers of La Nuova Bussola Quotidiano, wrote me a
very long letter to express publically his indignation about the
direction the Church is taking, above all regarding the homosexual
aggression which is of interest to the whole world. My reply follows
this letter, and with it, I do not want to close the discussion, but
open it to other input. Palmaro with his friend and colleague,
Alessandro Gnocchi, were at the centre of polemics in the past months
because of a series of articles in Il Foglio, when they harshly
criticized Pope Francis. The Pope himself, then called Palmaro, after
discovering that he had a grave illness. Hence, I would like to take the
opportunity to ask all our readers to pray for him.
Riccardo Cascioli,
Director of La Nuova Bussola Quotidana
[Catholic online daily]
January 8, 2014
Dear Director,
I read your editorial of January 3 [2014] –
“Renzi - if this is progress!” , and I can only agree with your
analysis on the new Secretary of the [Socialist] Democratic Party - his
cunning self-confidence, his transformism, the inevitable contradiction
between saying he is Catholic and his promotion of things that conflict
not only with the Catechism, but with the natural law. I would like to
add my appreciation for all that you have been doing for some time now
with the Bussola in the face of the homosexual assault, and don’t want to reproach you in any way.
However, I feel the need to write to you and your readers. In all honesty: is our problem really Matteo Renzi?
Did we really expect that one who becomes Secretary of the Democratic
Party, would then set about defending the natural family, the unborn,
combating artificial insemination, abortion, and opposing euthanasia?
Forgive me, are you actually familiar with the PD electorate which
include Catholics on pastoral committees, nuns and parish priests? In
your opinion, what does that electorate want from Renzi? It is obvious:
“homosexual marriage” and “lesbian-democratic” adoptions. Have you
ever listened to the average worker who votes for the left? In your
opinion, do they want the defense of natural marriage or do they want
council houses for our brother-homosexuals so horribly discriminated
against? Let’s stop believing that the problem is Niki Vendola* or the
ugly, bad, communist extremists and that it is important to be moderate;
the points of reference for the average man are Fabio Fazio* and
Luciana Littizzetto*, the Coop, Gino Strada*, Enzo Bianchi* and Eugenio
Scalfari*. Renzi puts all these ingredients into his blender, mixes
them with doses of homoeopathy from Don Ciotti* and Don Gallo*, and the
result is the perfect brew which holds the “little democratic parish”
and the Arcigay together. To expect something different from him would
be stupid.
The scandal, forgive me, is another.
Compared to Renzi - the Secretary of the PD who winks at the
homosexuals, the scandal is in listening to the exponents of the New
Centre Right who are saying: “Civil unions are not a priority for the
government”. Do you get it? It is not that the NCD jumps up like a
spring and declares: we shall never vote for these unions – ever! No: he
says that they are not a priority. Someone meets Hitler who is talking
about wanting to construct gas chambers. Does he reply like this: “Look,
Adolf, this is not a priority.” We will do that, we will do that too,
all in good time”?
I watched government minister, Hon. Lupi – a Catholic, who explained the situation on a Rai News
program. With a very embarrassed face and the terrified eyes of one who
is thinking (but I could be mistaken) : “Damn it! Now I have to talk
about the non-negotiable principles and homosexuals, and I’ll end up
like Pietro Barilla. I’ll have to leave my strategic and important
ministry, where I can do so much good for my country and my movement.
And then Lupi takes refuge in that well-known theme called ”priorities”,
like all of the other lion-hearts in Angiolino and Roccella’s party:
no, civil unions are not a priority.
Obviously there’s worse: on the same News
programme, there was Scelta Civica (Civic Choice) saying: we have to
defend the rights of homosexual people. Scelta Civica, I believe, is
that same party created in a rage by Todi 1* and Todi 2*, which the
Italian bishops had erected as a new bulwark for the non-negotiable
values under the ‘very Catholic’ leadership of Mario Monti. Then we have
the worst of the worst. In the same News, there was a ‘lady’ belonging
to Forza Italia who triumphantly announced that they would have put
their proposals for homosexual rights together with those of Renzi. I
heard a distant roll of drums against civil unions from Salvini’s Lega
and even more feebly from the Fratelli d’ Italia. The end.
No, dear Director, my problem is not Matteo Renzi.
My problem is the Catholic Church. The problem is that on the subject of the worldwide outbreak of the homosexual lobby, the Church has fallen silent. We have silence from the Pope to the humblest priest in the peripheries. And if the Pope speaks, the day after Padre Lombardi has to rectify, specify, clarify and differentiate.
Please abstain from dusting off letters and declarations made by
Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio ten years ago. If I find out today that
my son takes drugs, what should I say to him: “go and re-read the joint
declaration made by me and your mother six years ago when we told you
not to take drugs”? Or would I face him and try to shake him
immediately as best I can?
