George Weigel (FT): The Ascension vs. Human Composting

A stark and appalling contrast between the beauty and goodness of the Divine versus the folly and perversity of unredeemed humanity. Lord have mercy. More precisely, as we become less and less a Christian nation, this is a glimpse of our future, only the future will be ten times worse. For those with ears to hear, listen and understand.

Appreciating the significance of the Ascension means clearing our mind on what it means that Christ was “carried up into Heaven” (Luke 24:51). Skeptics question, even mock, the Ascension because they think of it in spatial terms: as if Jesus in his Ascension anticipated Tom Cruise’s hypersonic flight at the beginning of Top Gun: Maverick, where Chief Warrant Officer “Hondo” Coleman marvels, “He’s the fastest man alive.” No, the Ascension can only be understood as a transhistorical reality: an event in history that transcends history by opening a window into humanity’s true destiny, which is life beyond history in that eternity Jesus called the Kingdom of God. The Ascension completes the sequence of appearances in which the Risen Lord “presented himself alive [to the apostles] after his Passion . . . appearing to them over forty days and speaking of the Kingdom of God” (Acts 1:3). And in this last appearance, he, the Lord of history and the cosmos, points beyond this world to the glorious future of a Creation brought to fulfillment in the “new Jerusalem” where “death shall be no more . . . for the former things have passed away” (Rev. 21:2, 4).

The Ascension is thus crucial in the Church’s response to the crisis of our time, which is the crisis in the very idea of the human person. 

That crisis comes into sharpest focus when we consider the loathsome practice that goes by the Orwellian moniker “natural organic reduction,” in which thermophile microbes reduce the mortal remains of men and women to compost, which can then be used like the compost you buy at Home Depot. Green proponents of this barbarism claim that human composting has ecological value because it turns dead bodies into nutrients of the soil—which is probably not how the gardeners among relatives of the 72,000 British Empire soldiers killed during World War I’s Battle of the Somme imagined the fate of their loved ones whose remains were never found. Extremist greens thus demonstrate once again that they worship a false god, Gaia.

Human composting is legal in thirteen states (Washington, Colorado, Oregon, Vermont, California, New York, Nevada, Arizona, Delaware, Maryland, Minnesota, Maine, and Georgia). In every instance, the local Church has opposed the legalization of turning the bodies of the dead into fertilizer. Predictably, however, some in the Permission-Slip Subdivision of the Catholic bioethics guild have defended the practice, whose grisly precursors include some of the most grotesque practices of Nazi Germany’s extermination camps, where human remains were turned into bars of soap.

Human composting does not, as some of its Catholic proponents suggest, reflect the biblical teaching that we are dust and to dust we shall return (Gen. 3:19). On the contrary: It reflects the warped, degraded anthropology that regards humanity as the accidental result of cosmic biochemical forces that, over billions of years, just happened to produce us. The Ascension, and indeed the entire arc of biblical anthropology from Genesis to Revelation, teaches a diametrically different view of our humanity: We are not congealed stardust, but rather creatures of a loving Creator whose destiny, made manifest in Christ risen and ascended, is neither oblivion nor fertilizer, but glory.     

Which is the more humane view, from which we learn to respect others? Which is the view that can underwrite personal happiness and social solidarity? 

It’s not the view that we’re compost-in-waiting.

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Bethel McGrew (FT): The Fallacy of Private Religion

A spot on piece. It is an oxymoron for a so-called “Christian” to think his or her faith has no impact on how he or she lives daily life! Lord have mercy. It is also lamentable because living the Christian life faithfully (not flawlessly) offers the best path for human flourishing, something that God the Father desires for each one of us–that’s why he became human to save us from ourselves, the world, and the Devil! For those with ears to hear, listen and understand.

Catholic Twitter recently enjoyed a rare moment of unity when Labour MP Chris Coghlan used the platform to announce his own excommunication. The politician had been warned by his priest, Fr. Ian Vane, that a vote in favor of the U.K.’s assisted suicide bill would remove him from a state of grace in the eyes of the Church. Coghlan ignored the warning, and Fr. Vane accordingly denied him the sacraments. The priest rebuked Coghlan by name before his congregation, which provoked this much more public counter-announcement. At the top of Coghlan’s mind (apparently much higher than any thoughts of self-examination or repentance) was the fear that Fr. Vane would no longer sign off on his children’s Catholic education. But he wished to assure everyone that “My private religion will continue to have zero direct relevance to my work as an MP representing all my constituents without fear or favour.” 

If Coghlan was expecting sympathy from the public, he was sorely disappointed, though it appears his bishop has gone into damage control mode. Not much has changed since 2014, when the English and Welsh bishops’ conference scrambled to reassure parliamentarians that there were no plans to deny the Eucharist to any MP voting in favor of same-sex “marriage.” In an ideal Britain where the Church had its house in order, Fr. Vane’s decision wouldn’t have made news. 

What does “private religion” consists of in Coghlan’s mind? Clearly it does not extend to the defense of such complex doctrines as “Don’t poison the terminally ill.” Coghlan also chose to abstain from voting altogether on a bill legalizing abortion up to birth, which was apparently just too knotty for him to work out a firm position either way. “Religion,” for Coghlan, appears to be little more than aesthetic window dressing around his true identity: a politician who tells people exactly what they want to hear.

But this is perfectly consistent with liberal individualism, which, as Conservative MP Danny Kruger has observed, is now England’s de facto “governing faith.” Kruger provides an apt contrasting case study with Coghlan, as an adult convert to evangelical Christianity whose “private religion” very much has “direct relevance” to his work. From the beginning of his career, which began only after years spent running a charity for ex-prisoners, Kruger accepted matter-of-factly that he would be “unfashionable.” He has even faced public ridicule for being at odds with his own mother, Great British Baking Show judge Dame Prue Leith, on assisted suicide. Such is the price of carrying a fully integrated faith into the public square.

Coghlan’s hackneyed relegation of religion to the “private” sphere implies that religion is fundamentally irrational, its moral strictures purely arbitrary. If a Christian MP like Kruger takes a stand against abortion or assisted suicide, it is presumed that he has allowed his faith to blind his reason. Politicians like him are thus placed under pressure to “come out” and admit this, as if it constitutes a damning conflict of interest. But as Kruger wrote in an eloquent short reflection for the Spectator, the reasons for his pro-life stance are, as it were, open-access. It’s not difficult to form a natural law argument against euthanasia, and Christians shouldn’t make it so by causing the good sort of atheist humanist to second-guess himself. And indeed, some atheists have ironically seen the argument with clearer eyes even than some faithless clerics.

But what is epistemically open to the atheist may still depend on theism for its ontological grounding. And when that religious foundation is removed from under a society, abandoned even by its men of the cloth, the house collapses. Hence, Kruger’s warning about what is being irrevocably lost as England wanders ever further from its Christian mooring posts. It is possible for someone of no faith to swim against the current and choose life, but it requires levels of toughness and intellectual integrity that are in scant supply, as Coghlan’s case illustrates. When liberal individualism becomes the state religion, few people will be motivated to defect unless they can link arms with a large body of fellow defectors. This was why Michel Houellebecq found himself almost exclusively in the company of Christians when he made his own iconoclastic case against euthanasia. There is only one Michel Houellebecq, but there are many Christians.

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