Monday, 5 April 2010

Bahnisch & Warhurst on Abbott and Abbott on Abbott.....



"Abbott's Catholicism hearkens back to a much older tradition in Australian political culture, born of sectarian antagonisms, and an overweening ambition to impose a particular social and moral economy on the unwelcoming terrain of Anglo-Australian Protestant soil." said Mark Bahnisch over at The Drum on 1st April.
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"Other current politicians have connections through their parents and through its residue in party and union politics. But no one else has ties as deep as Abbott, who stresses the closeness of his association with Santamaria, his personal inspiration and mentor from school days onwards." John Warhurst quoted in Bahnisch's "Can Tony Abbott separate faith and politics?"
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"I was initially quite hesitant about accepting The Weekend Australian Magazine's invitation to write about the Pope's visit to Australia for World Youth Day. For one thing, a "Captain Catholic" reputation is supposed to be bad for my political prospects. For another, as revealed by a well-publicised youthful romance, I'm more than capable of breaking the church's rules. But on reflection, this papal visit seemed a rare chance to have Australians focus on the things that really count.
Many Catholics are understandably ambivalent about their church. The gospels are uplifting; the sacraments are a wonderful source of inner peace; attending mass should be a time of solace amid the daily rush; and many priests are wise and kind. On the other hand, sermons are often trite or dull; some religious services are tacky; and the official church too often resembles the caricature drawn by her enemies. For every inspirational pastor, there are plodders who make the "whiskey priest" of Graham Greene's novel seem like the saint that, deep down, he probably was. Most of us intuit God's existence but he remains elusive.
It's just over 20 years since I stopped training for the Catholic priesthood. It wasn't a "loss of faith". Rather, I'd reluctantly concluded that I wasn't cut out to be a parish priest; was unlikely to stay celibate for the rest of my life; and didn't quite have the sense of closeness to God that a priest would need in order to inspire faith in others. To this day, though, bringing people closer to God strikes me as the finest thing anyone can do. Next to my dad, Father Emmet Costello, a Jesuit mentor from school days, has been the most important male influence on my life. I've never had a better friend than Paul Mankowski, the American Jesuit who inveigled me into the boxing team at Oxford University."
from My life as a Catholic by Tony Abbott sometime in 2008.


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