Standard Newswire is a cost-effective and efficient newswire service for public policy groups, government agencies, PR firms, think-tanks, watchdog groups, advocacy groups, coalitions, foundations, colleges, universities, activists, politicians, and candidates to distribute their press releases to journalists who truly want to hear from them.

Do not settle for an email blasting service or a newswire overloaded with financial statements. Standard Newswire gets your news into the hands of working journalists, broadcast hosts, and news producers.

Find out how you can start using Standard Newswire to

CONNECT WITH THE WORLD

VIEW ALL Our News Outlets
Sign Up to Receive Press Releases:

Standard Newswire™ LLC
209 W. 29th Street, Suite 6202
New York, NY 10001, USA.
(212) 290-1585

Critics of the Pope Emerge

Contact: Jeff Field, Director of Communications, The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, 212-371-3191, cl@catholicleague.org

 

NEW YORK, March 15, 2013 /Standard Newswire/ -- Bill Donohue comments on some of the issues that are gripping the critics of Pope Francis:

    Pope Francis has captured the goodwill, indeed the love, of millions around the globe, and the response is hardly confined to Catholic circles. However, his critics are emerging, though none with any luck.

     

    Sex is always a good subject for Catholic haters. Their goal -- sex without consequences (kids and diseases) -- is threatened when religious leaders counsel the virtue of restraint. Similarly, we have the lament of people like Mary Johnson, a former nun, who told the MSNBC audience how "marginalized" gay and lesbian Catholics are. Catholic-bashing lawyer Marci Hamilton chimed in, commenting about the "sex abuse scandal that has scandalized the church over the past decade." Any high school fact checker knows better: the timeline of the homosexual scandal was the mid-60s to the mid-80s.

     

    Washington Post opinion writer Eugene Robinson wants to know "what did the newly chosen Pope Francis do" about the right-wing dictatorship in Argentina's "Dirty War?" We have an answer from Adolfo Perez Esquivel, the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize winner: he said the pope "was no accomplice of the dictatorship." Indeed, he firmly concluded, "He can't be accused of that." Others have written books praising the pope for his yeoman efforts in undermining the junta.

    Miguel A. De La Torre, a professor at the School of Theology in Denver, condemns the pope for not changing "the social structure that creates poverty." Guilty as charged. Nor did the pope cure insanity; if he did we would not be subjected to such crazy talk.

    Sadly, more than a few evangelicals are showing how insecure they are. Bethany Blankley is particularly exercised over Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly and Fox News executive editor John Moody for saying God was at work in selecting the pope. Of course He was. Too bad she never learned of the Holy Spirit in Sunday School.