CROSSING THE THRESHOLD OF IGNORANCE
One of Vietnamese Buddhist critiques of the
Pope John Paul II 's crossing the threshold of Hope (ed in 1995)
By Tran Chung Ngoc, Ph.D
Email: nctran@juno.com
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Giao Diem magazine has invited me to participate in this "Dialogue with
Pope John Paul II..." It was indeed an honor for me. After thinking
seriously about this invitation, I accepted. The famous Catholic
theologian Hans Kung once said: "There is no peace in the world if there
is no peace between religions, and there is no peace between religions
if there is no dialogue betweeen religions."
Therefore, I believe a dialogue between religions is necessary,
especially when the Catholic Church, after the Vatican Council II, in
1965, decided to promote ecumenism, and to open itself for dialogue with
non-Christian religions. However, instead of "reviewing" John Paul II's
Crossing the Threshold of Hope, that is, commenting on "how" he wrote
that book, I was interested in doing some research on "why" he wrote
that book. I believe that was the core issue. Therefore, the following
analysis is focused primarily on the "why" and just a little on the
"how." And, I must thank Pope John Paul II for giving me an opportunity
to do a somewhat in-depth research on the history of the Roman Catholic
Church, and as a result, to have gained a better understanding of it.
This analysis is based on documents and facts and not on rhetoric, and
those facts will be taken primarily from the work of the best Catholic
authorities: archbishops, bishops, priests, theologians and Catholic
scholars. However, it is possible that there may well be Catholics who
still believe in the infallibility of the Pope, that the Pope is the
Vicar of Christ, and who therefore, probably kneel whenever the Pope
appears on TV. This article is not for them, because they will find in
this analysis some painful truths that do not correspond to what they
have heard in their churches for so many years: that the Roman Catholic
Church is the wisest and most virtuous one in the world, that it is a
champion in serving the poor, and that the Church has always been an
avant-garde in the promotion of free speech and human rights. However,
for others, especially for those who are open-minded and who have a
minimum respect for intellectual honesty, this analysis may provide some
food for conscientious thought. And, in the end, they may have some
concrete ideas about the motive behind the writing of the book Crossing
the Threshold of Hope.
First of all, from the standpoint of a Vietnamese-American lay Buddhist,
I believe a dialogue with John Paul II is rather unrealistic. Such
dialogue cannot be realized for two main reasons.
1. John Paul II is the spiritual leader of millions of followers. He is
in the highest position in the Catholic world. He sits on thrones and
has to devote his entire effort and time to serve the poor, as taught by
Jesus Christ. It is unlikely that he has time and/or is willing to lower
himself to have a dialogue with a number of unknown lay Buddhists who
dare to comment on his divinely-inspired book.
2. It is impossible to have a dialogue with a Pope who still believes in
his medieval powers, still believes that the so-called Catholic truth is
the only truth in this pluralistic world and therefore still tries to
impose it on the rest of the world.
Although it is very unlikely that we will have a dialogue with John Paul
II, if we want to make some comments on his book Crossing the Threshold
of Hope, then we should, because this is one of our basic rights in this
free world. We should try to understand his motive for writing this
book. Once we understand his motive, our understanding and compassion
will lead to forgiveness, and we will be able to detach ourselves from
everything he has written about Buddha and Buddhism.
This analysis is necessarily long, unfortunately, but by no means
exhaustive. Due to the nature of the analysis and for the sake of
completeness, the use of a large number of documents is necessary to
substantiate the main points in the analysis.
First, I will review briefly what John Paul II has written about Buddha
and Buddhism, then I shall go directly to some remarks on his book by
some scholars, Catholic and non-Catholic , and finally I shall develop
those remarks for a deeper understanding of them.
On page 43, John Paul II writes about Buddha as follows:
"Buddha is right when he does not see the possibility of human salvation
in creation, but he is wrong when, for that reason, he denies that
creation has any value for humanity."
and, on pages 85-86 he writes about Buddhism:
"The Buddhist doctrine of Salvation constitutes the central point, or
rather the only point, of this system. Nevertheless, both the Buddhist
tradition and the methods deriving from it have an almost exclusively
negative soteriology. The "enlightenment" experienced by Buddha comes
down to the conviction that the world is bad, that it is the source of
evil and of suffering for man. To liberate oneself from this evil, one
must free oneself from this world, necessitating a break with the ties
that join us to external reality - ties existing in our human nature, in
our psyche, in our bodies. The more we are liberated from these ties,
the more we become indifferent to what is in the world, and the more we
are freed from suffering, from the evil that has its source in the
world.
Do we draw near to God in this way? This is not mentioned in the
"enlightenment" conveyed by Buddha. Buddhism is in large measure an
"atheistic" system. We do not free ourselves from evil through the good
which comes from God; we liberate ourselves only through detachment from
the world, which is bad. The fullness of such a detachment is not union
with God, but what is called Nirvana, a state of perfect indifference
with regard to the world. To save oneself means, above all, to free
oneself from evil by becoming indifferent to the world which is the
source of evil. This is the culmination of the spiritual process."
It is obvious that John Paul II has deliberately used a number of terms
peculiar to Catholicism such as "salvation" and "soteriology" which
either have different meanings or no meaning at all in Buddhism. It is
well known worldwide that Buddhism is a religion of Enlightenment and
not a religion of Salvation. The difference between those two kinds of
religion is crucial. I will come back to this later. Salvation, if this
word has any meaning at all in Buddhism, it must be understood as
self-salvation, that is, salvation without a savior. This is clearly
understood in Buddha's last words before He entered the Inconceivable
Nirvana: "Strive diligently for your own salvation".
So, salvation in Buddhism means "liberation from ignorance, awakening to
the truth of things by one's own effort" and not "salvation from sin
through a savior". Likewise, the word "soteriology" means "the division
of Theology which treats the mission and work of Christ as a Redeemer"
("Catholic Word Book", Catholic Information Service, Knights of
Columbus, New Haven, Connecticut), therefore, it didn't even exist
before Christ. It has no meaning at all in Buddhism, because Buddhism
already existed more than 500 years before Christ was born.
However, Pope John Paul II deliberately labeled Buddhism as a religion
that has a "negative soteriology", and then he asked a completely
meaningless question, at least to the Buddhists: "Do we draw near to God
in this way? This is not mentioned in the "enlightenment" conveyed by
Buddha."
More than 500 years before Jesus Christ was born, Buddha had already
attained complete enlightenment. He showed the human race a way to
repeat His spiritual experience through great strength and great
compassion, following the Boddhisattva Way, breaking through ignorance
by right understanding and awakening to the truth of things. Therefore,
the concept of salvation in an outside being, whoever he is, is
incompatible with the Buddhist teachings. In a Buddhist mind, the
concept of an outside God doesn't exist, and so who needs to be drawn
near to a non-existent God? We all know that "enlightenment" is a state
of mind which is unthinkable, indescribable and beyond any notion of
duality: Saints and common people are all the same; God, if there is
any, and Devil are not different, so what use is it "to draw near to
God," when one is enlightened? But, I have no intention to explain
Buddhism in this article, my concern is about the Pope's remarks
regarding Buddha and Buddhism, so, let me first quote a few comments on
his book by some scholars and priests.
A member of the Federation of Buddhist Organizations in Sri Lanka, Nalin
de Silva, said the Pope's remarks were malicious and appeared to be a
reaction to the recent spread of Buddhism and Islam in Europe. "He is
trying to defend his faith," de Silva said, "Islam and Buddhism are the
main challenges to Christianity."
Rev. Ken Tanaka, a professor at the institute for Buddhist Studies in
Berkeley, said it is clear that the pope "hasn't done his homework" and
presents "a very simplistic view of Buddhism. "Essentially, Buddhism is
about becoming detached from greed, hatred and ignorance - not from the
world," Tanaka said. "That's how one awakens to a higher level of
awareness."
Rev. Thomas Hand, a Catholic priest, said he wished the pope "were able
to speak about Buddhism from experience. You can't speak about anything
as obviously profound as Buddhism without getting into it."
Rev. Alan Senauke, a Zen priest and coordinator of the Buddhist Peace
Fellowship, said the pope's comments on Buddhism were little more than
"setting up straw men, then knocking them down. "Whether through
ignorance or intention, it is a serious misrepresentation of what
Buddhism is all about".
Lama Ole Nydahl, a teacher affiliated with the Kamtsang Choling, U.S.A.,
part of a Tibetan Buddhist sect, was not surprised with the pope's
comments. "How could a man like him possibly agree with a religion like
Buddhism, which takes people beyond dualism and produces a healthy
relationship with their bodies and minds?" he asked.
Let us take a close look at the above comments. It is obvious that Rev.
Ken Tanaka, Thomas Hand, and Alan Saunake made the same point: The Pope
indeed has a poor background in Buddhism, and therefore, he seriously
misrepresented Buddhism. But the most important point is revealed in the
comments of Nalin de Silva and Lama Ole Nydahl: The intellectual level
of the Pope is inappropriate for an understanding of the profound
teachings of Buddhism, and the pope's remarks on Buddhism were
malicious, as he is trying to defend the waning faith of his followers
around the world. In the following, I'll try to analyze the implications
in Nalin de Silva and Lama Ole Nydahl's comments.
In fact, if we read the book, Crossing the Threshold of Hope, carefully,
we will recognize right away that, besides a number of gratuitous
affirmations about the Catholic faith and dogmas, the book has two
principal purposes:
To put down other religious traditions by deliberately making malicious
remarks about them, based totally on one-sided, arrogant Catholic
teachings, and to discourage the Catholic flock from being impressed by
and attracted to the teachings of other religions, especially the
teaching of true love, true compassion, and self-salvation of Sakyamuni
Buddha.
To make an effort to consolidate the authority of the pope, the Vatican,
and the Catholic clergy to maintain the tradition of "keeping the
Catholic flock in a pyramid structure." This model structure will be
clarified by Penny Lernoux in a later paragraph.
With the above purposes, the pope has quoted selective parts in the
Bible, and reminds his flock with a number of dogmas that he considers
them as divine truths. He knows very well that his followers rarely read
the Bible, much less the history of the Catholic Church, and are
therefore, unaware of the many mistakes and contradictions in the Bible,
the pagan origin of the Bible, and are ignorant about what the Catholic
Church has done to the human race in the last 2000 years. He slandered
the founders of other religions, talked about the 'Enlightenment' of
Buddha even though he has no experience of it, and glorified Jesus
Christ as "absolutely unique". That's why Rev. Thomas Hand, a Catholic
priest, said he whished the pope "were able to speak about Buddhism from
experience," and Zen Master Thích Nhaát Haïnh has commented on this
arrogance in his new book Living Buddha, Living Christ, but I would like
to reserve this comment for the conclusion of this article.
Now, let us try to analyze the motive behind the writing of the book
Crossing the Threshold of Hope. I believe the pope had two major
concerns that compelled him to write the above book.
THE FIRST CONCERN that bothered the pope was the decline and falling
trend of the Catholic religion in general, and of the authority of the
Church and of the pope in particular, all around the world, and
especially in the West. This is reflected in the number of his trips,
mostly to Third World countries, where he tries to consolidate his
authority and the faith of his followers, through his skill of acting,
both as a spiritual leader and as an actor, but primarily as an actor.
He admitted to J. Michener of their PBS series in 1977, "I trained for
the stage as a young man. Yes, I wanted to be an actor." Therefore, we
Vietnamese were not surprised when he tried to speak a few Vietnamese
words to excite his Vietnamese followers in some of the audiences he
granted to the Vietnamese Catholics overseas. This type of special
acting has its own purpose, but we should not understand it as an
expression of love toward the Vietnamese people. This point will be
clarified later.
If we believe in the principle of "cause and effect", we can see that
the decline and falling trend of the Catholic Church have many causes.
In the following, I will only cite just a few principal ones.
