From our Burying-The-Lead Department comes a surprising entry from John Allen Jr., ordinarily the Vatican correspondent who makes the National Catholic Reporter worth checking in on from time to time. (Indeed, I think his book All the Pope’s Men is must reading for aspiring apologists.)
In his current column for NCRep, Allen includes but a brief mention of the Terri Schiavo case and the extraordinary Vatican response to it apparently as an afterthought at the very end of his column (titled "A Short Note on Terri Schiavo"):
"So much has been written and said about the Terry [sic] Schiavo case in the United States that I hesitate to add anything here. It’s already well-known that the Holy See has been outspoken; three senior Vatican officials have appealed directly on Schiavo’s behalf, including Cardinal Renato Martino, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace; Cardinal Javier Lozano Barrigan, president of the Pontifical Council for the Health Care Pastoral; and Bishop Elio Sgreccia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life.
"The American press, already accustomed to the engagement of religious conservatives on Schiavo’s behalf, has not given a great deal of attention to these Vatican interventions, treating them as largely pro forma.
"In fact, however, if one sees these statements through the lens of normal Vatican operating procedure rather than the particular contours of American debate, they’re really rather extraordinary. As a general rule, Vatican officials restrict themselves to enunciating general principles, treating particular cases, pieces of legislation or elections as something for local bishops to address. Readers will remember, for example, during the American debate over
[C]ommunion for pro-choice Catholic politicians, that Vatican officials outlined the general rules in
[C]hurch law but never even cited the name ‘John Kerry’ in doing so."
Now, granted, what Allen has to say about the Vatican response is a valuable insight into the Vatican’s usual modus operandi in cases like this, and into the Vatican’s suspension of it for Terri. But did he have to bury the blurb at the bottom of the column? And did he have to misspell Terri’s name? (Small peeve, I know, but I think it’s telling sometimes when journalists are not careful to double-check name spellings. I should note that Terri’s name is spelled correctly in the headline.)
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While I was gone for the wedding, a bunch of kindly folks sent me links regarding Terri Schiavo. Given how desperate things are becoming, I don’t want to stretch out the time of posting in order to give me time to read and comment on them, so here are the raw links: