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Australian Cardinal Threatens Disobedient Catholic Politicians


Australian Cardinal Threatens Disobedient Catholic Politicians

This article comes from the Catholic News Agency.
Cardinal Pell corrects politicians who claim to be Catholic but vote differently



Sydney, Australia, Jan 5, 2011 / 05:31 am (CNA).- As the country faces intense legislative debate this upcoming year over same-sex “marriage” and euthanasia, Cardinal George Pell of Sydney blasted politicians who claim a Catholic identity, yet consistently defy Church teachings on major issues.



In a Jan. 4 interview with the Sunday Herald Sun, Cardinal Pell gave a sharp rebuke to Australian members of parliament who "fly under the Christian or Captain Catholic flag" but "blithely disregard Christian perspectives" in their actions.



"If a person says, 'Look, I'm not a Christian, I've a different set of perspectives,' I disagree but I understand," he said. "If a person says to me, 'Look, I'm nominally a Christian but it sits lightly with me,' I understand that.”



"But it's incongruous for somebody to be a Captain Catholic one minute, saying they're as good a Catholic as the Pope, then regularly voting against the established Christian traditions."



Cardinal Pell called out politicians who endorse secular stances on issues while insisting that they're Catholics, saying, “if you're espousing something that's not a Christian position, don't claim Christian backing for that."



The Catholic Church “doesn't teach the primacy of conscience,” he said, explaining that a person's conscience doesn't trump Church teaching. “You know if somebody said apartheid was all right, nobody would say, 'Yes you can say that because of the primacy of conscience.'"



"To the extent that on a significant number of issues you depart from Christian teachings you know it's incongruous to be billing yourself as a champion of Christian rights,” he said.



"I'm not telling people how to vote," he underscored during the interview. "I'm telling people how I think they should vote. I'm an Australian citizen and I have as much right to do that as any other citizen."
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Panelists: Laity the Future of the Catholic Church


Panelists: Laity the Future of the Catholic Church

This article comes from the National Catholic Reporter.
Saying bishops 'scared,' panelists urge laity to take lead



By Jerry Filteau



Panelists at a recent Woodstock forum in Philadelphia urged lay Catholics to grab the reins and set the course for the church’s future.



“We are becoming a do-it-yourself church” for the laity, said Jesuit Fr. Thomas J. Reese, one of three senior fellows of the Woodstock Theological Center in Washington who spoke at “The Future of the Church: A Woodstock Forum on Sources of Hope,” held at St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia Dec. 5.



The U.S. Catholic hierarchy today is fearful and defensive, a far cry from the collaborative, pastorally transformed hierarchy that emerged during and after the Second Vatican Council, said Dolores R. Leckey, former longtime head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat for Laity, Family, Women and Youth, and a noted writer on spirituality.



It’s up to the laity to take responsibility for where the church goes in the years to come, Leckey, Reese, and Fr. Raymond Kemp, a Washington diocesan priest and director of Woodstock’s “Preaching the Just Word” program, said during the two-hour session with nearly 300 Philadelphia-area Catholics. (This reporter did not attend the forum but later requested and was given access to a video recording of it.)



Reese, a political scientist, nationally known media consultant and former editor of America, a Jesuit-run national magazine, said, “Personally, as a social scientist, I tend to be a pessimist when looking at the church. But as a Christian, I think I have to be an optimist. That’s part of our DNA as Christians. After all, our religion is based on someone who died and rose from the dead.”



A recent Pew Forum study showed that about one-third of American adults who were raised Catholic are no longer Catholic, he said, and the number of priests and religious in the U.S. church has declined dramatically, with new vocations few and far between.



“At 65, I’m considered a young priest,” he said, adding that the Catholic priesthood may be the only profession in the country today where someone who dies of old age is still considered “young.” Because of the church’s sacramental theology linked to ordination, lack of priests means lack of access to the Eucharist and other sacraments, weakening the entire institutional structure, he said.



He said that for him the most depressing finding of the Pew study was that 71 percent of former Catholics said the reason they left the church was “that my spiritual needs were not met by the church -- in other words, our fundamental product failed.”



