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This Pope Plays It Right
The world needs more rocks in the river.

By Jonah Goldberg


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In the spring of 2005, Pope John Paul II died. My father, who passed away that summer, watched the funeral and the inauguration of the current pope, Benedict XVI, from his hospital bed. My dad, a Jew, loved the spectacle of it all. (The Vatican, he said, was the last institution that “really knows how to dress.”)

From what he could tell, he liked this new pope too. “We need more rocks in the river,” my dad explained. What he meant was that change comes so fast, in such a relentless torrent, that we need people and things that stand up to it and offer respite from the current.

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I loved the literary quality of the expression “more rocks in the river,” even though the imagery doesn’t quite convey what my dad really believed. Dad was a conservative, properly understood. By that I mean he didn’t think conservatism was merely an act of passive and futile defiance against what Shakespeare called “devouring time.” Unlike human institutions, the rocks do not fight the devouring river of time, it just seems like they do. My dad believed that conservatism was an affirmative act, a choice of prudence and will. In the cacophony of perpetual change, the conservative selects the notes worth savoring and repeats them for others to hear and, hopefully, appreciate.

Over the weekend, the media misreported that Benedict had renounced the Roman Catholic Church’s longstanding “policy” against condom use. I put “policy” in quotes because the media have a tendency to portray all church positions as if they were like rules for trash pickup: easily changed or abandoned upon papal or bureaucratic whim. That’s not how it works.

What Benedict said in a book-length interview is that in certain circumstances using a condom would be less bad than not using one. To use Benedict’s example, a male prostitute with HIV would be acting more responsibly, more morally, if he wore a condom while plying his trade than if he didn’t.

The pontiff understands that not all harms are equal. Assault is wrong, for instance, but assault with a deadly weapon is more wrong than assault with a non-deadly one. Recognizing and limiting the harm you do can be the “first step in the direction of a moralization, a first act of responsibility in developing anew an awareness of the fact that not everything is permissible.”

Now, I’m not on the same page as the Vatican on all matters of sexuality, never mind theology. But I respect the Church’s position. And, given the core assumptions of Catholic moral thought, I think Benedict’s reasoning is sound.

But, more relevant, I appreciate the role the Church plays in savoring the right notes.

It’s a tired trope for Church critics to glibly suggest that the Vatican has the blood of millions on its hands because it doesn’t back condom distribution, particularly in Africa. That is as absurd as it is unprovable. The Church’s opposition to corruption, ethnic violence, and murder are just as pronounced and resolute, and yet such maladies persist in Africa as well. Are we to believe that African male prostitutes — no doubt devout Catholics all — were simply following Church doctrine when they declined to use condoms?

Meanwhile, the Church does perhaps more than any other institution to aid the sick and feed the hungry in Africa, something you certainly can’t say about many of the critics in the Fourth Estate peanut gallery.

As for the Church’s preferred approach — abstinence until marriage — it may be impractical in most parts of the world, as the critics claim. But it would undeniably save more lives than condom use if put into practice. What seems to offend many isn’t the efficacy of the solution but the suggestion that such values have any place in the modern world.

The Church’s position is that the truest notes are those that not only celebrate life and love but cut through the whitewater din of devouring time. As those notes become harder to hear, the answer isn’t to stop playing them but to turn up the volume.

Perhaps it’s the approach of yet another dad-less Thanksgiving — a holiday during which we give thanks for whatever parts of our lives are set to the music of those true notes — that has set my mind in this direction. But that shouldn’t surprise, for he was always the true rock in my river.

— Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. © 2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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COMMENTS   12

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   11/24/10 09:26

..w/ all the allusions to rocks, one sticks out by its absence is Peter, the rock upon whom the catholic church was built (anglican here, but still..)...but nice comment, re; your dad...kinda reminds me of "field of dreams"..happy t/giving..

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   11/24/10 09:36

I always enjoy the stories about your father. You continue to honor his fine memory your characteristic integrity and humor. Happy Thanksgiving!

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GWB
   11/24/10 09:53

An absolutely great article, Jonah. "Rocks in the river" - I'm going to remember that one. You always write about your father in a way that makes me wish I had known the man.

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   11/24/10 09:56

"In the cacophony of perpetual change, the conservative selects the notes worth savoring and repeats them for others to hear and, hopefully, appreciate."

Thank you.

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   11/24/10 09:58

I'm a great Christopher Hitchens admirer, but his judgment always seemed suspect to me because he never seemed able to recognize how much of the Church's teaching was found through reason. Informed and directed by faith, but reason nevertheless.

The Pope stated something reasonable that is in no way a 'change'. Birth control is against God's law in nature. Condom use by male homosexuals is not birth control. Their acts may be disordered, but their use of condoms is not.

To someone who is not Catholic, this of course all seems absurd and Pharisaic. But one can not deny the calm use of reason by which it was arrived.

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Darragh Ryan
   11/24/10 10:06

Thank you for this article. After reading the absolutely malevolent comments re the Church yesterday in the NYT (re Archbishop Dolan interview--comments section), it's heartening to see others feel as I do.

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   11/24/10 11:00

OK, so at the Ecumenical meeting the Priest, Minister, and Rabbi were enjoying their lunch. After a while the Priest gets up and says "I have to go to the bathroom" and proceeds to walk across the river to the facility. When the Priest returns the Minister says "Excuse me, I must use the restroom" and he too walks across the river to the facility. As they were eating dessert, the Rabbi says "Now it's my turn" and he walks to the river takes a step and falls in. The Minister turns to the Priest and asks "Should we tell him where the rocks are?"

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Halifax
   11/24/10 11:42

Great article, thanks! Yeah, the media have really tried to spin and lie about what the Pope said. However, this is all irrelevant. As these media organizations come and go over the centuries and millennia, the Catholic Church will still be there, standing like a rock. Unchanged. Eternal.

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   11/24/10 11:46

Thank you, Jonah, for clarifying what the Pope actually said and for so beautifully representing what the Church is. It sounds like your father was a wise and eloquent man and he was probably pleased that, in your case, the fruit didn't fall far from the tree.

I lost my own father around Thanksgiving two years ago. He was also a wise man, whom I miss, particularly in such times as these. I'll be including him and his wisdom among the blessings for which I am grateful tomorrow.

And, you, your work and the rest of the "rocks" here at NRO are among those blessings too. Happy Thanksgiving.

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G Martin
   11/24/10 20:15

I'm Thankful for your article.
Happy Thanksgiving!

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Abbiedad
   11/26/10 10:56

God bless you,Jessica, Lucy, and Cosmo, Jonah. Your column was a wonderful Thanksgiving treat.

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   11/29/10 12:25

It pains me to hassle Jonah over anything because I am a big, big fan. Nonetheless, the appellation “the church” is unfortunate. To keep it simple, I believe the Orthodox churches would dispute whether Rome has historically been the center of “the church” and Rome definitely hasn’t rated that title for several centuries. Calling it the Roman Church is most accurate but the Catholic Church (capital letters optional) is probably most appropriate for an American audience. One additional note regarding NRO’s The Corner: KJL’s and Potemra’s commentary on Roman happenings are normally about minor league internal squabbles. I recognize that WFB was catholic and that NRO may have a special interest in this subject matter, but it may be preferable to set up a separate category (much like Phi Beta Cons, Bench Memos, etc.) for catholic controversies. Still, I do not believe that Christian issues should be consigned to a blog ghetto, so it would be better to err by continuing to include (what I consider to be) some nuisance catholic chat than drop all Christian commentary from The Corner. OK, my 2 cents are hereby deposited.

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