So 450 (saved) Catholic priests have written
a letter to the Catholic Herald, saying, in effect, that they are OK with
Christian teaching and don't want to change it.
However, there are reports that some senior churchmen
have been applying pressure against signing the letter; moreover, the
notoriously publicity-shy
Cardinal Nichols has rebuked them for communicating with the press, issuing them with
a supply of bushels, under which they are instructed to hide their lights.
A quick calculation using my fingers and toes suggests that, if invited, three bishops would definitely
have signed the letter, or at most five. The rest... oh dear.
As a now-forgotten journalist called Damian Thompson once put it, "The Magic Circle".
This is what a saved bishop looks like (Philip Egan).
It is time for a scientific analysis of our bishops, to decide whether they are saved or not. From Easter I shall keep
an informal record of mentions of bishops (or at least the ones I notice) to see whether their actions are those of
a saved or unsaved person. So Mgr Egan scored very well this week with his comments on abortion (against), same-sex
marriage (against) and family life (for). He probably gets bonus points for
upsetting
Conor Burns MP.
Of course, some bishops are hardly ever in the news. For example, we have never had occasion to mention
Bishop Drainey of Middlesbrough on this blog. Indeed, I suspect that unless you live in the Diocese of
Middlesbrough you may not have heard of him
(and possibly not even then).
Terence Drainey. Nice chasuble, but saved status unknown.
How about an unsaved bishop? Well, to take a hypothetical example, suppose that a bishop
stopped one of his deacons from writing a totally orthodox Catholic blog, and gave a
misleading account of the whole affair? Would he not be in a state of sin (and unsaved)
until he repented and that deacon's
gagging was ended? No matter how many worthy deeds he did in the mean time?
Ugh.
Let's have another saved bishop.
Another saved bishop (Mark Davies).
So how can a bishop score points? Positive things are easy, but unfortunately rather
rare: defend Catholic teaching, especially when it is attacked by MPs who really belong in
the Goon Show; ban the Tablet; refuse to allow Timothy Radcliffe or Tina Beattie to
speak on church property in your diocese; stick up for people who want traditional
forms of worship; set up a fifty-mile-radius exclusion zone in which Paul Inwood's music is banned; you know, do all the things they
taught you to do at bishop-school.
Negative things? Prevaricate about Catholic teaching; bully your clergy if they show signs of
orthodoxy; encourage the Tablet; join in dodgy
ecumenical services with Muslims and Hindus; invite dissident speakers; cosy up to ACTA...
well of course none of the bishops would ever do such a thing.
Eccles (L) watches a very senior bishop to see whether he is saved.
Naturally, other countries have unsaved bishops too. There are distressing
accounts of Bishop Bootkoski of New Jersey giving the bootkoski to Patricia Jannuzzi, a teacher in
a Catholic school who
defended traditional marriage. Well done, bishop: Cardinal Dolan, the Grandmaster of the
St Patrick's Day Gay Pride Parade, would be proud of you.
"Show her the door, 44!" Bootcatholic calls out the Bingo numbers.