Another major negative factor in U.S. Catholic membership trends, Reese said, is that in the United States today, many of those leaving are women.



“In the 19th century we lost men in Europe. We didn’t lose the women,” he said. “Today we’re losing women too. ... Mothers are more important to the Catholic church than priests, because they are the ones that pass the faith on to the next generation. They are the ones who teach the kids how to pray, answer their questions about God, etc. Women are absolutely essential. If we lose women, we might as well close shop. And then the worst thing about this is that the more educated a woman becomes, the more alienated she tends to become from the Catholic church.”



Reese said that for church leaders to blame the exodus of Catholics from the church on sinfulness, dissent, lack of commitment, or other factors among those who leave is ignoring a major issue. “If this was a retail outlet, we’d say we’re blaming the customers -- and that’s not a way to make your bottom line,” he said.



He said a welcoming attitude, implemented in concrete welcoming practices, is lacking in most Catholic parishes and is one of the major weaknesses in U.S. Catholic practice today.



“When was the last time you entered a Catholic church and actually were welcomed?” he asked. “Our churches and our liturgies are boring. That, I think, more than theology, is what is driving our people away from our church.



“What you need is good music, good preaching, programs for kids and a welcoming community,” he said. “If you have that, you will have a full church.”



He called the Catholic church today “a lazy monopoly” around which evangelical churches “are running circles.”



As signs of hope, he said, the church “is much better today than it was” in the 1950s, and it is a church “that always changes.”



He cited the return to biblical scholarship and spirituality among the major causes for hope in the Catholic church today.



The Catholic focus on social justice attracts young Catholics, “especially when this work is seen not just as kind of an appendix to Christianity, as being a Catholic, but is integrated into our spirituality, as part of who we are, so it becomes part of who we are as Christians -- for many young Catholics this becomes attractive,” he said.



On the church’s immediate prospects for the future, “maybe God knows what she’s doing,” he said. “If you don’t have clergy, maybe the job’s yours.”



Leckey and Kemp struck similar notes on lay responsibility for the church’s future.



Leckey, who recently completed a book, The Laity and Christian Education, in the Paulist Press “Rediscovering Vatican II” series, said the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s is one of the chief reasons for her hope for the future of the church.



“What happened there was a monumental conversion of consciousness” among the world’s 2,500 Catholic bishops, she said, and one key area of that was recognition of the role of the laity, by virtue of their baptism, in the church’s mission of ministry and spreading the Gospel in the world.



She contrasted the conciliar view of the laity with the prevailing preconciliar view best expressed by Pope Pius X in the early 20th century when he said, “The one duty of the laity is to allow themselves to be led like a docile flock, to follow their pastors.”



Besides re-envisioning the church as the pilgrim people of God, the council stressed the universal call to holiness and changed the ongoing narrative of the church’s life, making it more biblically and liturgically centered, she said.



Today, she noted, 85 percent of the ministers in U.S. parishes are laity, most of them women.



Kemp said a key to a hopeful future for the church is a vital parish -- a parish that welcomes people and calls on them to contribute their time and talents. He cited Old St. Patrick’s Parish in Chicago as an exemplar, saying it has some 120 peer ministry groups and attracts young adults from across the city.



Another sign of hope for the church’s future in the United States, he said, is its involvement in works of charity and justice.



“We have a story to tell that attracts people who are not Catholic,” he said. “Where are we? We’re at the borders. Where are we? We’re at the AIDS hospice in Africa. Where are we? We are the ones that are walking the undocumented through the process. Where are we? We are the ones that are in the detention centers. We’re the ones that are building houses or founding houses outside the detention centers so that families can meet with their folks before they’re deported. Where are we? We as a church educate, feed, house, clothe, resettle more of those who do find their way here than any other NGO [nongovernmental organization] in this country.”

That is the kind of institution that attracts young people who want to make a difference in the world, he said.



During a question-and-answer session after their presentations, all three panelists stressed the need for laypeople to take the initiative if they want to see things happen in the church.