The First and most important Cause for the decline of the Roman Catholic
Church is clearly explained in the following remarks of Malachi Martin
in his book, The Keys of This Blood:
"In most European countries, secularism has already triumphed
completely. In that region, organized religions - Catholic, Protestant
and Jewish - are regarded as alike in their insistence to absolutes.
They are considered to have little or nothing to contribute, therefore,
to the current political, economic and cultural life of Western European
countries...
The author also quoted an American scholar:
"The Pope is well aware that, in the next century, Catholicism will
survive only in Third World countries. Catholicism has always flourished
only in poor population of low educational quality. The sophisticated
West can take Catholicism's narrowness no longer. The Pope realizes
that."
Who else but Malachi Martin, a former Jesuit, an eminent Catholic
theologian, an expert on the Catholic Church, and former professor at
the Vatican's Pontifical Biblical Institute, could possibly know the
Catholic Church better? In fact, about 70% of Catholics in the world are
now residents in South America, Latin America, Africa, and the
Philipinnes. The level of economic development and the level of
education of these peoples are well known. Therefore, we are not
surprised when most of the pope's travels were concentrated on Third
World countries, where the pope can vaguely apologize to these people
for all the crimes the Catholic Church has done to them in the past. He
asked them to forget the past, forget all the misfortunes that the
Catholic Church had brought to their countries, and to forget the
imposition upon them of a narrow, arrogant and oppressive Western
culture known as the Christian culture. These astute apologies should be
understood as follows:
"Sorry, in the name of our God, we enslaved you. Sorry, we killed you.
Sorry, we destroyed your cultures and traditions. Sorry, we divided and
messed up your peoples. Just forgive us and forget all this. You can
trust us now."
This is especially true with regard to the Vietnamese Catholics
overseas, where he "stirred up" the illusion of a vision of replacing
the communist regime by a Catholic regime similar to that in Poland
where 90% of the population is Catholic. He did this while ignoring the
fact that over 90% of Vietnamese are non-Catholics, and that the
Vietnamese people still have a vivid memory of the role played by the
Vietnamese Catholics in the invasion of the French colonialists, in the
100 years under the French domination, in the war for independence
against the French comeback in the 1940-50s, and in the 9 years under
the totalitarian Catholic regime of Ngoâ Ñình Dieäm in the South. He has
no hope in the more advanced, civilized countries where his followers
directly confront him with their opinions on the Church's outdated
dogmas that are against their time and incompatible with their social
realities.
Malachi Martin didn't make his remarks lightly. In fact, many scholars
and Catholic priests agree with him on two major points in his remarks:
The Catholic religion no longer appeals to the Western mind, and the
Catholic Church will survive only in Third World countries, i.e., in
countries where large numbers of people live in poverty and receive
little or no education. Let us review some of them.
Henri Guillemin, a practicing Catholic and well known French scholar,
wrote in his recent book, Malheureuse EÙglise:
"This Church, which now collapses, is ruled by a pontiff of medieval
type who, even if he improved his technique, can do nothing more, in my
opinion, to prevent it from disappearing, practically and pretty fast,
during the third millennium, at least under its "Roman" form, a Church
which, for its two "great sacraments", has recourse to magic."
(Translated from French: "Cette EÙglise, qui aujourd'hui s'effondre, est
reùgie par un pontife de type meùdieùval qui, meâme s'il amendait sa
technique, ne peut plus rien, aø mon sens, pour empeâcher de disparaitre,
pratiquement et assez vite, au cours du troisieøme milleùnaire, du moins
sous sa forme "romaine", une EÙglise qui, pour ses deux "grands
sacrements", recours aø la magie.)
Maximilian F. Russer, a Catholic, a former Trappist Monk, and a profound
theologian in his own right, wrote in his book, Authority in the Roman
Catholic Church:
"With Hans Kung, I must agree that "the paradigm of Constantinian-Byzantine
imperial church in which church and state harmonized only too well and
thought that they themselves could realize the kingdom of God on earth"
must go!
And I must also agree with Dr. Kung's assessment that "the model of
medieval papal church in which a theocratic ruler thought he could
exercise absolute control over both the apostolic churches of the East
and the churches of the West, indeed, over the consciences of all
people, and even be able to dictate morality to secular governments - a
pope-fixated church that even today still thinks it can defend its
medieval powers with authoritarian decrees, disciplinary sanctions, and
political strategies," must die!"
Avro Manhattan, the British author whose expertise in the Catholic
Church has made him famous with his best sellers The Vatican 's
Holocaust, Vietnam: Why Did We Go? etc.. wrote in his Catholic
Imperialism and World Freedom:
"That most formidable breeder of monsters, the Catholic Church, will be
made to tumble with the greatest ignominy of all by the tide of her past
misdeeds recoiling upon her, as irresistible as the waters of the great
flood. The blood of the unjustly slain, which has flowed like an
ever-widening river through the somber valleys of history, has already
run too deep for man to suffer any longer the earth to be empurpled with
it anew.
The fixed star of the Catholic Church shall fall from the sky of the
West with thunder. For the bell of destiny, which has tolled for all
tyrants, verily is about to toll also for her."
The following paragraph in Penny Lernoux's Cry of the People will
clarify what I have mentioned before about the pyramid structure of the
institutional Catholic Church in the world and at the same time will
support Martin's second point:
"In the beginning, Latin-American society was constructed like a
pyramid, with a few Europeans settlers enjoying all the privileges of
empire and a mass of Indians, blacks, and half-castes having no rights
at all. The pyramid survived because the mass at the bottom was
repeatedly told that it was stupid, lazy, and inferior. Foreign
missionaries helped drum these ideas into the native's heads by claiming
that it was God's will that they should be poor and ignorant. As the
Archbishop of Lima told his Indians: "Poverty is the most certain road
to felicity." Any Indian or African who had the temerity to doubt such
wisdom by rebelling against the system was promptly put to death...The
Catholic Church must accept a lot of the blame for this situation. Like
the conquistadors, most of the European missionaries who came to
Latin-America saw themselves as bearers of cultures vastly superior to
those of the natives. The missionaries were less interested in
integrating the Indians and Africans than on subjugating them to the
European religious structures. Little attempt was made to understand or
appreciate the cultural heritage of the people, and most of the
missionaries remained a group apart, European colonists on the American
continent, right up to the 20th century. Although the mas of the people
accepted the white man's God, either under physical duress or because he
seemed more powerful than their own Gods, they never assimilated the
ideas of Christianity.
Blinded by their own cultural limitations, the missionaries never saw
how superficial was the religious conversion."
Looking back at the works of the European missionaries in Vietnam in the
19th century and up to early 20th century, a very familiar picture
appears in my mind, and I can't help but feel proud to be a Vietnamese
because Vietnam was able to preserve almost intact its culture and
traditions, and rejected the white man's God in spite of nearly one
hundred years under the French domination during which the missionaries,
and later on the Ngoâ Ñình Dieäm's dictatorial Catholic government, had
tried their best and with all their power to Christianize Vietnam.
Now, let me quote a few more remarks about the same subjects written by
some scholars and Catholic priests:
In Freedom's Foe - The Vatican, Adrian Pigott wrote:
"Roman Catholics are often genuinely surprised to find that they are
frequently regarded with suspicion by their fellow-citizens. They do not
seem to realize that, if they elect to march in the papal army, they
must expect to receive the consequences. Their Generals (the bishops)
and their Commander-in-Chief (the pope), concentrate upon the welfare of
the Vatican rather upon the welfare of mankind. No wonder that Romanists
are unpopular with progressive and intelligent people; they cannot
become first-class citizens owing to their dual allegiance...It is
unfair to blame individual Roman Catholic for being (unconsciously)
detrimental to human progress. They have been brought up in what Dr.
Barnado called "The thick darkness of Romanism"...Illiteracy is always
prevalent in Romanist countries - to enable Priestcraft to flourish."
Father Joseph McCabe, a Catholic priest for some twenty years, wrote in
his book Rome Puts a Blight on Culture as follows:
"The Church of Rome puts a blight on culture and intellect. There is no
other possible explanation of the facts. Of adolescent and adult
Catholics about one-half are illiterate, as I will show in the next
chapter, and half the remaining have only that paltry degree of literacy
which makes their creed or opinion of no particular interest. The
cultural value of the remainder you can judge by the number of
distinguished men who emerge from the body...
All of which points infallibly to the conclusion that the Church itself
is responsible. One of those fine-nature writers who are always trying
to say a good word for Catholicism, which they never study, asks all
sweetly reasonable folk to see that mental concern about religion must
help to develop the mind and promote thinking. We might admit this on
one condition: that the man or woman does really think about religion by
reading both sides and conscientiously weighing their arguments. That is
just what the Roman Church uses its heaviest weapons to prevent. The
Catholic book is a holy book: the critical book is a "bad" book and is
on the same level as the kind of book you cannot buy openly.
If we are agreed that democracy is the ideal political form, we agree
also to teach all people to think critically and inquire without
restriction as the only way to get it to work satisfactorily. The law of
the Catholic Church is just the opposite. You must not inquire outside
your own creed and you must not think critically even within its range."
Father McCabe wrote a whole chapter on Rome Loves the Poor Illiterate,
analyzing the influence of Roman Catholicism on several cultures, using
many statistics in several parts of the world and concluded:
"Rome loves the illiterate. They are so easily persuaded to burn
"heretics" and kiss bogus relics."
In his famous book Crime and Immorality in the Catholic Church, Father
Emmett McLoughlin related his own experience as follows:
"It is my contention and my sincere conviction, from my experience in
the Catholic educational system, my life of 15 years in the priesthood,
and 13 years of constant observation and intense study since leaving the
Church, that its influence on all civilization has been far more evil
than of good. Intellectually, the Church of Rome has done its best to
strangle the human mind and stifle mental initiative. It must do this if
it is to survive. No thinking, intelligent, historically studious
person, especially a freedom-loving American, can become or remain a
Roman Catholic."
Dr. J.C. Cleary, a graduate from Harvard University, majoring in
Linguistics and Oriental Civilization, wrote in his article Buddhism and
The Modern Vietnamese, Giao Ñieåm magazine, #8 :
"The Vietnamese will no doubt be surprised when they find out that, to
the Westerners with progressive mind, it is Catholicism that is a bunch
of outdated myths, superstitions, and meaningless rituals. Westerners
know very well that, not many knowledgeable people still believe in
Catholicism. All those who have some knowledge about European history
know that, the Roman Catholic Church has done everything in its power to
oppose the development of Science and people's new way of living and
thinking. In America today, the fanatic Catholics are the first who
fight against the new traditions and the scientific world.
Therefore, in the Western mind, Catholicism is inseparable from an
outdated traditional doctrine, a regret of the past. In the West, the
majority of Catholic devotees are the least educated, from lower classes
and lower economical levels, who have nothing else to expect."
(Translated from Vietnamese)
And, regarding the proselytization in Vietnam , about 100 years ago, the
Governor General of Indochina, J. L. de Lanessan, wrote in his book Les
Missions et leur Protectorat, quoted by Patrick J.N. Tuck in French
Catholic Missionaries and the Politics of Imperialism in Vietnam,
1857-1914, as follows:
"In fact during the two centuries and more that the Catholic Missions
have been operating in China and the Indochinese peninsula they have
probably not converted more than ten scholars in all. The entire
educated and governing class of the population has evaded their
proselytes. In general Catholic missionaries only recruit from among the
lowest classes, and mainly among those who, for various reasons have
been rejected by Annamese society."
