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All Along the Watchtower

~ A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you … John 13:34

All Along the Watchtower

Tag Archives: BBC

Judas got a bad rap!

21 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by Geoffrey RS Sales in Bible, Easter, Faith, Satire

≈ 40 Comments

Tags

BBC, Christianity, controversy, fiction, Judas, sin, Usual rubbish from the C of E

_wsb_258x174_judas+hung

You can tell we’re coming up the Easter in the UK – it is time for the media to take its usual interest in Christianity by finding some unorthodoxy it can promote – this year, with the full participation of the Church of England, we get the old chestnut that Judas got a bad rap. The good old BBC has shrewdly spotted that a lady vicar best known for dancing at a wedding and for appearing on a reality TV show, has exactly the credentials needed for the sort of programme they want to do on Judas. She’s not, she says, saying Judas was OK, but he was maligned:

“I don’t think any of the other disciples were whiter than white – we just probably didn’t hear about it because they were all human and we are all a bit messed up.”

I don’t know which, if any Bible, she reads, but I’d recommend she try mine, which is full of stories of the Apostles messing things up – that Peter fella doesn’t come out of the story of the crucifixion very well. We ‘don’t hear about it’ – she should get one of those Bibles on tape – I heard it there.

The current Bishop of Leeds, who never saw an unorthodox thought he didn’t like, brings up the antique notion that Judas was a revolutionary and right to be disappointed in Jesus – guess he’s too young to have heard of ‘Jesus Christ, Superstar’ then?

It is left to the dancing Rev to make the daftest comment of all:

“Jesus forgave people as they were putting the nails in to his hands and there is no reason why he would not have forgiven Judas but he just didn’t hear that.”

Not sure whom she thinks did not hear what, but perhaps she’s still doing that Anglican free-wheeling riffs off Christianity without the Bible, because Jesus seems pretty clear about his fate:

The Son of man goeth as it is written of him: but woe unto that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed! it had been good for that man if he had not been born.

Not being a highly trained liturgical dancer, or a Bishop in the C of E, I’m old-fashioned enough to think these words of Jesus don’t sound good for old Judas.

Yes, Judas has a key role in the story of our Salvation. By betraying the Son of Man, he precipitates the Crucifixion – and thus the Resurrection.Some have seen in this an excuse for Judas; he was foreordained to do as he did. But St John makes it clear he had a choice – but like so many of us, he yielded to the temptations of the Devil.

Judas made a choice. Satan tempted Judas with something which appealed to his pride and ego. Whether he meant to betray Jesus to death, or simply stir up a revolution, he acted as though he knew better than Jesus. He betrayed his friend and Master for his ego. This may be the sort of thing which makes him an object of sympathy for TV clerics from the C of E, but I’ll stay with Jesus’ opinion. I wonder if the dancing vicar had one of those Gideon’s Bibles in her hotel room whilst on location? If so, shame she didn’t consult it.

If you want something sensible on the whole thing, the estimable Caroline Farrow has something good here – but then she’s an orthodox Catholic, and no doubt getting stick from the Tabletista. So, if you’re on Twitter, get in there and support the lass – she does a good job.

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St John Paul, the BBC and an agenda

18 Thursday Feb 2016

Posted by John Charmley in Faith, Pope

≈ 111 Comments

Tags

BBC, Catholic Church, Catholicism, Christianity, John Paul II

pope-john-paul-2

Yesterday I offered some comments on the shoddy journalism provided for us by the BBC on Monday night with its ‘Panorama’ programme, today I want to offer some comments as to the purpose behind it. Those involved are all well-educated, highly intelligent men, and the agenda they were pushing clearly, at least in their own minds, justified what they were doing.

If you start from the premiss that clerical celibacy is somehow ‘wrong’, then intellectually, it is easy to take the short-cut to seeing what someone without such a bias could not see – why the fact that St Pope John Paul II had a long epistolary relationship with a distinguished woman philosopher should be an argument against it. Whether or not the philosopher concerned might have fallen in love with the Pope, it is clear that the relationship between them remained within proper boundaries, and if John Cornwell or Ed Stourton has discovered a way of stopping women falling in love with handsome, charismatic men, they should tell the world about it. There is only one reason it could be considered an argument against clerical celibacy – fidelity to the vow would stop the priest abusing his position. Is that really what they want? If so, why not be honest about it, why the guff about ‘loneliness’? Do they really think that relationships between men and women have to have a sexual element? Perhaps single-sex boarding schools for boys are a bad idea? As the continuous emphasis on the fact that she was ‘beautiful’ shows, there is an element of schoolboy smuttiness in their reaction which shames only themselves – the old ‘Carry on matron’ spirit will not die whilst such men live.

Clerical celibacy is indeed ‘just’ a discipline in the Latin Church, and it could, indeed, be set aside. The Church has not seen fit so to do. It is legitimate to argue the case against it, but to base it when Stourton is basing it is not an argument, it is an excuse to scratch an itch which actually discredits those using it.