When she was asked how laypeople can engage in a dialogue with their bishops on issues that matter to them, Leckey suggested that the growing collaboration of religious and laypeople -- many religious communities have established lay associate programs -- could serve as a model and a means of developing such a dialogue.



It is difficult to get today’s bishops to enter into such a dialogue because they do not trust in the laity as they did after the council, she said.



“Our bishops are scared,” she said. “You don’t act defensively like that unless you’re scared to death. Their defenses are high. They weren’t high in the days right after the council.”



[Jerry Filteau is NCR Washington correspondent.]
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Researchers find "alarming" decline in bumblebees

Researchers find "alarming" decline in bumblebees

Four previously abundant species of bumblebee are close to disappearing in the United States, researchers reported on Monday in a study confirming that the agriculturally important bees are being affected worldwide.

Reuters







Researchers find

Researchers find "alarming" decline in bumblebees A bumblebee gathers pollen from a sunflower in Sumartin on Croatia's Adriatic Island of Brac July 18, 2009. REUTERS/Nikola Solic
Image:




By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Four previously abundant species of bumblebee are close to disappearing in the United States, researchers reported on Monday in a study confirming that the agriculturally important bees are being affected worldwide.

They documented a 96 percent decline in the numbers of the four species, and said their range had shrunk by as much as 87 percent. As with honeybees, a pathogen is partly involved, but the researchers also found evidence the bees are vulnerable to inbreeding caused by habitat loss.

"We provide incontrovertible evidence that multiple Bombus species have experienced sharp population declines at the national level," the researchers reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, calling the findings "alarming."

"These are one of the most important pollinators of native plants," Sydney Cameron of the University of Illinois, Urbana, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

In recent years, experts have documented a disappearance of bees in what is widely called colony collapse disorder, blamed on many factors including parasites, fungi, stress, pesticides and viruses. But most studies have focused on honeybees.

Bumblebees are also important pollinators, Cameron said, but are far less studied. Bumblebees pollinate tomatoes, blueberries and cranberries, she noted.

"The 50 species (of bumblebees) in the United States are traditionally associated with prairies and with high alpine vegetations," she added.

"Just as important -- they land on a flower and they have this behavior called buzz pollination that enables them to cause pollen to fly off the flower."

POLLINATING TOMATOES

This is the way to pollinate tomatoes, Cameron said -- although smaller bees can accomplish the same effect if enough cluster on a single flower.

Several reports have documented the disappearance of bumblebees in Europe and Asia, but no one had done a large national study in the Americas.

Cameron's team did a three-year study of 382 sites in 40 states and also looked at more than 73,000 museum records.

"We show that the relative abundance of four species have declined by up to 96 percent and that their surveyed geographic ranges have contracted by 23 percent to 87 percent," they wrote.

While no crops are in immediate danger, the results show that experts need to pay attention, Cameron said. Pollinators such as bees and bats often have specific tongue lengths and pollination behaviors that have evolved along with the species of plants they pollinate.

Bumblebees can fly in colder weather than other species, and are key to pollinating native species in the tundra and at high elevations, Cameron said.

Genetic tests show that the four affected bumblebee species have a risky lack of genetic diversity and other tests implicate a parasite called Nosema bombi, Cameron said.

"This is a wake-up call that bumblebee species are declining not only in Europe, not only in Asia, but also in North America," she said.

(Editing by Vicki Allen)

Read more at www.scientificamerican.com
 

"Bulge" in Atmospheric Pressure Responsible for Cold Winter Amid Global Warming

"Bulge" in Atmospheric Pressure Responsible for Cold Winter Amid Global Warming

The cold in places like Florida actually could be a sign of warming, rather than an argument against the phenomenon

























COLD WEATHER: The cold in places like Florida actually could be a sign of warming, rather than an argument against the phenomenon.
Image: Ruthanne Reid, courtesy Flickr




Editor's Note: This story was updated at 11 A.M. Eastern time to include comments from meteorologist Joe Bastardi.



Icicle-covered oranges in Florida. The United Kingdom swamped with its coldest December in more than a century. Travelers stranded in airports surrounded by snowy fortresses.