Dear Director, where are the Episcopal Conference and the bishops in this battle? A
deafening silence has fallen upon them. Actually, no: Monsignor
Domenico Mogavero, Bishop of Mazara del Vallo, ex-under-secretary to the
CEI and canonist – no less – spoke – oh, and how he spoke:
“The law cannot ignore hundreds and
thousands of people cohabitating. It is right that cohabitating couples
be recognized also in Italy without putting them on equal terms with
families.” For Mogavero, “The State can and must protect the pact
that two cohabitants have made between themselves. In contrast to
Christian mercy and universal rights – note well - two cohabitants
don’t exist for the law. Today, if one of the two is taken to hospital,
the other is even denied in the lending care or receiving medical
information, as if they were an outsider.” The Bishop concludes: “I
think it is legitimate to recognize rights such as the reversibility of
pensions or the transfer of rent in virtue of the person’s importance.
It is unsustainable – Mogavero underlines – that the cohabiter is a Mr.
Nobody for the law.” And as regards the Church, for which Pope Francis
has invited reflection on this theme, in view of the extraordinary Synod
on the Family, “without equating them to married couples, there are no obstacles to common-law unions.” Amen.
Do you get it, dear Director? Shortly
they’ll take my son of seven and at school they’ll make him play with
condoms and his genitals, and what does the Church talks about with me?
About boatloads which sink near Lampedusa, about Jesus who was a
refugee, about an obscure Jesuit of the 17th century just beatified!
No, my problem is not Matteo Renzi.
Dear Director, where is the Archbishop of Milan, Angelo Scola in this battle?
Shortly they will stop us from saying and
writing that homosexuality is against nature, and Scola talks to me
about half-castes and of the need to understand and value the Roma
culture. And again, it was the Archbishop of Milan some weeks ago who
invited the Archbishop of Vienna, Schönborn, to our Cathedral: as the
Church is disappearing in Austria, they asked him to come and explain
to the priests of our diocese how to obtain such results - what their
secret was. Just like this: a coach has brought his team to fall
down on the league, and so we’ll give him the teaching post at
Coverciano! [The central training ground and technical headquarters of
the Italian National Football Team.]
And would you look at the coincidence,
among other things: Schönborn – who wears the habit of St. Dominic and
Thomas Aquinas – came to explain to the Ambrosian priests that he had
personally intervened in protecting the nomination of two homosexuals
for a parish council. Schönborn says he met them and: “I saw two pure young men, even if their cohabitation is not what the order of creation has foreseen.” There you have it, dear Director, this is purity according to a prince of the Church at the dawn of the year 2014.
And my problem should be Matteo Renzi and the PD?
They are going to take my seven-year-old
son and brainwash him into thinking that homosexuality is normal and in
the meantime, my Archbishop invites a bishop to the Cathedral to teach
me that two homosexuals living together are examples of purity?
And so to finish. The Matteo Renzi who
promotes civil unions is a physiological byproduct of a Pope who, in his
travels is interviewed by journalists on the plane and declares: “Who
am I to judge” etc, etc. Obviously, I know too that these two are not of
the same nature, that the Pope is against these things and certainly
suffers regarding them, and that he is motivated by good intentions.
However, facts are facts. Confronted with that little sentence –
epochal from the mouth of a Pope “Who am I to judge”–, loads of
corrective and reparatory articles can be written, which tireless troops
of “normalists” have been doing now for months, in order to say, don’t
worry all is well – everything is just fine.
But we both know well, and anyone else who knows the mechanisms of communications does as well, that, that “Who am I to judge” is a tombstone on any political and legal battle regarding the recognition of homosexual rights. If
we were in rugby, I would tell you that that little sentence gained in a
few seconds more meters in favour of the homosexual lobby, than decades
of work by the world’s homosexual movement. I’ll tell you too, that
bishops like Mogavero, in the shade of that little sentence “who am I
to judge” can build castles of dissolution without impunity, and the
only thing left for us to do is to keep our mouths shut.
Let’s be clear: to impute that the Pope or
the Church are to blame because all the countries in the world are
normalizing homosexuality would be foolish: this rising tide is
unrestrainable, it cannot be stopped. The reason is simple: London, and
Paris, New York and Rome, Brussels and Berlin have become a gigantic
Sodom and Gomorrah. The point is however, whether we want to admit this,
dispute and denounce it, or whether we want to play smart and hide
behind the “Who am I to judge”. The point is also, whether this worldwide Sodom and Gomorrah, merit the language of mercy and comprehension.
Well, then, I wonder, why don’t we also
reserve the same mercy for the traffickers of chemical weapons, the
slave-traders and financial embezzlers? Aren’t they also poor sinners?
Right? Or do I have to ask Schönborn to meet them for lunch and evaluate
their purity?
Dear Director, the situation by now is
very clear: any Catholic politician, intellectual or journalist even if
he wants to fight on the homosexualist front, will find himself spiked
in the back by the mysticism of mercy and forgiveness. We are all
completely de-legitimized, and any bishop, priest, theologian,
director of a diocesan weekly or politician of the
Catholic-democratic-type can shut us up with that “Who am I to judge”. We would be riddled with shots like a farm pheasant in a hunting chase by types like Mogavero.
