O’Brien in Baltimore: A dark day for the US Church

A Dark Day for the Church in the United States

by Robert Waldrop, Oscar Romero Catholic Worker House

Comes now the news that the Archbishop for Military Services, the Most Reverend Edwin O’Brien, has been appointed as the new Archbishop of Baltimore.

Is this a message from Rome to the Catholic peace movement: “Go to hell”?

O’Brien has been an key supporter of the unjust war on the people of Iraq from the beginning. He criticized Bishop Botean for his courageous statement that participation in the war on the people of Iraq was the moral equivalent of willing participation in an abortion.

As the Archbishop for Military Services, O’Brien preached a gospel of moral laxism and relativism, claiming that we should “trust” our leaders instead of judging the war by the criteria of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He gave tacit ecclesiastical permission for Catholic members of the armed forces to participate in a manifestly unjust war. To this day, he continues to call for a “responsible transition” and thus turns his back on the suffering people of Iraq, condemning them to more death, more suffering, more murder.

In his Memorial Day message this year (2007), Archbishop O’Brien says that “at no time has the Holy See or the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops cast doubt on the motives of our national leadership in the Executive or Congressional branches.” This is undoubtedly true, but should we trust the opinions of our bishops on issues of such consequence, given the extent that they themselves have embraced the culture of death? Ask the victims of the clergy sexual abuse crisis about the “judgement” of the U.S. Catholic bishops. Plenty of other people have rightfully questioned the motives of President Bush and the members of Congress who voted for this unjust war. But those pro-life opinions don’t count to the Archbishop of Baltimore.

In any event, hundreds of thousands of people are dead. Their blood is upon Archbishop O’Brien and upon all the other bishops who preached a false gospel of moral laxism and relativism and thus gave tacit permission to wage this unjust war. We should remember that unjust war is always and in every circumstance an objective evil.

The Catholic members of the Armed Forces of the United States of America, who are brave and generous in offering their lives in service to their country, deserved better than to be sold down the river with honeyed words of religious deceit from their own archbishop.

Now he has been seated upon the cathedra of the “mother church” of this country.

What a dark and dismal day this is for the Church in the United States.

“The road to hell is paved with the bones of priests and lined with the skulls of bishops.” St. John Chrysostom, 4th Century AD

“Meanwhile I saw wicked men approach and enter; and as they left the sacred place, they were praised in the city for what they had done. This also is vanity. Because the sentence against evildoers is not promptly executed, therefore the hearts of men are filled with the desire to commit evil – because the sinner does evil a hundred times and survives. Though indeed I know that it shall be well with those who fear God, for their reverence toward him; and that it shall not be well with the wicked man, and he shall not prolong his shadowy days, for his lack of reverence toward God. This is a vanity which occurs on earth: there are just men treated as though they had done evil and wicked men treated as though they had done justly. This, too, I say is vanity.” Ecclesiastes 8:10-14.

Robert Waldrop

Oscar Romero Catholic Worker House in Oklahoma City

www.justpeace.org/onpilgrimage.htm

In search of the perfect pumpkin pie. . .

Since today is a FEAST day, I thought it would be appropriate to share a recipe for pie here at Pie and Coffee. For some time I have been searching for the perfect pumpkin pie. I may have found it today. I have experimented with a lot of different pumpkin pie recipes but this one is the best to date.

This pie was made from basic ingredients, I started with a whole pumpkin and went from there. To make the mashed pumpkin — a couple of weeks ago I sliced a pumpkin into chunks and baked it at 350 degrees until they were soft, and then put them in the freezer. Yesterday I took some of it out of the freezer and let it thaw, and then mashed the pulp this morning with an electric mixer. I did not use a pie pumpkin, just an ordinary “jack-o-lantern” pumpkin that I got from a local farmer through the Oklahoma Food Coop.

The RECIPE (with notes about which farms I got the various ingredients from):

3 cups mashed pumpkin (from McLemore Farms in Colony)
1 cup honey (Honey Hill Farm north of Edmond)
3 eggs (from Lehman’s Eggs in Newcastle)
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
16 ounces cream (Wagon Creek Creamery in Helena)

Combine all ingredients and mix well. Pour into two unbaked pie crusts. Bake at 425 degrees for 15 minutes, then at 350 degrees for 45 minutes, until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean.

To make the pie crust, I use “Dorothy’s Never Fail Pie Crust” recipe:

3 cups flour (Shawnee Mills, Shawnee)
1-1/4 cup butter (Wagon Creek, Helena)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 egg (Charles Horn, Cordell)
5 tablespoons water

I don’t know who “Dorothy” was — it presumably isn’t Dorothy Day — but her pie crust recipe works nicely. Mix the flour and salt, then add the butter and work the flour into the butter very thoroughly. Mix the vinegar and water, add the egg (slightly beaten), add to flour and mix thoroughly. Roll out between two pieces of wax paper.

As an experiment, I baked these pies covered with foil — this was suggested by Jo Logan, the bee keeper I got the honey from, since honey-sweetened baked goods tend to brown faster. The pies cooked just fine, but they did take an extra 15 minutes, so if you bake them covered, add 15 minutes to the 350 degree baking time. The crust came out lightly browned and not burnt.

OKC Catholic Worker statement on proposed immigration laws

Ed. note: Spanish version follows English version.

On the 26th anniversary of the Martyrdom of Romero, March 24, 2006

The Oscar Romero Catholic Worker Community Opposes the Wicked Immigration Laws!

In recent months, laws have been introduced into the United States Congress and the Oklahoma Legislature that would treat immigrants and refugees with great harshness and cruelty. These laws would make it a crime to offer help to the poor if they are not legal residents.

The Oscar Romero Catholic Worker community condemns these laws. We call upon all people of goodwill to stand together in solidarity against these wicked and evil laws that are based in racism and hatred of other cultures. We encourage everybody to contact their representatives in Congress and the Oklahoma Legislature to show their opposition.

We welcome the migrant and the refugee to our city and state. Our city and state will be better places to live if we offer hope and hospitality to immigrants.

If these laws are passed by Congress and the Legislature, we will meet this culture of death evil with civil disobedience. We will continue to offer hospitality and help to immigrants, even if this becomes a crime. There is no moral obligation to obey an evil and wicked law. There is nothing in the Bible that commands us to obey the government when the government does evil. We will not damn our souls to hell to satisfy corrupt politicians. We will continue to feed the hungry at every opportunity we find. We will never ask anyone to prove that they are a legal resident before offering them help and hope.
Continue reading “OKC Catholic Worker statement on proposed immigration laws”

If elected, I’ll ask for a recount.

The NPR affiliate in Norman, Oklahoma — KGOU — aired a great story about my campaign for Mayor of Oklahoma City today. The reporter, Scott Gurian, used to hang out with folks at the NYC Catholic Worker, so he understood how to interview and report on a Catholic Worker running for a political office. I put an mp3 of the story at my website, http://www.bobwaldrop.net/waldropkgou.mp3