These have been some of the dominant images this winter, and now one forecaster says it's going to get colder. Yesterday, an AccuWeather meteorologist predicted that January could be the chilliest for the nation as a whole since the 1980s.



"More waves of Arctic air will invade the country, starting late this week and continuing through the next week and beyond," explained Joe Bastardi of Accuweather in a release. Rare snowfall is headed to Seattle, while the Texas citrus industry may have to prepare for cold-weather damage, according to his forecast.



So how does this fit with global warming models?



According to some climate scientists, the cold in places like Florida actually could be a sign of warming, rather than an argument against the phenomenon.



The ongoing disappearance of sea ice in the Arctic from elevated temperatures is a factor to changes in atmospheric pressure that control jet streams of air, explained James Overland, an oceanographer of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA. That is because ice-less ocean is darker and, thus, absorbs more solar heat, which in turn spews warmer air than average back into the Arctic atmosphere.



That unusually warm air can contribute to a "bulge" effect to the atmospheric pressure controlling how cold air flows, according to Overland, who works at NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory. Rather than moving circularly in the Arctic from west to east as typical, the bulge may prompt air to move in a U-shaped pattern down to the southern United States.



How loss of Arctic ice gives you snow in Seattle

Last year was the waviest example of this pressure phenomenon in 145 years, said Overland. What also is happening is that the wavy air flow from north to south is appearing for longer periods of time, rather than just for a week or two, he said.



"You can't go as far as saying the loss of sea ice is causing cold weather in Florida," said Overland. "You can say it is a contributing factor." In October, Overland co-authored part of NOAA's Arctic Report Card, which included a section on how Arctic weather is influencing weather in mid-latitudes.



He emphasized that more research needs to be done on the cause and effect relationship between disappearing Arctic sea ice and cold weather in southern locations. Other research backs up his argument.



In November, climate scientist Vladimir Petoukhov reported in the Journal of Geophysical Research that the overall warming of Earth's northern half could result in cold winters. "These anomalies could triple the probability of cold winter extremes in Europe and northern Asia," he said in a statement.



The area covered by sea ice hovered near its historic low this summer, and is expected to be largely gone by mid-century (ClimateWire, Dec. 17, 2010).



Another study published in Environmental Research Letters last year, though, predicted colder winters in the United Kingdom because of natural variations in solar activity.



Differing from the majority of scientists, meteorologist Bastardi presented his "global cooling" theory in a December AccuWeather video arguing that carbon dioxide is a trace gas that has less effect on weather than forces such as the sun.



"There's no need to panic over global warming," he said.



The key thing is to look at the climate over long periods of time and not try to find meaning in one weather event, said David Easterling, chief of the Scientific Services Division at NOAA's National Climatic Data Center.



"The flip side is it's been unusually warm in Canada this winter," he said.



January aside, the National Weather Service predicts that swaths of the country stretching from the Southwest to the Southeast will be warmer than average this year. Record high temperatures are currently outnumbering record low temperatures by about two to one, and those ratios are projected to be about 20 to 1 by mid-century and 50 to 1 by 2100, said Jerry Meehl, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research.



How much the existing data registers with politicians and the public is an open question.



Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), who once called global warming a "hoax" and was one of the loudest opponents against climate legislation last year, posted a blog last month mentioning recent cold weather events.



How weather impacts belief

"The fanciful claims surrounding global warming have turned out to be a colossal deception, an artful hoax, and an intellectual fraud," it said.



According to the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research, news coverage of climate change in 50 newspapers around the globe dropped by more than half in late 2009 to 2010. That parallels the time frame that climate change fell off the radar of Capitol Hill and international climate negotiations ended in Copenhagen, Denmark.



Last year also witnessed a drop in public belief in man-made warming. Gallup, for example, reported that the percentage of the population saying that seriousness of warming is "exaggerated" jumped 15 points between 2007 and 2010.



Christopher Borick, director of the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion has studied public reaction to the climate change issue since 2008. He and his team found that an individual's belief or skepticism of its existence lies in personal experience: Unusually hot summers resulted in an increase in the number of believers, while frigid winters led to a greater number of skeptics.