The above documents are only a small sample from the vast amount of
literature about the Catholic Church, readily available in public and
university libraries. These documents prove that the remarks of the
theologian Malachi Martin are accurate. And now, we should be able to
understand why the Vatican opposed the Population Summit in Egypt in
September 1994. The motives for opposition were not in the moral
conscience but rather in the prospective number of followers in the
Third World and in the vision of imposing the Vatican's authority on the
poor mass, transforming that authority into a political force in the
world. Throughout its history, the Vatican never cared for the poor. Its
primary concern was and still is to accumulate wealth at the expense of
the poor mass. Just look at the wealth of the Church and we will know
where the truth lies in its professed missions of serving the poor.
Peter de Rosa, a former archbishop, remarked in his book, Vicars of
Christ:
"Those who dress in purple silk, live in palaces, sit on thrones - it is
not easy for them to act as servants of the servants of God or to
represent the Poor Man of Nazareth to the poor and starving of the
world."
In the underdeveloped poor countries, population growth without control
will lead to millions of human beings, mostly infants, dying of
malnutrition, diseases etc... Who is responsible for this? Does the
Vatican care about this? Let's read B.S. Rajneesh in his book, Priests &
Politicians: The Mafia of the Soul:
"The pope goes on traveling around the world preaching that birth
control is against God; that any method of preventing the birth of a
child is anti-God - particularly in the countries of the East where
people are so poor, and they are going to become poorer everyday. But
the pope's interest is not that man should live comfortably, without
hunger.
And, you will be surprised to know that on one hand, the pope goes on
talking against birth control methods; and on the other, the Vatican has
a hidden factory where they make birth control pills - because it is
good business; it brings millions of dollars.
You call such people religious?
...And his interest in birth control is really to increase the
population. Whatever consequences happen to people is not the problem.
If people are poor and hungry, they can be easily converted to
Christianity, particularly into the Catholic church. Their schools,
their hospitals, their orphanages are nothing but factories for
converting people into Catholics.
...The popes don't seem to be interested in saving humanity. Their basic
interest is how to get more and more people into their religion, because
that is going to be their power. It is pure politics."
The Second Cause for the decline of the Catholic Church is the movement
for independent national Churches. These movements that have fought for
the liberation of the local churches from the indoctrination and
authoritarian structure of the Vatican, are growing larger and larger.
These movements started many centuries ago and culminated in the
movement of "liberation theology" which took place in Latin America in
the 1960s, and then spread to Africa and Asia. In the history of the
Catholic Church, since the 17th century, many national Catholic Churches
have refuted the powers of the Pope. Gallicanism in France is a movement
of the French clergy which asked for limiting the authority of the Pope
and for the autonomy of regional churches. French Gallicanism was a
national church which acknowledged the pope but denied papal
infallibility and central authority. In 1790, although over eighty
percent of the French population were Catholics, French National
Assembly rejected a proposal that made Catholicism a national religion.
In The Papacy and the Modern World, Karl Otmar von Aretin wrote that:
"The emergence of national churches was the problem threatening the
spirituality of the popes in the eighteenth century. In Rome nothing met
with such relentlessly thorough opposition as the 19th-century
national-church tendencies, while to this day liberalism is seen by Rome
as the greatest enemy of the Catholic Church."
And, in Father Emmett McLoughlin's book, Crime and Immorality In The
Catholic Church, there is a chapter entitled, "What Catholicism Has Done
To Catholics", where he wrote:
"Luther's Reformation in the 16th-century was merely the successful
climax of centuries of struggle of sincere millions who disagreed as
much with the morals of Rome as they did with its doctrine. If the soil
were not ripe for revolt, the Reformation movement of Lutherans..and
others could not have spread so rapidly through the most progressive
nations of Europe. All of these peoples were Roman Catholics rejecting
the crime and immorality of Rome, its pope and its clergy.
It is more than a coincidence that the Christian peoples that rejected
Rome became and still are the most moral and law-abiding in the world.
Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Denmark, Finland, England, Scotland and
Switzerland..they have learned to rely on God and their own will power,
and not on confession, purgatory, indulgences, rosaries, medals and the
like."
And, Paul Blanshard wrote the following in his book, American Freedom
and Catholic Power, to suggest that the American Catholic Church should
be independent from the Vatican:
"It is important, therefore, to distinguish between the American
Catholic people and their Roman-controlled priests. The Catholic people
of the United States fight and die for the same concept of freedom as do
other true Americans; they believe in the same fundamental ideals of
democracy. If they controlled their own Church, the Catholic problem
would soon disappear because, in the atmosphere of American freedom,
they would adjust their Church's policies to American realities.
Unfortunately, the Catholic people of the United States are not citizens
but "subjects" in their own religious commonwealth. The secular as well
as the religious policies of their Church are made in Rome by an
organization that is alien in spirit and control. The American Catholic
people themselves have no representatives of their own choosing either
in their own local hierarchy or in the Roman high command; and they are
compelled by the very nature of their Church's authoritarian structure
to accept nonreligious as well as religious policies that have been
imposed upon them from abroad."
Paul Blanshard published his book in 1950 and since then, the ideal for
an independent American Church picked up more and more momentum among
the American Catholic communities. In reality, the American Catholics
practically defy almost all the Pope's decrees and encyclicals by simply
ignoring them. And on more than one occasion, they even confronted the
Pope with questions relating to the incompatibility of the Pope's moral
laws with their everyday social lives.
This is reflected in the statistics on the opinions of the American
Catholic population regarding recent Vatican encyclicals. For example,
the encyclical Humanae Vitae condemned all artificial birth-control
methods. But, according to a survey conducted 10 years later by the
sociologist-priest Andrew Greeley of the University of Chicago, 87% of
American Catholics disagreed with the encyclical. Another survey by
Newsweek, published in November 1993, showed that 59 % favor gay rights,
and even 47 % favor abortion rights.
In fact, in America as in Europe, Catholics are no longer docile
subjects of the Vatican. Not only do they simply ignore the Vatican's
authority in several encyclicals, but they also openly protest against
the Vatican's injustice in dealing with the freedom of expression of
their leaders. This is exemplified in two cases in America where the
Vatican tried to silence the voices of dissent within the American
Church, the case of Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen of Seattle and the
case of Father Charles Curran at the Catholic University of America, and
two cases in Europe where the Vatican tried to punish those theologians
who disagreed with the Church teachings and/or theology: the case of the
German theologian Hans Kung and the case of the Dutch theologian Edward
Schillebeeckx, and one case in Latin America where the famous Brazilian
theologian, Leonardo Boff, was silenced by the Vatican because of his
highly acclaimed book Church: Charism and Power.
The above five cases of intellectual repression are worth recounting
here, even only briefly:
1. The case of Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen:
In September 1986, Archbishop Raymond G. Hunthausen of Seattle was
ordered by the Vatican to hand over his decision-making authority to his
auxiliary bishop, Donal Wuert, because the Vatican did not agree with
his views on moral and social issues. When Archbishop Hunthausen
announced this order, the Seattle Catholics reacted and protested. 252
of his 280 priests, i.e., 90%, supported him. Apetition with more than
13,000 signatures from the Seattle Catholics protested this act of
repression and urged the Vatican to restore his full authority. The
Canon Law Society of America expressed its concern to the national
bishops' conference and to the Vatican, and voted 173 to 53 to question
whether the Vatican's order to relieve Hunthausen from his authority
conformed with canon law. In May 1987, the Vatican announced that
Archbishop Hunthausen's full authority would be restored.
The case of Father Charles E. Curran:
Father Charles E. Curran was an assistant professor at the Catholic
University of America, teaching moral theology. In April 1967 he was
fired. The University administration, being loyal to and under the
pressure of the Vatican, gave no reason for his dismissal, but there is
no doubt that his unorthodox views on birth control did not agree with
the Vatican teaching. Father Curran has the support of his students and
especially that of his colleagues on the faculty, who voted 400 to 18 to
discontinue classes until he was reinstated. The boycott closed down the
university for three days. The Administration announced that Father
Curran would be re-hired and be promoted to associate professor.
The case of the German theologian Hans Kung:
From his writings, Hans Kung pointed out that from the New Testament we
can see that Jesus himself did not found a Church, the Roman Church was
a movement which over the course of time took on increasingly
institutional forms. He questioned papal infallibility, proving that it
has no basis in Scripture and that it is built on an inadequate concept
of truth.
So, in December 1979, the Vatican declared that Hans Kung, professor at
Tubingen University, one of the most famous universities in Germany, "in
his writings has departed from the integral truth of Catholic faith, and
therefore can no longer be considered a Catholic theologian nor function
as such in a teaching role."
The protest against Vatican’s suppression of professor Hans Kung was
strong, world-wide. Hans Kung himself received more than 5,000 letters
of support. Organizations were formed "for the rights of Catholics", for
the recognition of such rights by the Vatican. Not all of the protestors
agreed with Kung’s opinions, however they conceived that he had the
right to express his views as a Catholic theologian without having his
fundamental right violated. Kung was removed from the Catholic faculty
of theology at Tubingen, but he remains as director of the Institute of
Ecumenical Research.
The case of the Dutch theologian Edward Schillebeeckx:
The Dutch theologian Edward Schillebeeckx, professor at Nijmegen in
Holland, published his first Jesus book, "Jesus An Experiment in
Christology", in 1974. The major points of disagreement with the Vatican
teaching concerned the divinity of Christ, his awareness of being the
Son of God, and the objective reality of his resurrection. Schillebeeckx
realized that the religious environment in which the New Testament
originated is so different from ours today. He raised the question: "we
do not live in a cultural-religious tradition that expects a messiah, or
a mysterious celestial son of man; or an approaching end of the world"
as taught clearly in the Bible by Jesus himself. He went as far as
"Today, Science and Technology are widely looked on as a source of
salvation for mankind, and non-Christian religions of worldwide repute
offer alternative routes."
Because of this book, in December 1979, he was grilled at the vatican on
charges of deviationism in Christology. This act of repression raised a
storm of protest from Catholic and non-Catholic theologians, university
faculties, priests, nuns and lay people in Europe and the America. A
petition with more than 60,000 signatures collected by a group of
Amsterdam theological students was hand-carried to the Vatican.
And, in September 1982, Schillebeeckx was awarded the National Erasmus
Prize for Theology. This showed clearly an act of defiance of the Dutch
government with regard to the Vatican authority.
The case of the Brazilian theologian Leonardo Boff:
Leonardo Boff, the eminent Brazilian theologian, had published a book
entitled "Church: Charism and Power" which was highly acclaimed all over
the world. He not only believes that the Church must be a Church of the
poor, but he also criticizes the totalitarian structure of the Vatican,
and most interestingly, he raises the issue of human rights within the
Church. For that reason and for that reason only, the Vatican tried to
"silence" Father Boff.
In May 1985, the Vatican ordered Father Boff to begin immediately and
unspecified period of time of "obedient silence" to allow him time for
"serious reflection." He was told to give up his duties as editor of the
Revista Eclesiastics Brasileira, the most influential theological
journal in Brazil, and not to teach and publish.
As the announcement of the silencing was widely reported in the press,
Father Boff became instantly famous. His picture appeared in newspapers
and magazines all over the world. At the monastery he was residing, he
received daily many letters, cards and telegrams of support. Catholic
groups all over the world protested Rome about what some called the
rebirth of the Inquisition. Ten Brazilian Catholic bishops publicly
criticized the Vatican’s treatment of Boff. Even some Protestant
religious bodies issue statements of support for Boff. Labor unions
organized public demonstrations protesting the silencing. T-shirts and
posters appeared for sale in Brazil picturing Boff with his mouth
gagged.
A little less than a year later, the Vatican lifted the silencing.
"L’affaire Boff" was reported and analyzed in detail in the book The
Silencing of Leonardo Boff. The Vatican and the Future of World
Christianity by Dr. Harvey Cox, a Victor S. Thomas Professor of Divinity
at Harvard Divinity School.
