Volume > Issue > The Catholic Campaign for Human Development Serves Up Tainted Alphabet Soup

The Catholic Campaign for Human Development Serves Up Tainted Alphabet Soup

HOLY MOTHER THE STATE

By Juli Loesch Wiley | April 2012
Juli Loesch Wiley is a worshiper of one God, the wife of one husband, the mother of two grown sons, and mother hen to a little RCIA flock, as well as an agitator/activist, small-hobby gardener, and occasional writer in Johnson City, Tennessee.

Every year around Thanksgiving, there is a brief kerfuffle in the U.S. Catholic Church. At that time, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) sends out its annual appeal asking for special collections for the Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD), the bishops’ program that awards millions of dollars to “grassroots” community groups that “work for justice” and “address the root causes of poverty.” Simultaneously, concerned Catholic laymen crank up their blogs and start their annual buzz about the leftward tilt of the grantees and the urgent need to “boycott CCHD.”

In 2011 it happened again, but in a strikingly new context. The controversy took place amid a series of unprecedented political attacks on Catholic institutions that threaten their identity and even their existence — attacks that emanated from state capitals and Washington, D.C.

Our Dangerous Situation

The long-term “Catholic strategy” of the secular statists, who enjoy dominant social and political power at the moment, appears to be to undermine and dismantle the institutional presence of the Catholic Church in the U.S. The statists include the present presidential administration and its allies who are committed to the culture of death. They will not and cannot tolerate those who believe life begins at conception, that it is sacred, that abortion is a “moral evil” and a “criminal practice” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, nos. 2271, 2274), and that human sexual differentiation (“male and female He created them”) has, by God’s design, an intrinsic orientation toward marriage, fertility, and family.

Enjoyed reading this?

READ MORE! REGISTER TODAY

SUBSCRIBE

You May Also Enjoy

Letter to the Editor: September 1996

Greatly Surprised... How to Warn of Hell... Laughing Out Loud All Alone... Social Justice Before Vatican II

Raymond Carver's Death

The obituary of this prominent short-story writer and poet read, "I'm a paid-in-full member of the working poor. I have a great deal of sympathy with them. They're my people."

The Gentle Catholic Radicalism of Peter Maurin

"Gentle personalism" described his program for renewal. It was an impulse toward freedom and community that had the potential of radiating throughout creation.