While I'm on the subject of the Times newspaper, take a look at this rant from Matthew Parris: Did John Paul II perform a miracle? Am I Mother Teresa?.As we all know, Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre has claimed that she has been cured of Parkinsons Disease through the intercession of Pope John Paul II. Her condition was such that she could hardly move her left side, she was unable to write legibly, she could not drive, had severely limited mobility and her pain kept her from sleeping.
After praying to Pope John Paul II one evening, she claims that she found she was able to write and woke up the next morning completely cured of her condition.
As is customary in any claim of a miracle, medical experts have been interviewed to verify that the condition had actually been diagnosed, that it is no longer present and that there is no medical explanation for the cure.
So what does Parris say to those who would cite these facts and ask him how he can be sure that the miracle did not happen?
“But how can you be sure?” Oh boy, am I sure. Oh great quivering mountains of pious mumbo-jumbo, am I sure. Oh fathomless oceans of sanctified babble, am I sure. Words cannot express my confidence in the answer to the question whether God cured a nun because she wrote a Pope’s name down. He didn’t.Now I think I understand why Richard Dawkins speaks of faith as he does:
Faith is the great cop-out, the great excuse to evade the need to think and to evaluate evidence. Faith is belief in spite of, even perhaps because of the lack of evidence… Faith is not allowed to justify itself by argument.This is a notoriously inaccurate description of religious faith in the Christian tradition as Alistair McGrath and many others have pointed out. But it is an excellent description of the kind of secularist blind faith exemplified by Matthew Parris in his article. If he were at all interested in any rational discussion or evidence, Parris would have a number of possible avenues to explore. The claim of a cure is, after all, a falsifiable claim. He could try any of the following:
- Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre did not have Parkinsons to start with.
- Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre has not been cured - she still has Parkinsons.
- Sister Marie-Simon-Pierre has been cured but there is a medical or other non-miraculous explanation for the cure.
8 comments:
"This is the century during which, after 2,000 years of what has been a pretty bloody marriage, faith and reason must agree to part, citing irreconcilable differences. So block your ears to the cooing voices on Thought for the Day, and choose your side."
I find it very irritating when people state that false dichotomy: "faith or reason". It is quite unreasonable to claim to know that there is no God.
Fr. Tim,
Yawn. Yet again, another completely predictable, self-deceiving, theophobic swipe at Christianity courtesy of Matthew Parris.
I agree with you—Parris’ intellectual case against the nun having been miraculously cured through the intercession of Pope John Paul is so thin that I could put my finger through it.
Much as he may think of himself as such, Parris is not a champion of individual rights, freedoms and lifestyle choices in the face of the oppressive forces of bigotry and obscurantism. To my mind, he shows the classic signs of the intolerant rebellion called the dictatorship of relativism.
His attitude can be summarized along the lines of: “Catholicism teaches that my sexuality is intrinsically disordered, so Catholicism and its adherents are dangerous and must be purged.” He has gone so far as to say this in at least one of his articles:
Why does militant homosexuality, when embraced, involve such a radical rebellion against God and His followers? I am at a complete loss to explain it. St. Paul was probably at a loss too, but he was able to note many of the symptoms: “They are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless” (Rom 1:29-31). It’s nearly 2,000 years since he wrote those words, but "plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose…"
Mind you, the path away from God tends to be curved rather than linear. The best we can hope for is that Matthew Parris lasts the distance and finally emulates his forerunner Oscar Wilde by acknowledging that when it comes to God, resistance is futile. Sometimes, there is something so mannered about a person’s mode of rebellion that one has grounds for hoping that they’ll get real in the end. A bit like St. Paul.
Sometimes, it just takes more faith to doubt than believe.
What is particularly annoying is that Parris often tries to portray himself as a calm critic when in fact anyone who reads that article can practically hear him thumping the secular pulpit. This is nothing less than an example of bad-mannered religious hatred. We must pray for such people.
I always like to show these people recent photos of St. Bernadette in her Snow White glass coffin.
It makes them start drooling and sets their teeth chattering. Sometimes they fall down and start twitching...
hee hee...
I saw that article during the week at work; I thought he was a very rude man. :(
Pray for his conversion.
If St. Augustine/Bernard Nathanson/Newman/Hahn/Insert Name Here can convert, so can this man.
Come on over, buddy.
We're waiting for you.
Fr. Tim
Just a PS to my previous comment on dear old Matthew Parris. I religiously followed your instructions about how to incorporate links to external sites in the combox but things didn’t quite work.
In case anyone is interested, the Parris article I was trying to link to has the marvellously inclusive and pro-diversity title “SWEEP OUT RELIGIOUS SUPERSTITION WHICH WILL NOT TOLERATE ME,” which appeared in The Times on October 23, 2004.
You can attempt to access it (but I make no promises) here
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