temperance - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Wed, 08 Nov 2017 21:26:18 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg temperance - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Learning from the Weinstein morality play https://cathnews.co.nz/2017/11/09/learning-weinstein-morality-play/ Thu, 09 Nov 2017 07:11:51 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=101857

A Hollywood brushfire about sexual misconduct by producer Harvey Weinstein has become a raging forest fire which has jumped the Atlantic. Obviously, criminal allegations have to be proven, but apologies and obscure admissions of guilt show that the flames are spreading far and wide. After Weinstein, other Hollywood figures, including Oscar winner Kevin Spacey, have Read more

Learning from the Weinstein morality play... Read more]]>
A Hollywood brushfire about sexual misconduct by producer Harvey Weinstein has become a raging forest fire which has jumped the Atlantic.

Obviously, criminal allegations have to be proven, but apologies and obscure admissions of guilt show that the flames are spreading far and wide.

After Weinstein, other Hollywood figures, including Oscar winner Kevin Spacey, have been denounced for sexual harassment. And now the UK's Defence Minister has resigned after allegations of inappropriate behaviour surfaced.

We can expect more, much more, so we need to think about how to respond effectively to the maelstrom of sexual abuse. I suggest a three-stage therapy process.

The first is to acknowledge that the Sexual Revolution which began five decades ago in 1968 has been a disaster. It takes about 50 years for revolutions to fall apart.

The Russian Revolution of 1917 had run out of steam by the mid-60s. After 50 years, our Sexual Revolution is starting to disintegrate; free love has become sleazy sexual abuse.

They scoffed when Harvey Weinstein half-defended his appalling actions by saying that he grew up in the 70s. But perhaps Weinstein was right, in a way.

He may never have had a chance to learn how to behave properly with women.

The 70s was a decade of mass disruption of mutual respect between the sexes. In many environments, it was a free-for-all.

Married women had been using contraceptives since the early 60s, and their daughters thought that if it was good enough for mum, it was good enough for them.

Right and wrong disappeared. Hooking up, adultery and homosexual acts were acceptable if they were consensual.

Some feminists helped the cause by trying to outdo men in raunchiness. Some of them are still defending pornography. If you were a man or a boy, the expectation was that you would bed as many females as you could.

If you were a woman or girl, you were expected to get involved or at least not complain about it, regardless of the man's further intentions with respect to your life and well-being or any children you might conceive. Continue reading

  • Martin Fitzgerald is a teacher at Redfield College, in Sydney.
Learning from the Weinstein morality play]]>
101857
Catholics in Kerala want to make drinking alcohol a sin https://cathnews.co.nz/2012/12/18/catholics-in-kerala-want-to-make-drinking-alcohol-a-sin/ Mon, 17 Dec 2012 18:30:03 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=38007

Responding to a serious binge-drinking culture, Catholic temperance advocates in India's most Catholic state want their bishops to declare drinking alcohol a sin. The temperance commission of the Kerala Catholic Bishops' Council also wants a ban on church institutions employing people who drink, and a ban on drinking alcohol at weddings. The commission's secretary, Father Read more

Catholics in Kerala want to make drinking alcohol a sin... Read more]]>
Responding to a serious binge-drinking culture, Catholic temperance advocates in India's most Catholic state want their bishops to declare drinking alcohol a sin.

The temperance commission of the Kerala Catholic Bishops' Council also wants a ban on church institutions employing people who drink, and a ban on drinking alcohol at weddings.

The commission's secretary, Father P. J. Antony, said the extreme stand was taken in view of "the crisis the Kerala society is going through due to excessive drinking".

He said the proposals were based on the teachings of the Bible and were also in accord with scientific studies that showed alcohol caused various physical and mental illnesses.

But the president of the commission, Charlie Paul, said making drinking a sin might need more theological backing. "Some bishops have reservations on this and want it to be referred to theological experts," he said.

Christianity is believed to have reached Kerala with the arrival of St Thomas in the year 52. The state's 6 million Catholics — in Latin, Syro Malabar and Syro Malankara rites — make up about 20 per cent of the population.

The temperance commission, whose vision is a drug-free Church and society in Kerala, was founded in 1998 and operates in all 29 Catholics dioceses in the state.

It also wants the state government — which earns more than 40 per cent of its revenue from alcohol — to get out of the liquor trade.

Kerala has India's highest rate of consumption of alcohol. The accident rate from road crashes is more than twice the national average, and alcoholism is seen as an underlying cause of increasing suicides and divorces.

"Alcoholism is a serious problem in Kerala, and we have to take tough measures to counter it," the commission's chairman, Bishop Sebastian Thekethecheril, said earlier this year.

Sources:

The Asian Age

Christian Today India

Kerala Catholic Bishops' Council

Image: Kerala Catholic Bishops' Council

Catholics in Kerala want to make drinking alcohol a sin]]>
38007