There is, of course, a wider agenda here. The authoritarians on the liberal wing of the Church, who have suddenly in Pope Francis, discovered the joys of obedience, spent the best part of three decades alternately sulking and whining about the authoritarianism of John Paul II and Benedict XVI – and when I say whining, just remember that the Tablet’s Rome correspondent actually cried when Joseph Ratzinger became Pope. They objected to the successor of Peter daring to disagree with their desire to turn the Catholic Church into the American Episcopal Church – and they continue to be frustrated that their ‘Spirit of Vatican II’ Pope is not moving fast enough in the desired direction  – old men in a hurry all of them.

No doubt, in their own minds, if by a drip drip of innuendo they could leave the impression that that great hero of Orthodox Catholicism (odd how they always forget Assisi) John Paul II had feet of clay, it would help their cause. I suspect that all it really helps, is their own biliousness with the great Pope – their reactions to him are reminiscent of that of the British Left to Mrs Thatcher. Unable to win the debate during the life time of the two great figures, the frustrated old men need to express a lifetime’s bitterness before they pass on to their reward. Quite why the BBC might pander to such men does not need a public enquiry, but it does raise further questions about why those who own a TV should be required to support it through the licence fee. Those with a taste for that sort of thing have the Tablet and the Guardian to relieve their loneliness.

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The BBC and St John Paul II: a comment

17 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by John Charmley in Faith, Pope

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

BBC, Catholic Church, Catholicism, Christianity, controversy, Shoddy journalism, St Pope John Paul II

Blessed John Paul II

For many of us in this country, the BBC’s Panorama programme has been a beacon of why it is worth paying a licence tax to support a public broadcasting organisation; it, and Radios 3 and 4 have long been, for some of us, the only real justifications: after Monday night only the radio remains. On Monday night the programme descended into a gutter of slime, innuendo and suggestio falsi in connection with St Pope John Paul II. To what ought to be his eternal shame, a formerly well-respected, Catholic educated journalist, Ed Stourton, put together a programme of such poor quality that I shall be using it with my graduate students to show them how one should not use evidence.

One imagines there must have been some excitement when the BBC programme makers heard that Ed had access to ‘intimate’ (their words) letters written by Pope John Paul II to a woman. There was, of course, ‘no suggestion’ he had ‘broken his vow of celibacy’, but, and here comes the innuendo which inevitably follows such a disclaimer – they were ‘intense’, and the two went on ‘camping trips’ and she was an ‘attractive woman’, and it was ‘an intense relationship’, and she ‘seems to have had intense feelings’ and he ‘struggled to make sense of their relationship in Christian terms’. Setting aside the cheap sexism (if she had been ‘unattractive’ would that somehow have made a difference?) and the guessing (from what was revealed, it seems St John Paul had no difficulty at all), we get the steady drip, drip of innuendo – an impression of much smoke, encouraging the belief that there must be some fire somewhere. A decent historian, faced with the clear fact that the letters are not in the slightest bit salacious and contain not a whiff of scandal, might have pointed to the fact they are not the only letters the Pope wrote to close women friends, and written a proper documentary around the intellectual companionship and support such correspondence provided – but where are the viewing figures in that? Of course, the BBC, as a public broadcaster, uses that fact to claim it does not need to chase the ratings, but give it a chance to, and it dives to the bottom of the gutter like a rat down a drain.

The programme managed an impressive line-up of liberal ‘Catholics’, some, like the former seminarian, John Cornwell, already well-versed in making money from misrepresenting the history of the Church (he is the author of a bad book on Pius XII and the holocaust). There was a former Polish Jesuit who might, to be fair, as well have still been a Jesuit, as he managed to say all sorts of critical stuff about John Paul – not that he actually knew anything, but he was Polish. It was a particular sadness to see an historian I much respect, Eamon Duffy, with this sad crew of the discontented. I did not know whether to laugh of cry when he said that had the existence of the letters have been known, it might have had an effect on the canonisation process – before going on to say that it might only have slowed it down a bit, which might be no bad things given the haste; not, of course, a word about St John XXIII.

What do we know know that we did not know? Not much. It has been clear for sometime that the BBC is bent on squandering whatever might be left of its reputation as a leading broadcaster, so we should not be surprised at this piece of slime. It has also long been clear that the BBC is religiously illiterate enough to suppose that Ed Stourton and his liberal chums speak for the Catholic Church. We should, I suspect, be surprised that the ‘Today programme’ on Radio 4 gave the excellent Fr Alex Lucie-Smith and Caroline Farrow all of five minutes to comment on what nonsense the programme had been – but then 8.55 on radio and peak time TV for half an hour hardly constitutes balance.

Oh yes, and we learnt something else we already knew. St John Paul II was one of the most remarkable figures of the late twentieth century and a man whose moral stature the BBC is signally unfit to judge.

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