The 5 cases of intellectual repression illustrated above show the
totalitarian character of the Roman Catholic Church, and from these we
can see clearly that the Vatican's policy of silencing dissidents in the
Catholic Church failed in every case because of the reactions of the
progressive Catholics around the world. This also shows that the Vatican
no longer has the power to enforce its authority upon the regional
churches, unless some regional church, such as the Vietnamese Catholic
Church, voluntarily and completely submits to the Vatican. Indeed, the
Vietnamese Catholic Church has been proved to be a very docile one. I
wonder how long it will take the Vietnamese Catholic Church to realize
the true nature of the Roman Catholic Church, and therefore, to realize
the importance of an integral and independent national church in Vietnam
if it doesn't want to be alienated from the rest of the Vietnamese
people as it has always been in the past.
The violation of human rights in the Catholic Church is unknown to most
of the ignorant Catholic mass at the bottom of the pyramid-like
structure of the church. The Catholic mass still believes their church
is a champion of human rights without knowing that historically, the
Catholic Church was and still is an organization that has violated human
rights the most in the world.
Ironically, Father Emmett McLoughlin also wrote in his book Letters To
An Ex-Priest:
"...The centuries-old mistress of "tyranny over the mind of man," (i.e.,
the Catholic Church) clothed now in the robe of Ecumenical Brotherhood,
protected by the slogan of "tolerance," seduces the rulers in high
places, poses learnedly in academic hall, and shares Protestant pulpits
as she grows stronger - in money, in political power, in the illusion of
numbers.
Every ex-priest knows the Church system's seductiveness, its duplicity,
its totalitarianism, its chameleon-like ability to wear the color of
democracy in America and the blackness of the swastika in Germany. He
knows that it seeks not the salvation of souls, but the enslavement of
minds; not the rewards of heavenly glory, but the accumulation of earthy
power. Not the eternal treasures in heaven where thieves cannot steal,
but the passing gold of every nation on earth - of each nation as it
attains its zenith."
The Boff case took place in the midst of the decade on "Liberation
Theology". Therefore, I would like to analyze the subject of "Liberation
Theology", recently one of several major concerns of the Vatican.
We already know that Liberation Theology was a national movement that
took place in Latin America in the 1960s and then spread to Africa and
Asia. The theology of liberation takes its name from an economic and
sociological analysis of the Latin American context. According to Latin
American liberation theologian Gustavo Gutieùrrez in his "Contestation
in the Church", the situation of Latin America today is no less
abominable than it was in the beginning:
"The Church in Latin America was born alienated. It has not, from the
start and despite some valiant efforts to the contrary, been the master
of its own destiny. Decisions were taken outside the subcontinent. After
the wars of independence of the last century, a sort of ecclesiastical
"colonial treaty" was established. Latin America was to supply "the raw
materials": the faithful, the Marian cult, and popular devotions; Rome
and the Churches of the Northern hemisphere were to supply "manufactured
goods": studies of Latin-American affairs, pastoral directives, clerical
education, the right to name bishops - and even supply them - money for
works and missions. In other words, the general dependent situation of
Latin America is just as real in Church affairs."
The above statement was confirmed by Clauss Bussmann, professor of
theology at the University of Duisburg in Germany, who wrote in his
book, Who Do You Say? Jesus Christ in Latin American Theology:
"..One thing is certain. The story of the Latin-American Indian from
1492 to the present is mostly one of suffering. The Indians have been
economically exploited, culturally destroyed and Europeanized, and raped
in matters of religion."
It is obvious that once that situation began to surface as a state of
dependency, "liberation" became the order of the day. It is also obvious
that the Latin American Church, dictated by Rome, would not be able to
serve its poor people efficiently, the people who have been exploited
for centuries. This is true, wherever there is a regional Catholic
Church, not only in Latin America, but also in Africa and Asia. The
reason is simple, if a regional Church is dominated and dictated by
Rome, it does not have any self-identity, and by that very fact, it
cannot be said to exist independently within its own cultural spheres of
which the Vatican knows nothing. Therefore, it is incapable of
fulfilling its own mission: to serve its own followers.
In summary, Liberation Theology is nothing but a declaration of cultural
and intellectual independence. There are many reasons for the emergence
of the Liberation Theology. Here I will cite the main ones:
From its first appearance in the New World, the Catholic Church was part
of the overall enterprise of conquest and colonization of the native
people by Spain and Portugal and the imposition of colonial rule.
2. The Catholic Church always sided with the local Government and the
rich.
The Catholic Church says one thing but practices another thing. The
Bible says to serve the poor but the Church always searches for lands
and money. This is accurately described by Desmond Tutu, the priest who
won the Peace Nobel Prize in 1984: "We have our lands and they came with
their Bible. We believed in them and we pray with the Bible in our hands
and our eyes closed. When we open our eyes, we have the Bible and they
have our lands."
4. The Catholic Church is an authoritarian institution. That's why:
"Liberation theology is a critique of the activity of the Church and of
Christians from the angle of the poor. It also paid special attention to
the Church with strong anti-authority and anti-institution spirit. The
poor, nonwhites, and women are finding new meaning in Christian faith as
well as revealing the shortcomings of interpretation made by Western
males." (Phillip Berryman, "Liberation Theology")
And, in A Vision of Hope: The Churches and Change in Latin America,
Trevor Beeson & Jenny Pearce wrote:
"..It is not "a new theology" which has been discovered, but "a new way
of doing theology" in the Latin America context, - in the context, that
is, of the struggle for liberation. The primary fact is a growing number
of Christians all over the continent have engaged themselves in the
struggle for the political, social, economic, cultural and spiritual
liberation of their people."
In the Liberation Theology movement we can find those eminent
theologians such as Gustavo Gutieùrrez, Juan Luis Segundo, Leonardo Boff
etc.. and those who made a substantial contribution to the Vatican
Council II such as Karl Rahner, Edward Schillebeeckx, Hans Kung.
In summary, the emergence of the "National Church" movement and the
"Liberation Theology" movement was able to develop worldwide because of
the following reasons: There is no reason that the peoples in Latin
America, in Central America, in Africa, and in Asia have to accept the
power and authority of the Vatican, and to accept its interpretation of
the Bible of some Western white males. If we read the history of the
Catholic Church, the history of the popes, the history of the crusades
and Inquisition, and with the knowledge that it took 359 years for the
Vatican to admit its wrongs in the case of Gallileo Gallilei, then a few
important questions must be taken into consideration:
Is it true that the popes and those cardinals, archbishops, and etc..,
who reigned in the Vatican are more intelligent and more virtuous than
the rest of the people in the world? In the past, the Catholic Church
has made many mistakes, and committed many crimes, so, what is the point
of blindly following the teachings of the Church? Every culture is
different. There is no reason that the cultures of Latin America,
Central America, Africa, and Asia have to duplicate the Western
Christian culture. To accept dependence on Western Christian culture,
under any form, is to show a mentality of a slave, a lack of
self-confidence of the natives who, because of ignorance, put their
church above their nation, and by that very fact, betrayed their nation.
The idea of democracy developing in the Third World countries, must be
applied in the religious life as well as in the socio-political domain.
The above progressive ideas above, indeed threatened the power and
authority of the Catholic institutional church, that is why the pope is
trying to reverse this trend of thinking to save his wordly power.
It is unfortunate that, while in more advanced and civilized countries,
people have already recognized the true nature of the Roman Catholic
Church, and therefore have been fighting for their cultural and
intellectual independence. In a number of underdeveloped countries, the
ignorant Catholic masses still believe in the infallibiblity of the
pope, still believe that the pope and the church have the God-given
exclusive right to interpret the Bible and the power to excommunicate
their followers. They still believe that a direct communion with Christ
is impossible and one has to go through an intermediary such as the pope
or the Vatican. They still believe that the pope is the Vicar of Christ,
therefore, he holds all the tickets to heaven. Because of such
superstitious belief, they willingly and totally submit their body and
soul to the Vatican. The following remark describes accurately this sad
situation:
"But Rome has a lot to offer, too. Rome does provide a refuge for the
countless millions who are unable to think for themselves, to take on
the burdens of personal responsibility." (Louis Baldwin, "The Pope and
the Mavericks".)
The Third Cause for the decline of the Roman Catholic Church is that
more and more Catholic priests and lay Catholics are leaving the Church,
especially in Europe and in North America. If one reads the statistics
given out by the Church, one finds some impressive numbers, because the
Church only counts those who have been baptized and not those who have
left the Church. The Catholic Church maintains that "once a Catholic,
always a Catholic" and those who left will eventually come back.
However, the result from several researches based on scientific methods:
gathering data, analyzing the data, then making projections for the
future, indeed have caused a great concern to the pope and to those
Catholic leaders in the Vatican about this exodus.
For example, the book, Full Pews and Empty Altars is the result of six
years of research, from 1984 to 1990, by two sociologists, professors
Richard Schoenherr and Lawrence Young at the University of Wisconsin in
Madison, in which the authors warned the Catholic Church that
"The shortage of priests in the US is crumbling the foundation of the
Roman Catholic Church."
and projected that from 1966 to the year 2005, the number of priests
will drop 40%, from 35,000 to 21,000. This research was commissioned in
1984, ironically, by the US Catholic Conference and funded by a grant
from the Lilly Endowment, part of Lilly Pharmaceutical. But in 1990,
when the authors announced the results of their research to the US
bishops, the final funding was cut off. The reason? Cardinal Archbishop
Roger Mahony of Los Angeles said at the time:
"We are disciples of Jesus Christ, we live by God's grace, and our
future is shaped by God's design for his Church - not by sociologists."
With that kind of mind-set, how can science possibly be reconciled with
blind faith?
In fact, the above result of research revealed nothing new, because the
problem of priests leaving the Church has become more and more serious
since then. The Pope is aware of this and he is trying to reverse this
trend primarily through recruitment and prayer.
In the book Shattered Vows: Priests Who Leave, David Rice, a Dominican
priest travelled 38,000 miles to interview a large number of Catholic
priests who have left the Church, wrote:
"100,000 Roman Catholic priests have walked out in the last 20 years -
more than one every two hours. Almost half of all American priests will
leave - most often, to marry - before the 25th anniversary of their
ordination. The Vatican won't talk about this exodus, yet it is the most
grievous crisis to face the Church since the Protestant Reformation."
The fourth cause for the decline of the Roman Catholic Church is the
image of the Church which has been gravely damaged by many scandals all
over the world. It is well known that the Vatican signed some concordats
with Hitler and Mussolini and sided with them as reported in the
following accounts:
"To help Mussolini in his political difficulties, in 1923 the new Pope
dissolved all the various Roman Catholic political parties.. Thus the
curious partnership between two ambitious Italians enabled the formation
of the first Facist state - largely due to Vatican patronage and
support.
By 1930 Mussolini (now firmly established) showed his thanks by
returning favors to the Pope. Under the Concordat - Vast sums of money
were given to the Pope. Roman Catholicism was declared the State
Religion. Only textbooks approved by the Church could be used in
schools. Privileges for priests were extended. "Catholic Action" (the
new propaganda machine of the Vatican) was recognized. Very soon the
immoral alliance had resulted in Italy in the abolition of such items of
Civilization as: Free Speech, Honest Education, Liberalism, Democracy,
The Free Press.
In the mean time, in Germany, another intolerant Romanist, Adolf Hitler,
had launched out into similar indecencies, receiving valuable Vatican
support." (Adrian Pigott, Ibid.)
The following is in a figure caption in "The Godfathers" by Chick
Publications:
"Like Italy, German signed a concordat with Vatican in Rome, 1933.
Signing the concordat is Cardinal Pacelli (later to become Pope Pius
XII). By 1933 he was the Vatican Secretary of State. Second from left
(in the figure caption) is Franz Von Papen, a sinister Nazi and devout
Roman Catholic who was Hitler's ace diplomat and the Vatican agent in
helping to bring Hitler in power."
And, after World War II, the Vatican smuggled out thousands of Nazis war
criminals, using such charity organizations as the Caritas and Red Cross
to provide the criminals with false passports to resettle them in
Argentina, Austria, and even in America.