Dear Director, our problem is not Matteo Renzi.
Our problem, my problem, is that the other
day the Holy Father said the Gospel “is not proclaimed with doctrinal
beatings, but with sweetness.” Also here, I would please ask “normalists”
and timewasters to abstain. Even I know that effectively the Gospel is
announced like that – apart from the fact that John the Baptist had
rather brusque methods himself, and the Lord defines him “as the
greatest among those born of woman”.
But you know very well that with that little sentence, we have both been spiked like codfish.
We have both been fighting against
legalized abortion, divorce, in vitro fertilization, euthanasia,
homosexual unions and cunning politicians like Matteo Renzi, who are
promoting and spreading all that stuff. But there you have it, we
are both irremediable doctrinal bashers, people without charity,
ethicists, “theologians”, as some journalist from Communion and
Liberation calls us. Furthermore, phenomenon like La Bussola and Il Timone
are anachronistic examples of this lack of charity, of this
unpresentable moral rigour. Plus, the daily, titanic efforts of the “normalists”
will not be enough to subtract these titles of de-legitimization from
official Catholicism, as all the balancing exercises in trying to keep
your feet in two different shoes, always end up, sooner or later, with a
tragic flight into the void.
I also think that the problem – forgive
the personal aspect – is not dirty, ugly and bad Gnocchi and Palmaro,
because of what they wrote in Il Foglio.
I would re-write the same thing again,
ten, a hundred, thousand times more, since unfortunately, everything is
coming to pass in the worst way, much worse than what we could have ever
predicted.
This is why, dear Director, our problem and the problem of Catholics and ordinary people is not Matteo Renzi.
The problem is our Mother Church, who has decided to abandon us in the jungle of Vietnam:
the helicopters have taken off and we have been left where we’ll let
ourselves, one at a time, be spiked by the “Vietcong relativists.” I am
not protesting for myself, and you know the reasons why. And besides, I
prefer a thousand times, to stay down here waiting for the Vietcong,
rather than ever get into one of those helicopters, in which perhaps
there is the promise of a little seat in some clerical conference of the
type “Scienza e Vita,” under the illusion that one is a part, in
some way, of the official power, together with all the other ecclesial
movements. Or with the crazy idea - written in black and white - that,
Gnocchi and Palmaro were perhaps right, but they shouldn’t have said
it, because certain truths should not be uttered, rather they should be
somewhat denied publically in order to confound the enemy.
No, I am not protesting for myself.
However, I still have the problem of that
seven-year-old son of mine and three older ones too. I don’t want to
and can’t give them the response of the boatloads sinking near
Lampedusa, the homosexual example of purity from Cardinal Schönborn, the
half-castes and the praise of the Roma culture by Cardinal Scola, the
disdain for doctrinal thrashings according to Pope Francis and the
eulogizing of civil unions by Mogavero. To these children I cannot tell
the fairy-tale called “Matteo Renzi.” Anyway, regarding Renzi, ten minutes done well by Crozza* will fix him.
Dear director, dear Riccardo, why would I
ever write these things to you? Because last night I couldn't sleep. And
because I’d like to understand – and ask the readership of Bussola a question: What
more has to happen in the Church for Catholics to stand up, once and
for all, and shout their indignation from the rooftops? Attention: I am addressing individual Catholics,
not associations, secret meetings, movements, sects which for years
have been managing the brains of the faithful for the benefit of third
parties, dictating the line the followers have to take. These groups
seem to me to be placed under the care of those minus habens [of
lesser intelligence] and headed from afar by more or less charismatic
individuals, who are more or less trustworthy. No, no: here I am making
an appeal to individual consciences, to their hearts, their faith and
their virility. Before it is too late.
I owe this to you my dear Riccardo. I owe
this to all those who know me and still have esteem for me and for what I
represent. Pardon me for having taken advantage of your patience and
also that of your readers.
Mario Palmaro
__________________
Translation, slightly adapted to conform to informal style used by Mario Palmaro – Francesca Romana. Source: Bussola Quotidiana
Translator’s notes:
*Niki Vendola, LGBT activist, left-wing politician
*Fabio Fazio, TV presenter for left-wing RAI 3
*Luciana Littizzetto, comedian, anti-Catholic, does TV spots for COOP
*Gino Strada, war surgeon, Founder of Italian NGO Emergency
*Enzo Bianchi, Prior of Monastic Community of Bose (Biella), but not a priest, and progressive Catholic writer
*Eugenio Scalfari, editor of left-wing daily – La Repubblica.
*Todi
1 and Todi 2 – two Forums held in the Todi, Umbria for associations and
people of Catholic inspiration in the work place in October 2012
*Crozza, comedian of scathing satire
*Don Ciotti, Catholic priest, writer, social activist, particularly against drugs and the Mafia
*Don Gallo, Catholic priest, now deceased famed for communist ideals and social activism
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