Monday, 25 September 2017

How to deal with a filial correction

This is part of our self-help guide, "How to be a good Pope", and it deals with your approach to Correction.

About a year ago you received some "dubia" from senior cardinals, asking you to explain Catholic teaching, with particular reference to your apostolic exhortation "The Joy of Sin". As is traditional when Popes are asked to give leadership to their flock, you ignored the dubia entirely, and left it to your poodles - Spider, Bean, Ivory, and a bunch of ludicrously over-promoted cardinals - to gnaw the ankles of anyone who mentioned them.

Pope with hammer and sickle

Time for some firm government at the Vatican!

Now things are getting more serious, as 62 devout Catholics trouble-makers have written a long letter accusing you of spreading heresy on 7 counts. Your first reaction is one of relief - phew, they left out the other 35 charges - but it is all rather embarrassing.

The dubia issue was settled easily enough, and after a year a couple of the cardinals died mysteriously. Fortunately, you have an alibi. However, getting rid of 62 priests and scholars may not be so easy. Take them on a bus trip over a cliff? Invite them to a party with poisoned cakes? Mmm, we'll have to think about this.

Cardinal murders

Not guilty!

Only one thing to do: issue a new Motu proprio, AD HOMINEM. This entitles people - if they are mates of the Pope - to hurl insults as they wish. The alternative is for us to argue that the letter is in error when it accuses you of being a naughty pope, but you haven't actually got any arguments, have you?

Right, let's attack Dr Joseph Shaw first. He's a Latin Mass junkie, and so is obviously sneering at you because you can't decline "unus-una-unum" (and many of your most notorious Jesuit friends can't decline "sex"). You discard him.

Pope John XXII

Our hero, Pope John XXII. From the days when popes were real popes.

Then there's Deacon Donnelly, a.k.a. Protect the Faith (which turns out to be incompatible with protecting the Pope). He was stamped on a few years ago by Bishop Campbell, and asked to stop blogging and go for a completely voluntary period of rest and reflection, or else. He seems to have escaped his chains. You discard him.

Oh, and Fr John Hunwicke. I'll bet he wrote all the clever bits of the letter. We can't understand the Aramaic jokes on his blog, anyway. You discard him.

To be honest, you haven't read the letter, and you don't intend to read it. And now that you've blocked the Correctio Filialis website from being accessed in the Vatican (thanks for the idea to our dear friend Kim Jong-un!) nobody else will read it either!

Kim Jong-un

"I have received this letter signed by 62 scholars. We know where you live..."

O.K. team, you know what to do. Spider, deploy the sockpuppets. Bean, keep banging on about how you are more intellectual than the gang of 62. Ivory, play a floating role of tweeting odd comments and writing absurd articles for Crux. Get your mates at the Tablet and Fishwrap to help. Summon the cardinals from their LGBT meetings and get them to attack!

But you, Francis, must under no circumstances answer the letter, or even read it.

8 comments:

  1. 'Poisoned cakes', Eccles? Don't forget the cannolis, Godfather.

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  2. Deacon Nick Donnelly should of changed his aka from "Protect the Pope" to Protect Catholics from the Pope.

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  3. Thank you for giving us a good laugh especially at times when we need it, dear Eccles. You know, there would be no one more proud of Pope Francis than me if he had the humility he's always telling us to have and responded to the letter and the dubia and said, "you know what maybe you're right and thank you for helping me a showing me where I'm going wrong" because I honestly believe first the dubia now this filial correction come from a place of love for both the Church and the Holy Father. I want to love my Pope but sometimes he makes it so hard when he keeps insulting and giving ammunition to anti-catholics to hurl at the rest of us. It's very hard. Thanks again for the good laugh Eccles because I certainly needed it and thanks for helping me keep the faith. Pray for the Pope, there's still time for him.

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  4. I bet Fr Hunwicke did write the clever parts!

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  5. There are a some possibilities to explain this situation.

    1. Pope Francis wanted to obfuscate Catholic doctrine by presenting a statement riddled with anomalies and confusion.(Unlikely)

    2. Pope Francis did not realise that A L was confusing ( Likely)

    3.Pope Francis is not intellectually inclined ...nicest way I can put it. (Yes)

    4. Pope Francis' advisors and speech writers are not acquainted with Catholic doctrine and honest lucid expression (Likely)

    4. Because of his age and intellectual challenges Pope Francis is being manipulated by anti Catholic forces in powerful positions.(Likely)

    5.The Cardinals who voted for Pope Francis either pulled his name out of a hat or had questionable motives.(Likely}

    Like any leadership position there should be certain requirements that are necessary to fulfil the position satisfactorily.Pope Francis may be kind and compassionate , be unostentatious, hang out at the local barber shop,ditch the lttle red slippers but he should be humble and sensible enough to take advice from experts when it comes to matter of doctrine philosophy and theology...like Pope Benedict or similar.It seems t Thems me thoughts.

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  6. Pope Francis is doing with the Correctio as he did with the Dubia - ignoring it. Not reaponding in any way. Effectively acting as if it didn't exist. I do hope there is some form of Plan C.....

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