ABC Prime Time reported in May 1994 that the Vatican's "Ratlines"
smuggled out Hitler's killers, one of them butchered 335 civilians in
one day, including women and children.
In the business of finance, the Vatican connection with the Mafia is of
no surprise to anyone:
"And on the subject of the green, it's now of no secret that the papacy
has financially benefited from its ties to the Italian Mafia, as
documented in several books. It even led to the poisoning of John Paul I
and the indictment of Archbishop Paul Marcinkus." (Mark Pitsch in "The
Daily Cardinal", Sep. 15, 1987)
"Archbishop Paul Marcinkus was the head of the Vatican Bank. This is the
man who was running all the Mafia heroin money through the bank. In 1982
Archbishop Marcinkus was involved in a huge financial scandal after an
Italian bank collapsed..
A warrant for the arrest of the Archbishop had been issued, but the
Vatican is a separate government - just eight square miles - and the
Italian government has no power to interfere in the Vatican. And the
Pope was hiding the man inside the Vatican; the arrest warrant was
waiting outside." (Rajneesh, B.S., Ibid.)
All of these scandals have seriously tarnished the image of the Roman
Catholic Church all over the world. The world now realizes that the
Roman Catholic Church is primarily a political, economic institution
rather than a religious one.
This is exactly what Paul Hofmann wrote in his book O Vatican: A
Slightly Wicked View of the Holy See:
"When outsiders first come into contact with the Vatican they are struck
by how much attention it pays to administrative, bureaucratic, legal,
and political business, and how relatively little it seems to care for
transcendental matters. This should explain why the reader will find
plenty of mundane material in these pages rather than descriptions of
the Vatican's spiritual life. It may seem as though I am reporting on
one of the multi-national corporations or the United Nations. But the
Vatican is a complex business."
I have no intention to go into more detail with the above scandals.
Readers who are interested in the above topics should consult the
following books to have a more complete picture of the Roman Catholic
Church: The Vatican's Holocaust by Avro Manhattan, Genocide in Satellite
Croatia, 1941-1945 by Edmond Paris, The Vatican Empire by Nino Lo Bello,
The Vatican Connection by Richard Hammer, Priests and Politicians: The
Mafia of the Soul by B.S.Rajneesh, and Unholy Trinity: How The Vatican's
Nazi Networks Betrayed Western Intelligence to the Soviets by Mark
Aarons & John Loftus, Rich Church, Poor Church by Malachi Martin, and
The Vatican Billions by Avro Manhattan.
Besides the above scandals, the most recent and damaging scandals have
involved the physical and sexual abuse of orphans in some orphanages,
and the molestation of children by quite an impressive number of
priests. ABC Prime Time reported the "1.2 billion law suit" concerning
the immoral abuses of orphans in an orphanage in Canada where the "gray
nuns" (nuns who wear gray clothes) mistreated some of the orphans to
death, and deliberately disabled a number of them. For example, thew
nuns would pierce their ear drums, to receive $2.5 per day from the
Government for each disabled child instead of $0.75 for each normal
child. And most recently, the movie The Boys of St. Vincent, based on a
true story in the book Unholy Orders: Tragedy at Mount Cashel by Michael
Harris, exposed the physical and sexual abuses of young orphans in the
orphanage of St. Jones in Newfoundland, Canada and the cover up by the
regional Church. But the most serious problem the Church is facing now
is about a large number of its priests who sexually abused young girls
and boys in their parishes. And, the more damaging effect is, instead of
finding a way to protect the followers, the Church has made every effort
to cover up the abusive priests to save the Church image.
The book A Gospel of Shame: Children, Sex Abuse and the Catholic Church
by Elinor Burkett and Frank Bruni describes the following:
"The book uses interviews with victims to examine children's unique
vulnerability to priests and with priests abusers to explore their
dangerous isolation. It documents the failure of prosecutors, judges,
psychologists and reporters to monitor bishops, who spend million of
dollars to protect the church's image rather than its believers."
On the same subject, Jason Berry wrote in his book Lead Us Not Into
Temptation: Catholic Priests and the Sexual Abuse of Children:
"In fact, between 1984 and 1992, 400 Catholic priests in North America
have been reported for molesting children. To date, $400 million has
been paid by the Church to resolve these cases. One source projects that
$1 billion may be paid by century's end."
Reviewing this book, Father Andrew M. Greeley, a sociologist-priest,
professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago, remarked that:
"I am familiar with many of the cases and situations about which Jason
Berry writes. I can assure the reader that to the best of my knowledge
his reporting is accurate and restrained, indeed if anything almost too
conservative. It is my strong impression that the situation is actually
much worse than it appears in this book. One will become very angry, I
suspect, as one reads through its pages, not so much at the victimizers,
who themselves were often if not always victims when they were children,
but at Catholic leadership. Bishops have with that seems like programmed
consistency tried to hide, cover up, bribe, stonewall, often they have
sent back into parishes men whom they knew to be a danger of the
faithful."
In fact, in Father Andrew Greeley’s research, he projected that at least
2,500 priests nationwide have victimized tens of thousands of children
in the past generation (Los Angeles Times, June 15, 1993)
Jason Berry also wrote in the article Fathers: The Catholic Church has
to Confront the Problem of Sexually Abusive Priests, Los Angeles Times
Magazine, June 1995:
"Since the early 1980s, when the silence that surrounded the sexual
abuse of children was broken, the Catholic Church has seen hundreds of
its priests accused of a deed made even more horrific by their vocation.
To the faithful, a priest is a Christ figure, celebrating Mass,
preaching the Gospel, forgiving sins, watching over his congregation. A
priest who molests a child betrays not only that child but all those who
believed in the institution he represents.
And that institution, historically powerful and secretive, has until
now, largely chosen to protect its own servants rather than the people
they are pledged to serve, to deny that a systemic problem exists."
And, we can read the following on the front cover of the book Sex,
Priests, and Power: An Anatomy of a Crisis by A. W. Richard Sipe, an
ordained Catholic priest:
"From every corner of this country and from other countries around the
world, reports of sexual abuse, exploitation, and outgoing sexual
misconduct by Catholic priests have appeared in every major newspaper,
magazine, and TV and radio talk show. What was first denied by Church
officials finally turned into a deluge of overwhelming evidence played
out in legal settlements and courtrooms.
Richard Sipe startled the world in 1990 with his controversial book "A
Secret World: Sexuality and the Search of Celibacy" which presented
evidence of sexual activity by almost 50% of the Roman Catholic
priesthood.
Now, 5 years later, Richard Sipe examines the continuing sexual crisis
facing the Catholic Church today. Has the storm of publicity and
controversy caused the church to acknowledge any of the accusations?
Will the church accept statistical evidence or alter the way it trains
its clergy? How has it come to grips with reforming or retraining
abusers? Has it acknowledged the spread of AIDS among its ranks? Why
does the church oppress women and react with hostility and fear towards
them?
"Sex, Priests, and Power" addresses these and other questions. The book
substantiates its conclusions with many vivid and chilling stories of
sexual abuse by clergy against children, women, and members of its own
ranks.."
The four principal causes for the decline of the Roman Catholic Church
analyzed above, will no doubt lead to the irreversible falling trend of
Catholicism in the world. The Pope is aware of that, and by writing the
book Crossing the Threshold of Hope he hopes to somewhat reverse this
trend. Unfortunately, people all around the world, even in Third World
countries, are becoming more and more educated, and there is no way the
Church can possibly suppress the truth as it has done so often in the
past. His book only confirms that the true nature of the Roman Catholic
Church has not changed at all. It still dreams of imposing its teaching
upon the rest of the world.
THE SECOND MAJOR CONCERN that bothered the Pope is the spread of
Buddhism and Islam in Europe and America. I do not know anything about
Islam, but regarding Buddhism I can see clearly its rather rapid spread
throughout the West. More than thirty years ago, when I studied physics
at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, the bookstores in town
carried only a very limited number of Buddhist books, for example the
three volumes of Zen Essays by Daisetz T. Suzuki, A Buddhist Bible by
Dwight Goddard, Zen Keys by Thích Nhaát Haïnh, and a limited number of
works by such well known authors such as Edward Conze, Christmas
Humphreys, Sir Edwin Arnold, Theodore Stcherbatsky, Alan Watts, Charles
Luk, Sangharakshita, John Blofeld and Philip Kapleau. But now, I am very
impressed by a very large selection of Buddhist scriptures, texts etc...
available at every large bookstore. In 1993, the book The Miracle of
Mindfulness by Thích Nhaát Haïnh was one of the best sellers. Books on
Tibetan Buddhism are also numerous, especially after the Honorable Dalai
Lama was awarded the Peace Nobel Prize.
The influence of Buddhism on Western societies has been developed
rapidly because of the works of the above-mentioned authors and many
more. Apart from Zen Buddhism, which was introduced to the West by
Daisetz Suzuki, the most recent contribution to the spread of Buddhism
in the West has been by the Dalai Lama with Tibetan Buddhism and by
Thích Nhaát Haïnh with Engaged Buddhism combined with Mindfulness, and
of course, with the assistance of many other monks and lay Buddhists.
A recent CBS's "60 Minutes" reported that there are over 2 million
American Buddhists, not to mention those of Asian origin such as
Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Korean... NBC TV Network also reported
that there are about 300 Buddhist Centers in Los Angeles alone, and
about 50 in Boston etc.. In the book How The Swans Came To The Lake,
Rick Fields recounts the history of the development of Buddhism in
America with major contributions from His Eminence the Dalai Lama,
Tripitika Master Hsuan Hua from the city of "Ten Thousand Buddhas" in
Talmage, California, and the late Vietnamese Zen Master Thích Thieân AÂn
in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and Vietnamese Zen Master Thích Nhaát
Haïnh teaching in several American communities.
The development and spread of Buddhism in the West were reported in
Buddhism in Europe by Kosho Yamamoto, Zen Comes West by Christmas
Humphreys, Buddhism and the West: The Integration of Buddhism into
Western Society by Sangharakshita, Buddhism in Australia by Paul
Croucher, and The Awakening of the West by Stephen Batchelor etc...
It is not my intention to advertize Buddhism. Buddhism is not for sale.
It does not have any relic, holy water or indulgence for sale either.
So, there is no need to advertize it. I am only reporting the facts.
But, it is worth trying to understand why Buddhism has captivated the
Western mind. Let me quote just a few observations:
"Wherever Buddhism has traveled during its 2500 year history it has
entered into a rich and dynamic relationship with its host cultures. For
Buddhism this has meant new forms of expression and communication as
well as considerable differences in emphasis and approach. To its
surrounding societies have come new ideals, new ideas, new ethical
standards, fresh social, cultural, and artistic life - indeed, rarely
anything less than radical transformation.
Now Buddhism is coming to the West, and judging from the seriousness
with which many Westerners are taking to its principles and practices,
there can be no doubt that history is going to repeat itself. Buddhism
is about to become integrated into Western society." (Sangharakshita,
Ibid.)
The following is from the book God and the New Haven Railway. And Why
Neither One Is Doing Very Well by George Dennis O'Brien, professor of
Philosophy and President of the University of Rochester:
"Whatever else Christianity may be, it seems on its face clearly to be a
religion which preaches salvation and a savior. Before one becomes
instantly bored with that idea, it is important to note that most other
significant spiritual contenders not only don't preach salvation, in
some cases they positively dislike it. Islam is a case in point. Islam
means "surrender"; there is no God but Allah and there you are! Muslims
find the Christian notion of a savior demeaning both to the saver and
the saved. God can accomplish his ends for humanity without complex
metaphysical gyrations, and dependence on a savior would devalue the
moral independence and fortitude of the intended clients. Human folks
ought to stand on their own two bare feet and get on with saving
themselves.
