Readers Write
Recent letters on Sunday Christmas services, Anne Rice, the Oregon suicide case, evangelical theologies, and gender roles.
| posted 12/12/2005 12:00AM
Christmas Break
I dare say [many Christians] don't have a problem missing a Sunday service when it is convenient for them, but God forbid that ministry leaders get a breakand on Christmas, no less! ["Megachurches Cancel Christmas," posted December 5]
Serving in my local church every weekend on top of working a full-time job, I welcomed the news that we would not be having a Sunday service. If anyone feels slighted by not having a church service on Christmas Sunday, [they can] go someplace where they will. And if they really want to be religious, why not spend the day at their local mission or soup kitchenI am sure they could use the help.
Alvin Bass
Wilson, North Carolina
Sacraments for Homosexuals
Unfortunately, Anne Rice's statement about "Christian gays and their right to worship and receive the sacraments" ["Interview with a Penitent," posted Dec. 1] is misleading, implying that gays are somehow hindered from worshiping as Catholics. In fact, no one is ever barred from attending Catholic mass. Anne Rice's gay son certainly has the right to receive the sacrament of penance (confession) and is encouraged to do so.
However, other sacraments, most notable Communion, are not to be received in the state of mortal sin. Practicing homosexuals are committing a grave sin if they are aware of the church's teaching about the gay lifestyle and consent to the sin anyway. [To deny them Communion] is in no way a lack of love. Instead, it is an act of loving kindness for the Catholic church to deny those who are openly committing grave sins, as it attempts to awaken the faithful to their unhappy condition, bring them back into the state of grace through sacramental confession, and keep them from committing the additional mortal sin of receiving the body and blood unworthily.
I am afraid Anne Rice does not understand the beauty and love in this teaching.
Kathie Marshall
Howell, Michigan
Hard Cases, Bad Law
In the December 2005 editorial, "It's Okay to Be Against Suicide" [posted Nov. 30],Christianity Today's editors conclude that we should encourage the Supreme Court to strike down Oregon's assisted-suicide law while, at the same time, encouraging the Court to de-federalize others issues of concern to us, notably abortion. Like many American evangelicals, the CT editors want the law to reflect their moral values without regard to any overarching political theory. That's mere pragmatism, which is unprincipled and ultimately immoral.
Early on in law school, I learned that "hard cases make bad law." You can always find a case that, taken alone, seems like a bad result. I'd agree with the CT editors that the Oregon law is a bad and immoral one. But if you make policy based on that individual hard case, you sacrifice the balance and fairness that the system as a whole seeks to achieve. The principled way to change the Oregon law is through grassroots organizing in Oregon, not through federal judicial intervention. Serious efforts at systemic change must stem from a political and jurisprudential theory, not merely from a pragmatic response to a few hard cases.
David W. Opderbeck
Assistant Professor of Business Law
Baruch College, City University of New York
Poverty in Theology
After attending the Christian Community Development convention in Indianapolis, I read Ben Witherington III's article, "The Problem with Evangelical Theologies" [posted Nov. 9]. It occurred to me that none of the theologies discussed had made justice for the poor and oppressed central. Possibly the Reformed, Wesleyan, and Pentecostal theologies would benefit from inserting four key concepts from Luke 4:1819 into the heart of their thought. These concepts are: the Spirit, the poor, the oppressed, and Jubilee justice (the year of the Lord's favor). As Graham Cray put it: "The agenda of the kingdom of God is justice; the dynamic of the kingdom is the Holy Spirit."
December (Web-only) 2005, Vol. 49