In
an April 21, 2005, column in the Los Angeles Times, entitled
"A Catholic Call For Dissent," Catholic gadfly Charles Curran bemoans
the appointment of the conservative Cardinal Ratzinger as the next Pope
(Benedict XVI). In doing so, Curran tries to besmirch the Church by
claiming that "for over 1800 years the popes and the church did
not condemn slavery."
The truth? Campaigns
against slavery within the Church date back as early as the seventh
century. In addition, Pope Eugene IV, in 1435, and Pope Paul III, in
1537, both roundly condemned slavery in official documents. Both popes
threatened excommunication for those engaged in the slave trade.
The Holy Office also asserted that slaveholders should emancipate and
compensate blacks who were unjustly enslaved. An outstanding
overview of the Church's history of its condemnation of slavery can be
found in the article "The Truth About the Catholic Church and
Slavery," by Rodney Stark,
here at christianitytoday.com.
Curran laments that he was
fired as a theologian from Catholic University back in 1986.
Maybe it was because he can't get his facts right!
TheMediaReport.com says ... Pope
Benedict XVI has liberals and secularists hyperventilating!