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Scalia: Faithful live for Christ Supreme Court
justice urges Christians to live fearlessly By
PENNY BROWN ROBERTS Advocate
staff writer U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said Saturday that people of faith should
not fear being viewed by "educated circles" as "fools for
Christ." The
justice -- in Baton Rouge to address the Knights of Columbus Council 969
centennial celebration without charging a fee -- told a largely Roman Catholic
crowd of 350 at the Holiday Inn Select that there's nothing wrong with
"traditional Christianity." "To
believe in traditional Christianity is something else," Scalia said.
"For the son of God to be born of a virgin? I mean, really. To believe
that he rose from the dead and bodily ascended into heaven? How utterly
ridiculous. To believe in miracles? Or that those who obey God will rise from
the dead and those who do not will burn in hell? "God
assumed from the beginning that the wise of the world would view Christians as
fools ... and he has not been disappointed." Scalia
praised "traditional Catholics" who say the rosary, go on
pilgrimages, kneel during the Eucharist and "follow religiously the
teaching of the pope," adding that "intellect and reason need not be
laid aside for religion. It is not irrational to accept the testimony of
eyewitnesses who had nothing to gain. There is something wrong with rejecting a
priori (deductively) the existence of miracles." The
outspoken conservative justice -- known for his views on religion in America --
didn't shy from them during his visit to south Louisiana Saturday. He didn't
discuss any specific issues before the high court, but did tell those in
attendance they had "no greater model" for their faith than St.
Thomas More. The
Catholic martyr and considered the patron saint of lawyers, repudiated Martin
Luther and refused to endorse King Henry VIII's plan to divorce Katherine of
Aragon or recognize the king as the supreme head of the Church of England. More
was found guilty of treason and beheaded in 1535. "I
find it hard to understand people who revere Thomas More but who themselves
selectively oppose the teachings of the pope," said Scalia, widely cited
as a potential nominee for the position of chief justice when William Rehnquist
leaves the bench. "If
I have brought any message today, it is this: Have the courage to have your
wisdom regarded as stupidity. Be fools for Christ. And have the courage to
suffer the contempt of the sophisticated world." President
Ronald named Scalia to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
in 1982. Four years later, Scalia was nominated and unanimously confirmed to
the U.S. Supreme Court, taking the seat vacated when was elevated to the
court's top post. The
Catholic justice -- raised in the New York City Borough of Queens, and the
father of nine children, one of them a priest -- has become an anti-abortion
hero to many in the American political right and a leading conservative voice
on the court. He has
described himself as an "originalist," following the Constitution as
written by the Founding Fathers, rather than interpreting it to reflect the
changing times. In
November, while speaking to an interfaith conference at a Manhattan synagogue,
Scalia made headlines by saying that a religion-neutral government does not fit
with an America that reflects belief in God in everything from its money to its
military. More than
a year ago, he removed himself from the Supreme Court's review of whether
"under God" should be in the Pledge of Allegiance after mentioning
the case in a speech and complaining that courts are stripping God from public
life. Last
year, Scalia cast one of two dissenting votes in a 7-2 Supreme Court ruling
that states may deny taxpayer-funded scholarships to divinity students. And in
2000, he stood with a majority of the court in upholding the constitutionality
of taxpayer funding for parochial school materials in a Jefferson Parish case. Louis
McHardy, a Baton Rouge native who is retired executive director of the
Nevada-based National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, called
Scalia "one of the nation's heroes." "His
message to me is that our constitution is all-encompassing," said McHardy,
who attended Saturday's banquet. "It takes into consideration all points
of view." Rev.
Miles Walsh, pastor of Our Lady of Mercy Church and Knights of Columbus
chaplain, said Scalia's address convinced him that the justice is
"committed to the transcendent principles he believes in." The
Knights of Columbus Baton Rouge Council 969 was founded in January 1905 by 30
men who were charter members. The organization founded the LSU Catholic Center,
and over the years has supported orphanages, mental health facilities and
hospitals. |