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October 24, 2006

Lott on Curran

Jeremy Lott reviews Fr. Charles Curran's autobiography:

Read it - (the review, that is). Good stuff, and one pities Lott for having to take on the book. What's interesting is Curran admitting that he and his supporters worked very hard to keep procedural, rather than substantive issues at the fore in regard to his position at Catholic University and as a Catholic theologian:

After the CDF contacted Curran in 1979, he stalled and tried again to play the procedural card. The initial letter was accompanied by 16 pages documenting the “errors and ambiguities” in his writing and a request that he reply to them in the next month. When he did get around to responding, Curran again “pointed out the serious flaws in the [CDF’s examination] process,” claiming that the “procedure violates the basic principles of justice in that it does not recognize the right of the accused to hear specific charges, to know who are the accusers, to have a copy of all the files against one, and to have representation of one’s own choice.”

The exchange continued in the same vein, with the CDF trying to wring answers out of Curran, and with the professor continuing to lecture them about the unfairness of the process. At one point, an officer of the CDF wrote to Chancellor Hickey to ask if he could please find some way to hurry Fr. Curran along. I don’t know how to adequately convey to readers how tedious the back-and-forth is except to say that reading about this episode made me pine for martial law.

And although the review frames the story in terms of the "decline of liberal Catholicism" - one can't help but wonder , considering the little nugget at the end of the review -  what helped set the stage in the first place.

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Comments

Charlie Curran writing about himself? What a surprise...

Posted by: AmericanPapist at Oct 24, 2006 2:31:18 PM

Charlie Curran writing about himself? What a surprise...

Posted by: AmericanPapist at Oct 24, 2006 2:31:20 PM

Charlie Curran writing about himself? What a surprise...

Posted by: AmericanPapist at Oct 24, 2006 2:31:25 PM

oh dear, word verification decided to submit my comment in triplicate. =(

Posted by: AmericanPapist at Oct 24, 2006 2:32:47 PM

Who was it that said in hell, there will be nothing but procedure, and it will be scrupulously followed?

Posted by: c matt at Oct 24, 2006 2:51:04 PM

I don't agree with Fr. Curran's opinion of himself, but please please please please please please please, don't anyone ever say that "contraception and sterilization, abortion and euthanasia, masturbation, premarital sexuality, and the indissolubility of marriage" constitute "pretty much every moral issue in the catechism." That is a really really really really bad misreading of Catholic moral theology.

Posted by: Tom K. at Oct 24, 2006 4:27:37 PM

Some years ago I heard Fr. Curran debate Dr. Janet Smith on contraception. He seemed a kind-hearted man; wrong-headed, but kind-hearted. His argument boiled down to the fact that since "good Catholics" were doing it, the Church had to adjust. Dr. Smith demolished him, of course, so soundly I felt sorry for the man.

Posted by: Ken at Oct 24, 2006 6:11:10 PM

CMATT:

The source of the quotation you have in mind is Grant Gilmore's The Ages of American Law(1977) p. 111:

“The better the society, the less law there will be. In Heaven there will be no law . . . The worse the society, the more law there will be. In hell there will be nothing but law, and due process will be meticulously observed.”

JMB

Posted by: JMB at Oct 24, 2006 6:32:29 PM

Tom K., What the heck are you talking about? Who said that? Or anything close to that?

Posted by: Mark Adams at Oct 24, 2006 6:57:00 PM

Lott did, in his review.

Posted by: Lickona at Oct 24, 2006 8:24:08 PM