"[Weather] has a big effect on the perception that climate change is happening," said Borick. "Meteorological phenomena, storms and droughts, can be translated by individuals to their views on what's happening with long-term climate."



In a survey last spring, following an unusually cold winter for many parts of the United States, the percentage of climate change believers stood at 52 percent, with 36 percent non-believers and 13 percent unsure. The number of believers rose 8 percent and the number of non-believers dropped 9 percent in the fall survey, taken just a few months after a hot summer.



But Jon Krosnick, a professor at Stanford University, said the only group affected by cold weather in terms of belief about climate change is the 30 percent of the population who distrust scientists. And then they only consider how the most recent season compares to the previous three years in terms of worldwide temperatures, he said.



If this winter is unusually cold, he said, you would expect to see a "small drop" in the percentage of people who think global warming is happening.



"People don't use their local temperatures as a benchmark," he said. "They are not dodos."

Read more at www.scientificamerican.com
 

Gas hits $7.51 for British drivers

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Gas hits $7.51 for British drivers

LONDON, Jan. 5 (UPI) -- The price per gallon of gasoline in London reached a record, topping more than $7 per gallon, creating a headache for the British economy, executives said.

The average price for gasoline in the United Kingdom hit $7.51 per gallon because of an increase in the fuel duty and taxes, the Platts news service reports.

British drivers pay more for gasoline than any other country in the world and the current price tops the previous high-water mark of $7.15 set in May.

Edmund King, president of the British Automobile Association, said low-income households "simply can't afford this." Brian Madderson, chairman of RMI petrol, told the news service that he didn't see any relief at the pump any time soon.

Energy analysts blame a rise in the price of crude oil for part of the increase in gasoline prices. John Hofmeister, a former president at Shell Oil, told the Platts news service that energy shortages and record-high gasoline prices were on the horizon because of high demand and ineffective governing.

Hofmeister said U.S. consumers should expect $5 per gallon at the pump by 2012.

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Cold suspected in Chesapeake fish kill

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Cold suspected in Chesapeake fish kill

BALTIMORE, Jan. 5 (UPI) -- Maryland officials say they are investigating a large fish kill in Chesapeake Bay, but suspect cold temperatures, not water-quality issues, were responsible.

The Maryland Department of the Environment estimated 2 million fish have been reported dead in the upper bay, The Baltimore Sun reported Wednesday.

Bay water quality tested as acceptable and biologists said they believe "cold-water stress" was the probable cause of the mass kill, department spokeswoman Dawn Stoltzfus said.

The dead fish are primarily adult spot with some juvenile croakers, she said, and spot are susceptible to colder water and normally leave the upper bay by this time.

Water temperatures plummeted in late December to 36 degrees, a near-record low for that time of year, Stoltzfus said.

Large winter kills of spot have been seen at least twice before, she said, with about 15 million dying in early 1976 and a smaller number in 1980.

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Thousands of crabs wash up on U.K. beaches

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Thousands of crabs wash up on U.K. beaches

LONDON, Jan. 5 (UPI) -- Thousands of dead crabs have washed ashore along Britain's east coast in the county of Kent, and environmentalists say the prolonged cold weather is to blame.

Huge numbers of Velvet swimming crabs, also known as devil crabs, are thought to be victims of lower-than-average sea temperatures caused by Britain's coldest December in 120 years, The Daily Mail reported Wednesday.

More than 40,000 of Britain's largest swimming crab littered beaches along the Kent coastline, the newspaper said.

"We suspect that climate change and warmer weather has lured the crabs towards the shoreline," coastal warden Tony Sykes said.

"We believe the sudden temperature drop causes the crabs to suffer from hypothermia and die," he said.

Coast Project Manager Tony Childs said he was surprised at the large numbers of dead crabs.

"We had a crash in numbers last year and we hadn't expected such a large population," he said.

Cleanup would best be left to natural events, he said.

"As happens with the circle of life in nature, we expect the crabs to be naturally dispersed from our shores very quickly by our local seagulls," he said.

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