Buddha is not a savior, he is the Enlightened One. He has seen the
truths of human life, and he offers the Noble Eightfold Path as a guide
to similar enlightenment and release from suffering...
For enlightenment or morality one needs teachers, not saviors. The
distinction is crucial. On the whole, religions of morality or
enlightenment are much more palatable to contemporary American taste.
They have two distinct advantages over the Biblical tradition. In the
first place they appear to be do-it-yourself spiritualities. This
conforms to an American taste for independence and self-reliance.
Self-help is what we seek in the latest nonfiction remainder list.
Although great teachers are valuable in these traditions, they are also
dispensable, and one can be self-taught. One cannot be self-saved in the
Biblical story. The second advantage of religions of enlightenment and
morality is that they can dispense of most theological machinery. If
there are Gods at all - and in Buddhism there appear to be none - then
their role is either as helpful (but dispensable) teachers or as ideals
and exemplars. The truth is in the teaching, not in the teacher-savior.
Americans like to believe they are self-made. Rugged individualistsm,
hard work, and Yankee cunning have conspired to make a raw continent an
everlasting "bread machine" of wealth and comfort. The preacher piously
advised the New England farmer on his cultivated field: "What you and
God have accomplished!" The farmer replied, "You should have seen it
when only God was working the field." If this metaphor of "self-made" is
truly a defining character, Americans will have no need for an outside
maker or an external savior."
And, we can read the following on the back cover of the book, The
Awakening of the West: The Encounter Of Buddhism and Western Culture by
Stephen Batchelor:
"The "Awakening of the West" is a beautifully written history of the
Encounter of Buddhism with the West during the past 2000 years - a
chronicle of missed opportunities, cultural arrogance, political
tragedy, and unfulfilled dreams.
Since the time of Alexander the Great, European kings and popes longed
for the power to be gained through the conquest of Asia. They sent
periodic streams of envoys and missionaries to establish contact with
the "infidels," but the European's narrow-mindedness prevented them from
learning much at all about Buddhism.
Buddhism is said to be the fastest growing religion and one of the most
influential spiritual movements in the West."
In Western countries, the influence of Buddhism in general, and of the
Dalai Lama in particular, especially since he received the Peace Nobel
Prize, no doubt made John Paul II worried. That's why he characterized
the Dalai Lama as "stirring up" interest in Buddhism outside Asia. Why
John Paul II was worried about this "stirring up" is beyond my
understanding.
The history of Buddhism shows that it is a peaceful religion, and in the
course of more than 2500 years, Buddhism has never had to rely on
swords, guns, forced conversions, and political manipulations to support
its propagation in the world. Does the Pope want to keep his followers
away from the tree of true knowledge? Is he afraid of some kind of
crusade and/or inquisition behind the present Buddhist movement? Is it a
sign of lost confidence in the Catholic teachings? If his followers are
satisfied with the Catholic teachings why do they bother to take up
Buddhism?
And, to keep his followers from being attracted to Buddhism, he
characterized Buddhism as an atheist religion. For many decades the
Catholic Church has been against the Communists, associated Communism
with Atheism, brainwashed its followers that the Communist atheists are
evils. This is a distortion of the facts. Dr. Madalyn O'Hair wrote that:
"Communism is a socio-economic political system. Atheism is a position
taken in respect to religion. The one is completely separate from the
other. One could exist without the other, and has - since Atheism has
been around for thousands of years and Communism is only about 100 years
old."
To label Buddhism as atheist, John Paul II exploited the hatred of
Communism, as taught by the Church for so many years, hoping that his
followers will hate Buddhism as they were taught to hate Communism.
That's why Nalin de Silva commented that the Pope made malicious remarks
about Buddhism. And, even before the emergence of Communism in the
world, Robert Ingersoll already asked:
"Why should a believer in God hate an atheist? Surely the atheist has
not injured God, and surely he is human, capable of joy and pain, and
entitled to all the rights of man. Would it not be far better to treat
this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us?"
John Paul II must know about the history of the Catholic Church, its
development and expansion throughout the world. Let me review briefly
the Vietnamese contact with the spread of Catholicism along with French
colonialism in Vietnam to see if there is any parallel between the
spread of Buddhism and that of Catholicism in the world.
We Vietnamese, have experienced tremendous sufferings when the European
missionaries came to our country a few hundred years ago to "save" us,
to make us know the "love" of the Christian God and believe in a Jewish
Savior. First, they slandered Buddha, calling him a "black liar", and
all other Vietnamese religions: Taoism and Confucianism (Catechism in
Eight Days by Alexandre de Rhodes), then they urged us to give up our
roots, to abandon our sacred tradition of worshipping our ancestors.
Finally, they transformed their Vietnamese followers into religious
fanatics who betrayed their country by siding with and fighting for the
French colonialists under the command of their Catholic priests, all in
the name of the Christian God of Love. This method of propagation of the
faith was beyond the understanding of the majority of the Vietnamese
population. They used to live in harmony with their three main
religions: Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism. Now they encounter an
alien religion which is at odds with everything they believe in. But
later on, when we read about the history of the Catholic Church, about
the history of the popes, about the eight Crusades, the Inquisitions,
the massacre on St. Bartholomew's Eve etc.. we began to understand the
true nature of the Catholic Church. And, as a result, it's not a
surprise to anyone that over several centuries, including nearly one
hundred years of French domination and nine years of Catholic
dictatorship under Ngo Dinh Diem, during which the Catholic bishops,
priests, European as well as indigenous peoples have tried their best to
proselytize Vietnam, and they still could not bring the Vietnamese
Catholic population to above seven percent.
Although we lost our independence for nearly one hundred years to the
French, we did learn some progressive ideas from them, especially in the
matter of religion. We still remember Leon Gambetta who had shouted a
"cry of war":
" The clericalism, that is the enemy" (Le cleùricalisme, voilaø l'ennemi);
and EÙmile Combes, a senator who openly declared in the French Senate:
"It is not that we attack the religion but the clergy, those who want to
use religion as an instrument of domination" (Ce n'est pas aø la
religion que nous attaquons, c'est aø ses ministres, qui veulent s'en
faire un instrument de domination);
and Jean Bossu who, when fighting for the democracy of the French
people, had declared:
"Anti-clericalism is the fundamental basis of the democratic spirit. For
us, the clericalism, that is the Church, that is Catholicism, which has
always been the enemy of all liberty." (L'anticleùricalisme est la base
fondamentale de l'esprit deùmocratique. Pour nous, le cleùricalisme,
c'est l'EÙglise, c'est le Catholicisme, qui a toujours eùteù
l'adversaire de toute liberteù).
The French intellectuals realized the importance of a liberal system of
education, therefore they were successful in their opposition to the
Catholic education and they could be able to pull their children out of
the arms of the Catholic priests and at the same time, unmask the
hypocrisies of the Church (Arracher l'enfant au moine, deùvoiler les
hypocrisies de l'EÙglise). That's why the French Minister of Education,
Charles Dupuy had openly declared:
"We declare it very frankly, it seems to us intolerable that under the
cover of the liberty in education, whoever could raise the children
against their country and against their time." (Nous le deùclarons treøs
franchement, il nous parait intoleùrable qu'aø la faveur de la liberteù
d'enseignement, qui que ce soit puissent eùlever des enfants contre leur
pays et contre leur temps.)
And, Victor Hugo, the great French writer of all times, stated that:
"There are only two criminals: Ceasar and Peter. Ceasar who kills, Peter
who lies. The priest is, or can be convinced and sincere. Should we
blame him? No. Should we fight against him. Yes." (Il n'y a que deux
coupables, Ceùsar et Pierre; Ceùsar qui tue, Pierre qui ment..Le preâtre
est, ou peut eâtre, concaincu et sinceøre. Doit-on le blaâmer? Non.
Doit-on le combattre? Oui.)
and also this famous remark:
"The civilization, that light, can be extinguished by two modes of
submersion; two invasions are dangerous to it,, the invasion of the
soldiers and the invasion of the priests. The one threatens our mother,
the country; the other threatens our children, the future." (La
civilisation, cette lumieøre, peut eâtre eùteinte par deux modes de
submersion; deux invasions lui sont dangereuses, l'invasion des soldats
et l'invasion des preâtres. L'une menace notre meøre, la patrie; l'autre
menace nos enfants, l'avenir.)
So, for many centuries, the European intellectuals have known the true
nature of the Roman Catholic Church, unlike the ignorant poor masses in
Third World countries who still believe in the supernatural, the
miraculous, the superstitious, and the impossible.
We also were able to learn from many other progressive minds such as
Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson, Voltaire, Robert Ingersoll, Charles
Bradlaugh, Bertrand Russell, just to name a few. All of them were
freethinkers who fought for the freedom of thought, against the myths
that enslave the mind of man. In their opinion:
"He who endeavors to control the mind by force is a tyrant, and he who
submits is a slave." (Ingersoll).
Now, I would like to make a few comments on John Paul II's remarks about
Buddha and Buddhism. I have no intention to go into the faith of the
Catholics because I conceive that religious faith is a right of man,
including blind faith and/or superstitious faith. However, it is
unethical for a spiritual leader of a religion like Catholicism, based
solely on his own faith and the truth he conceived from his tradition,
to make malicious remarks about the founder of another religious
tradition, Buddha in the case of Buddhism, and to misrepresent another
religion.
Although his representative already apologized to the Buddhist
Community, the harm was done, and this is a classic tactic "aø la
Machiavellianism" (i.e., immorality, craft and deceit are justified in
pursuing and maintaining political power).
Let me first comment on his following remark about Buddha:
"Buddha is right when he does not see the possibility of human salvation
in creation, but he is wrong when, for that reason, he denies that
creation has any value for humanity."
It is obvious that, as professor Ken Tanaka said, the pope "hasn't done
his homework". It is also obvious that, as Rev. Alan Senauke remarked,
the pope's comments were little more than "setting up straw men, then
knocking them down"
Why? Let's read the following in the Flower Ornament Scripture (The
Avatamsaka Sutra), Book Four, "The Formation of the Worlds", translated
from the Chinese by Thomas Cleary:
"Children of Buddha, if explained in brief, there are ten kinds of
causes and conditions by which all oceans of worlds have been formed,
are formed, and will be formed. What are the ten? They are because of
the Buddhas' mystical powers, because they must be so by natural law,
because of the acts of all sentient beings, because of what is realized
by all enlightened beings developing omniscience, because of the roots
of goodness accumulated by both enlightened beings and all sentient
beings, because of the power of the vows of enlightened beings purifying
lands, because enlightened beings have accomplished practical
undertakings without regressing, because of the enlightened beings'
freedom of pure resolve, because of the independent power flowing from
the roots of goodness of all enlightened ones and the moment of
enlightenment of all Buddhas, and because of the independent power of
the vows of the Universal Good. This is a summary explanation of ten
kinds of causes; if I were to explain in full, there would be as many as
there are atoms in an ocean of worlds."
So, in the Buddhist's view of the universe, the formation of the
multitude of world systems depends on many causes that encompass the law
of interdependence, the law of dependent origination of all things,
therefore there was no beginning, no first cause, no creator. Buddhism
doesn't accept the creation theory with a God creator, therefore the
question of acceptance or denial of any value of Creation to humanity is
totally irrelevant, because you cannot have any concept about something
non-existent. Furthermore, the concept of an ocean of world systems
shows clearly that the Buddhist's view of the universe is more accurate
compared to that in the Bible which, until the 17th century C.E (Common
Era), still believed in an incorrect concept of a unique world system.
In fact, Creation and God Creator are myths believed by a small fraction
of people in this pluralistic world. It's not a verified truth, much
less a universal truth. For those who believe in those myths, creation
has some value. But for those who don't believe in those myths, there
will be no value whatsoever. John Paul II believes in that myth,
therefore for him creation is valuable. But he cannot say that whoever
doesn't believe in that myth is wrong. That is a very narrow point of
view in this modern, civilized world. His statement implied that the
truth he conceives is the only truth in this world, and he tries to
impose that truth upon the rest of the world. It didn't work in the
past, even with the support of swords, guns, forced conversions. It
never will.
