There’s a post written by Joe Heschmeyer which neatly lays out which Church Fathers used the which Deuterocanonical books. The problem is, I keep forgetting where it is on his blog, so I’m linking to it here, and copying over the key collection of data:
Yesterday I saw the unfortunate news that Fr. Frank Pavone had been laicized. I’ve already seen some Catholics on Social Media immediately posting “I stand with Fr. Pavone”. Their loyalty to Frank Pavone is touching, but the sentiment of such posts is unclear. I can see three possible interpretations:
They believe the reasons for his dismissal to be false
They believe the reasons for his dismissal are true, but they think the penalty is excessive
They believe the reasons for his dismissal may or may not be true, but they just don’t care
Unfortunately, I have a suspicion that most people fall in the last camp…
Earlier echos…
When Fr. Altman was in the news about a year ago, we saw lots of people posting similar sentiments because they saw him as bastion against “liberal” Catholicism. Unfortunately few of his supporters would acknowledge the authority of his bishop or try to address his words and actions. In their minds, the very fact that he stood up for “conservative” Catholicism gave him a free pass. However, just because someone does great good, doesn’t make it impossible for that same person to have done something incorrect or wrong.
We’ve seen a very similar phenomenon in recent years among some Trump supporters. While some Christians who voted for President Trump acknowledge that they didn’t like some of the things he has said and done, others don’t seem to give such behaviour a second thought as long as he continues to “own the Libs”.
Balanced criticism
Now, one might ask why it seems that “conservative” priests appear much more likely to be disciplined than “liberal” ones. It’s a good question and I agree that discipline does seem to slant in one particular direction. However, that doesn’t mean we can just ignore ecclesiastical law, and just because one bishop fails in his duty to correctly discipline his priests doesn’t mean that all bishops must cease to do so.
Here is one of the tweets which seems to have got him into trouble:
Since disobedience was was of the charges against him, it’s probably worth noting that the video below was posted the day afterhe claims to have first discovered the ruling from the Catholic News Agency. I hope that the video was recorded prior to confirmation of his laicization, otherwise it doesn’t bode well regarding his future obedience to this ecclesiastical ruling:
Finally, as always, watch this video from Michael Lofton where he offers some level-headed commentary on the situation:
Jami` at-Tirmidhi 2653: Speaks about Muslims losing knowledge, even though they continue to recite the Qur’an. Is this the sort of “corruption” Muhammad had in mind for the Jews and the Christians?