In a speech delivered this week in Leicester’s Anglican Cathedral,
the prelate stated, “In the name of tolerance it seems to me tolerance is being
abolished.”
Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor retired three years ago as head of the
Archdiocese of Westminster. The speech was delivered to a group of Catholic
thinkers in England.
The cardinal had strong words regarding the effect that
secularists have had in the U.K.. "Our danger in Britain today is that
so-called Western reason claims that it alone has recognized what is right and thus
claims a totality that is inimical to freedom," he said.
"No one is forced to be a Christian. But no one should be
forced to live according to the new secular religion as if it alone were
definitive and obligatory for all humankind."
"The propaganda of secularism and its high priests want us to
believe that religion is dangerous for our health. It suits them to have no
opposition to their vision of a brave new world, the world which they see as
somehow governed only by people like themselves.”
The cardinal cited the controversy over same-sex “marriage,”
stating that the issue was not about prejudice against homosexuals, but about
democracy and the nature of marriage itself. “On what grounds does a minority
have the right to change the meaning of a fundamental institution for the
majority?” he said.
He also protested the treatment of Christians in the workplace,
citing a recent case in March where two women were penalized at work for
refusing to not wear crucifixes. The British government asserted in that
particular case that since wearing a cross is not a requirement of the faith,
employers have a right to ban wearing a cross in the workplace.
The cardinal further objected to the treatment of the elderly and
the most vulnerable in society, saying that a loss of “reverence” for humanity
causes them to be viewed as a problem, and not a gift. “An aging population
certainly presents its challenges – not least to our prejudices – but it is
also an extraordinary gift,” he continued. “When society only sees age as an
expensive inconvenience, a threat to resources and lifestyles, it no longer
sees a person but a problem. This permits a slow erosion of dignity; subtly and
silently the process of dehumanzation has begun.”
No comments:
Post a Comment