But, for the sake of completeness, I think it is interesting to view the
creation theory in the light of science, of simple reasoning and common
sense to see if it has any value at all to humanity. John Paul II wrote:
1. "When Christ speaks of the love that the Father has for the world, He
merely echoes the first affirmation in the Book of Genesis which
accompanies the description of creation "God saw how good it was... He
found it very good" (page 56)
2. "The world that the son of man found when He became man deserved
condemnation, because of the sin that had dominated all of history,
beginning with the Fall of our fist parents." (page 57)
3. God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone
who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life." (page
54).
That is essentially the Creation theory that leads to the doctrine of
salvation.
Now, let's see how God created the world, and what kind of love God has
for the world and how good the creation was. The Bible reads, Genesis,
Holy Bible, The New King James Version:
"1. In the beginning God created the heavens and earth. 2. The earth was
without form, and void; and darkness was on the face of the deep. And
the Spirit of God was hovering the face of the waters. 3. Then God said,
"Let there be light"; and there was light. 4. And God saw the light,
that it was good; and God divided the light from the darkness. 5. God
called the light Day, and the darkness He called Night. So the evening
and the morning were the first day."
When was "the beginning"? Buddhism conceives that the world has no
beginning, no end. And science knows nothing of a beginning. Stephen
Hawking, the foremost cosmologist of our time, reported in his book A
Brief History of Time:
"In 1981 my interest in questions about the origin and fate of the
universe was reawakened when I attended a conference on cosmology
organized by the Jesuits in the Vatican. The Catholic Church had made a
bad mistake with Galileo when it tried to lay down the law on a question
of science, declaring that the sun went around the earth. Now, centuries
later, it had decided to invite a number of experts to advise it on
cosmology. At the end of the conference the participants were granted an
audience with the pope. He told us that it was all right to study the
evolution of the universe after the big bang, but we should not inquire
into the big bang itself because that was the moment of Creation and
therefore the work of God. I was glad then he did not know the subject
of the talk I had just given at the conference - the possibility that
space-time was finite but had no boundary, which means that it had NO
BEGINNING, NO MOMENT OF CREATION."
It is clear that the above view of the origin of the universe
corresponds to that of Buddhism more than 2500 years ago. It is also
clear that the pope didn't want the scientists to inquire into the big
bang itself, fearing that their discovery would definitely refute, once
and for all, the Christian Creation theory with a God Creator. In fact,
if he accepted the big bang theory, he already denied the likelihood of
the existence of a God Creator, because big bang is nothing but the
explosion of an infinitely hot singularity of infinite mass.
According to Genesis the earth was made first and it was "without form
and void". If we can believe the Bible as the "word of God" then God
didn't even know that besides our world system there are infinite
numbers of other world systems just as described in the Buddhist Flower
Ornament Scripture (Avatamsaka Sutra).
The universe as we see it today is the revelation of modern science and
not of God, because God didn't even know that the earth was round, that
the earth revolved around the sun. That's why Giordano Bruno was toasted
at the stake, Galileo was confined in his home until he died, and it
took the Church 359 years to admit that it was wrong in the Galileo
affair.
Furthermore, it is impossible to conceive of anything without some form.
And if the earth was "without form and void" then how could it hold
water so that the "spirit of God" was hovering the face of the waters?
Moreover, who was there to listen to God then later reported in the
Bible that "Then God said..?"
Next comes the creation of light, God divided the light from the
darkness, and called the light day and the darkness, night. The sun was
not yet created, and we have here evening and morning, day and night.
Every school child knows that this is utterly impossible and absurd.
Then, how could God divide the light from the darkness? Is darkness a
part of light or just the absence of light? Those absurdities reflect
the ignorance of the primitive priests who knew nothing about cosmology,
physics etc... Are we all wrong for not seeing any value in these
absurdities.
Now, let us go a little further into the Bible. We know that God then
made Adam and Eve, and because they disobeyed God and ate the fruit from
the tree of knowledge, they were cursed, by God himself and kicked out
of the Garden of Eden. Adam and Eve then gave birth to two sons: Cain
and Abel. Now Abel kept flocks, and Cain worked the soil. In the course
of time Cain brought some of the fruits of the soil as an offering to
the Lord. But Abel brought fat portions from some of the firstborn of
his flock. The Lord looked with favor on Abel and his offering, but on
Cain and his offering he did not look with favor. So Cain was very
angry, talked his brother into going to the field and killed him...Then
Cain lay with his wife and she gave birth to Enoch etc...
The question is, why did the God of Love create such an injustice that
induced the murder of Abel by his brother Cain? And, who was Cain's
wife? At that time, there was only one woman in the world: his mother
Eve. So, Cain must have committed incest. It is quite possible, because
later on in the Bible there is the story of Lot's two daughters who got
their father drunk and slept with him and got pregnant by him.
Why would God create a world in which the beasts kill each other to feed
themselves, with all the germs, and viruses for every disease, and
especially for the human race, the first generation with disobedience
(Adam), the second generation with murderer (Cain) and incest (Cain &
Seth), and God found it good, very good. It is really beyond my
understanding as a human being to conceive of such a notion of goodness
in God. The Christian concept of goodness is a very peculiar one, maybe
what I need is some kind of superblind-faith to believe in that kind of
goodness.
It is worth noting that more than one hundred years ago, Robert
Ingersoll, the greatest American freethinker, or "infidel" if you wish,
commented on this subject as follows:
"Is there an intelligent man or woman in the world who believes in the
Garden of Eden story? If you find any man who believes it, strike his
forehead and you will hear an echo. Something is for rent. Does any
intelligent man now believe that god made man of dust, and woman of a
rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? Was
there not room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he does not
want people to eat his apples?
Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? I pity any man or
woman who, in this nineteenth century, believes in that childish fable.
Why did Adam and Eve disobey? Why, they were tempted. By whom? The
devil. Who made the devil? God. What did God make him for? Why did he
not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent? Why did he not watch the
devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve? Instead of turning them out,
why did he not keep him from getting in? Why did he not have his flood
first, and drown the devil, before he made a man and woman.
I defy any man to think of a more childish thing. This god, waiting
around Eden - knowing all the while what would happen, then does what?
Holds all of us responsible, and we were not there. Here is a
representative before the constituency had been born. Before I am bound
by a representative I want a chance to vote for or against him; and if I
had been there, and known all the circumstances, I should have voted
"No!" And yet, I am held responsible.
We are told by the Bible and by the churches that through this fall of
man - "Sin and death entered the world."
According to this, just as soon as Adam and Eve had partaken of the
forbidden fruit, god began to contrive ways by which he could destroy
the lives of his children. He invented all the diseases - all the fevers
and coughs and colds - all the pains and plagues and pestilences - all
the aches and agonies, the malaria and spores; so that when we take a
breath of air we admit into our lungs unseen assassins; and, fearing
that some might live too long, even under such circumstances, god
invented the earthquakes and volcano, the cyclone and lightning,
animalcules to infest the heart and brain, so small that no eye can
detect - no instrument reach. This was all owing to the disobedience of
Adam and Eve.
In his infinite goodness, God invented rheumatism and gout and
dyspepsia, cancers and neuralgia, and is still inventing new diseases.
Not only this, but he decreed the pangs of mothers, and that by the
gates of love and life should crouch the dragons of death and pain.
Fearing that some might, by accident, live too long, he planted
poisonous vines and herbs that look like food. He caught the serpents he
had made and gave them fangs and curious organs. ingeniously devised to
distill and deposit the deadly drop. He changed the nature of the
beasts, that they might feed on human flesh. He cursed a world, and
tainted every spring and source of joy. He poisoned every breath of air;
corrupted even light, that it might bear disease on every ray; tainted
every drop of blood in human veins; touched every nerve, that it might
bear the double fruit of pain and joy; decreed all accidents and
mistakes that maim and hurt and kill, and set the snares of life long
fried, baited with present pleasures - with a moment's joy. Then and
there he fore knew and foreordained all human tears. And yet all this is
but the prelude, the introduction, to the infinite revenge of the good
God. Increase and multiply all human grieves until the mind has reached
imagination's farthest verge, then add eternity to time, and you may
faintly tell, but never can conceive, the infinite horrors of this
doctrine called "The Fall of Man."
To understand why, in this scientific and civilized world, the Catholic
Church still teaches that horrific doctrine, let us read the following
explanation of G.W.Foote in his book Bible Romances:
"The Book of Genesis is generally thought, as Professor Huxley said, to
contain the beginning and end of sound science. The mythology of the
Jews is held to be a divine revelation of the early history of man, and
of the cosmic changes preparatory to his creation. In every Christian
country the masses of the peoples are taught in childhood that God
created the universe in six days and rested on the seventh. Yet every
student knows this is utterly false, every man of science regards it as
absurd, and the more educated clergy are beginning to explain it away.
But they must retain the Creation story in some sense or other, for two
very strong reasons. First, it stands at the very threshold of the
Bible, and if it is a mere fiction it inevitably throws discredit on all
that follows. Secondly, it is inseparably connected with the story of
the Fall. Both live or perish together. And if the Fall is to be
regarded as a myth, what becomes of Christianity? The Christian scheme
of salvation is unintelligible without the antecedent doctrine of the
Fall of Man. Without the Fall, and the ensuing curse, the Atonement is a
baseless dogma, and the Incarnation, the Crucifixion, and the
Resurrection are gigantic mistakes.
The Creation theory, as we shall attempt to show, is incoherent,
self-contradictory, and absurd. It is also discordant with the plainest
truths of Science..."
So much for the Creation theory and the doctrine of the Fall of Man. Do
we see any value in that theory of Creation? Now, we shall go into the
dogma of "First Parents". Let's assume that the story of Adam and Eve is
true, in the sense that God made Adam out of dust and Eve from one of
Adam's ribs. Does this story imply that Adam and Eve are the first
parents of the human race? Genetically speaking, during the last 6000
years, the age of our world according to some Bible (actually, the age
of the earth is about 4.5 billion years), have we ever seen a white
couple giving birth to an African child?
There are many races in the world. So, was Adam black? white? yellow? or
red? Where did the different races with different languages come from?
If God was a little bit more intelligent he would have made one set of
parents for each race in the world. From the point of view of a
Vietnamese, I cannot find any Vietnamese name in the Bible. All of them
are Jewish names. Not only that, all the events in the Bible occurred in
the Middle East. So, if Adam was in fact a first parent, he could be
only the first parent of the Jewish race, or of some race in that
region.
Why do we, Vietnamese, have to accept a Jew as our first parent knowing
that it is impossible for a Jewish couple to give birth to a Vietnamese,
or an Indian, or an African child? So, those Vietnamese who believe in
this doctrine of first parents are indeed living in illusion, because
from the above reasoning, Adam and Eve could not be the first parents of
the human race as a whole. Therefore, at least for us Vietnamese, the
myth of the "Fall of Man" is irrelevant, and we do not need any Savior
who saves us from an immaginary sin unrelated to our race. We are not
responsible for the sin, if in fact there is any, of Adam.
Interestingly enough, more than two hundred years ago, Voltaire, in his
Treatise on Metaphysics, Chapter I, "On the Different Species of Men",
after recounting many different species of men he has met, wrote:
"At Goa, I meet a type even more extraordinary than all those before; it
is a man wearing a long black cassock, who claims he was made for
instructing others. All these different men, he says, are born from the
same father, and he goes on to tell me a long story. But what this
animal says seems very unlikely to me. I inquire whether the negro man
and a negro woman with their black wool and flattened noses, ever have
white children with blond hair, aquiline noses, and blue eyes; if
beardless nations have come from bearded people; or if white men and
women have ever produced yellow people. I am told no, that negroes
transported to Germany, for example, only have negroes, unless the
Germans take it upon themselves to change the species. And it is added
that no man wìth some learning has ever asserted that unmixed species
might degenerate and that hardly anyone but Abbeù Dubos would have said
such a foolish thing in a book entitled "Reflections On Painting and
Poetry".
It seems to me then that I have fairly good grounds for believing that
in this respect men are like trees; just as firs, oaks, pear trees, and
apricot trees do not come from the same tree, white men with beards,
negroes with wool, yellow men with manes, and men without beards do not
come from the same man."
Lastly, another question comes up in my mind: Is Jesus Christ the "only
son" of God as John Paul II made a big point about it several times in
his book?
I am a little bit confused here, because reading the Bible, I find not
one, not two, but three Jesus Christs completely different from one
another.
According to Matthew 1:1-17, the genealogy of Jesus Christ is the
following, from King David down:
"David, Solomon, Rehoboam, Abijah, Asa, Jehoshaphat, Jehoram, Uzziah,
Jotham, Ahaz, Hezekiah, Manasseh, Amon, Josiah, Jeconiah, Shealtiel,
Zerubbabel, Abiud, Eliakim, Azor, Zadok, Akim, Eliud, Eleazar, Matthan,
Jacob, Joseph, Jesus." , 27 generations in total.
But, according to Luke 3:23-38 the genealogy of Jesus Christ is as
follows:
"David, Nathan, Matthata, Menna, Melea, Eliakim, Jonam, Joseph, Judah,
Simeon, Levi, Matthat, Jorim, Eliezer, Joshua, Er, Elmadam, Cosam, Addi,
Melki, Neri, Shealtiel, Zerubbabel, Rhesa, Joanan, Joda, Josech, Semein,
Matthathias, Maath, Naggai, Esli, Nahum, Amos, Matthathias, Joses,
Jannai, Melki, Leci, Matthat, Eli, Joseph, Jesus." altogether 42
generations.
And, according to another account in the Bible, Jesus Christ was also
the product of an illegal impregnation of an innocent girl named Mary by
the Holy Ghost.
So, which one of the above was the "only Son" of God? The one in
Matthew? Or the one in Luke? Or the Holy Ghost Junior? But, that is not
the issue. The issue here is, two of the above stories must be wrong,
because we cannot accept all the three at the same time unless we are
out of our mind. This leads to the question: if the Bible has something
wrong in it, and there are indeed many inaccuracies as proved by many
eminent scholars, God must be wrong because the Bible is the "Word of
God". And if God himself is fallible, what about Jesus Christ? and what
about the pope who is the vicar of Christ? And if God can write one
thing wrong, who knows? - he may have written many things wrong.
But, the above questions came from a mind capable of reasoning, and not
from a faithful believer's mind. Reason and blind faith do not mix, so
actually the mind of a freethinker and the mind of a
no-question-asked-believer are functioning at different frequencies, it
is very hard to attune them to have even some kind of resonance.
But we, Buddhists, do believe in something. We do believe in the
following teaching of our Lord Buddha (Anguttara-Nikaya Sutra):
Don't believe anything on mere hearsay.
Don't believe traditions because they happen to be old and have been
passed down through many generations.
Don't believe anything because people talk a lot about it.
Don't believe solely because the written testimony of some ancient wise
man is shown to you.
Never believe anything that begs to be taken for granted, or because
ancient precedent tempts you to regard it as true.
And don't believe anything on the mere authority of your teachers or
priests.
What you should accept as true and as the guide to your life is whatever
agrees with your own reason and your own experience after thorough
investigation, and whatever is helpful both to your own well-being and
that of other living beings.
Because of the above belief, Zen Master Thích Nhaát Haïnh wrote in his
new book, Living Buddha, Living Christ:
"People kill and are killed because they cling too tightly to their own
beliefs and ideologies. When we believe that ours is the only faith that
contains the truth, violence and suffering will surely be the result."
"...Do not think the knowledge you presently possess is changeless,
absolute truth. Avoid being narrow-minded and bound to present views.
Learn and practice non-attachment from views in order to be open to
receive other's viewpoints"
Buddhism considers ignorance, greed and hatred as three poisons which
have to be iradicated. Because of ignorance one is narrow-minded.
Because of ignorance one practices intolerance. Because of ignorance one
is arrogant. Because of ignorance one attaches to the concept of
exclusiveness. And because of ignorance one lives in illusions.
Therefore, the first step in the practice of Buddhism is "crossing the
threshold of ignorance." Aiming at "crossing the threshold of hope"
while still living in the thick darkness of ignorance is an illusion,
just like aiming at plucking a flower in a mirror, or grabbing the moon
in the bottom of a pond. Thích Nhaát Haïnh's new book, Living Buddha,
Living Christ, opposes narrow-minded, arrogance, intolerance, and
exclusiveness with open-minded, humility, tolerance, and inclusiveness
through the concept of inter-beings. So, let me conclude my analysis
with his following lesson that summarizes it all:
"John Paul II, in "Crossing the Threshold of Hope", insists that Jesus
Christ is the only Son of God: "Christ is absolutely original,
absolutely unique. If He were only a wise man like Socrates, if He were
a "Prophet" like Mohammed, if He were "enlightened" like Buddha, without
any doubt, He would not be what He is. He is the one mediator between
God and humanity."
This statement does not seem to reflect the deep mystery of the oneness
of the Trinity. It also does not reflect the fact that Christ is also
the Son of Man. All Christians, while praying to God, address Him as
Father. Of course, Christ is unique. But who is not unique? Socrates,
Mohammed, the Buddha, you, and I are all unique. The idea behind the
statement, however, is the notion that Christianity provides the only
way of salvation and all other religious traditions are of no use. This
attitude excludes dialogue and fosters religious intolerance and
discrimination. IT DOES NOT HELP."
Traàn Chung Ngoïc, Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin - Madison
**********************************************************************************
SELECTED READINGS
Aarons, Mark & Loftus, John, "Unholy Trinity: How The Vatican's Nazi
Networks Betrayed Western Intelligence to the Soviets", St. Martin's
Press, New York, 1991
Aterin, Karl Otmar Von, "The Papacy and the Modern World", Weidenfeld &
Nicolson, London, 1970
Baldwin, Louis, "The Pope and the Mavericks", Prometheus Books, New
York, 1988
Batchelor, Stephen, "The Awakening of the West: The Encounter of
Buddhism and Western Culture", Parallax Press, Berkeley, CA., 1994
Beeson, Trevor & Pearce, Jenny, "A Vision of Hope: The Churches and
Change in Latin America", Fortress Press, Philadelphia, 1984
Nino Lo Bello, "The Vatican Empire", Triden Press, New York, 1968.
Berry, Jason, "Lead Us Not To Temptation: Catholic Priests and the
Sexual Abuse of Children", Doubleday, New York, 1992
Blanshard, Paul, "American Freedom and Catholic Power", Beacon Press,
Boston, 1950
Berryman, Phillip, "Liberation Theology", Pantheon Books, New York, 1987
Boff, Leonardo, "Church: Charism & Power", Crossroad, New York, 1986
Burkett, Elinor & Bruni, Frank, "A Gospel of Shame: Children, Sexual
Abuse, and the Catholic Church", Viking, New York, 1993
Bussmann, Clauss, "Who Do You Say? Jesus Christ in Latin American
Theology", Orbis Book, New York, 1985
Cleary, Thomas, "The Flower Ornament Scripture (The Avatamsaka Sutra)",
Shambala, Boston, 1985
Cox, Harvey, "The Silencing of Leonardo Boff: The Vatican and the Future
of World Christianity", Meyer-Stone Books, Oak-Park, IL., 1988; "Many
Mansions: A Christian's Encounter With Other Faiths", Collins, London,
1988
Croucher, Paul, "Buddhism in Australia, 1848-1988", New South Vales
University Press, AU., 1989
Edwards, Paul, "Voltaire: Selections", A Scribner/Macmillan Book, New
York, 1989
Ferm, Deane William, "Third World Liberation Theologies", Orbis Book,
New York, 1987
Foote, G.W., "Bible Romances", The Pioneer Press, London, 1922
Guillemin, Henri, "Malheureuse EÙglise", EÙditions Du Seuil, Paris, 1992
Hammer, Richard, "The Vatican Connection", Chanter Books, New York, 1983
Thích Nhaát Haïnh, "The Miracle of Mindfulness", Beacon Press, Boston,
1987; "Living Buddha, Living Christ", Riverhead Books, New York, 1995
Hanson, Eric O., "The Catholic Church in World Politics", Princeton
University Press, New Jersey, 1987
Harris, Michael, "Unholy Orders, Tragedy at Mount Cashel", Penguin Books
Ltd., Middlesex, England, 1990
Hofmann, Paul, "O Vatican! A Slightly Wicked View of the Holy See",
Congdon & Weed, Inc., New York, 1984.
Humphreys, Christmas, "Zen Comes West", Allen & Unwin, London, 1960
Lernoux, Penny, "Cry of the People", Penguin Books, New York, 1991;
"People of God", Penguin Books, New York, 1989
Lewis, Joseph, "Ingersoll: The Magnificent", AA Press, Texas, 1983
Manhattan, Avro, "The Vatican's Holocaust", Ozark Books, Springfield,
MO., 1986; "The Vatican Billions", Paravision Books, London, 1972;
"Catholic Imperialism and World Freedom", Watts & Co., London, 1952;
"Vietnam: Why Did We Go?", Chick Publications, CA., 1984
Martin, Malachi, "The Keys to this Blood", A Touchtone Book, New York,
1990; "Rich Church, Poor Church", G.P. Putnam's Sons, New Yok, 1984
McCabe, Joseph, "The Vatican's Last Crime: How The Black International
Joined the World-Plot Against Freedom, Liberalism, and Democracy",
Haldeman-Julius Co., Kansas, 1941; "Rome Puts the Blight on Culture: The
Roman Church the Poorest in Cutlure and Richest in Crime",
Haldeman-Julius Publications, Kansas 1942; "The Church: The Enemy of the
Workers. Rome is the Natural Ally of All Exploiters", Haldeman-Julius
Publications, Kansas 1942; "The Truth About The Catholic Church",
Haldeman-Julius Publications, Kansas, 1926; "The Totalitarian Church of
Rome: Its Fuehrer, Its Gauleiter, Its Gestapo, and Its Money-Box",
Haldeman-Julius Publications, Kansas, 1942
McLoughlin, Emmet, "Crime and Immorality in the Catholic Church", Lyle
Stuart, Inc., New York, 1962; "Letters to an Ex-Priest", Lyle Stuart,
Inc., New York, 1965
Nichols, Peter, "The Politics of the Vatican", Frederick A. Praeger,
Publishers, New York, 1968
Obianyido, Anene, "Christ or Devil? The Corrupt Face of Christianity in
Africa", Delto Publications Limited, 1988
O'Brien, George Dennis, "God and the New Haven Railway, and why Neither
One is Doing Very Well", Beacon Press, Boston, 1986
Pigott, Adrian, "Freedom's Foe - The Vatican", The Pioneer Press, 1965
Rajneesh, B.S., "Priests & Politicians: The Mafia of the Soul", The
Rebel Publishing House, Cologne, Germany, 1987
Rausch, David A., "A Legacy of Hatred: Why Christians Must Not Forget
the Holocaust", Moody Press, Chicago, 1984
Rice, David, "Shattered Vows, Priests Who Leave", William Morrow & Co.,
Inc., New York, 1990
Peter de Rosa, "Vicars of Christ: The Dark Side of the Papacy", Crown
Publishers, New York, 1988
Russer, Maximilian F., "Authority in the Roman Catholic Church", Vantage
Press, New York, 1991
Sangharakshita