September Storms Damned Them Damasos
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Then, on 30 September and closer to home, in the Manila Cathedral at that, one Carlos Celdran pulled a stunning stunt that stung not only the sitting prelates of the Catholic church but also the fence-sitters and snorers among the faithful. Originally, Rizal in his novel condemned the Padre Damaso character for all time; a century hence, Celdran damned latter-day Damasos!
EARLY in the first week, it was the celebrated physicist Stephen Hawking-hogged headlines that flooded the net: "God did not create the Universe." Hawking says: "It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the Universe going... Because there is a law such as gravity, the Universe can and will create itself from nothing... Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the Universe exists, why we exist."
The scientific conclusion that the total energy of the universe is zero somewhat echoes the (big)bangs that may well lead to a theory of everything and consign the god-concept to total oblivion, even if it remains, for now, deeply drilled into human heads. As if biologist P.Z. Myers didn't constantly remind us: "Science is godless; we need to embrace that fact."
Second, professor Richard Dawkins turned into a firebrand at a London rally and whipped up a whirlwind that blew the robes off Joseph Ratzinger aka Popeye Benedict. The rally culminated a months-long campaign and clamor for the arrest of the German Ratzi for the alleged cover-up of sexual molestation committed by countless priests over the years. In his fiery speech, Dawkins nuked the Pope:
"He is an enemy of women – barring them from the priesthood as though a penis were an essential tool for pastoral duties. He is an enemy of truth, promoting barefaced lies about condoms not protecting against AIDS, especially in Africa. He is an enemy of the poorest people on the planet, condemning them to inflated families that they cannot feed, and so keeping them in the bondage of perpetual poverty -- a poverty that sits ill with the obscene riches of the Vatican. He is an enemy of science, obstructing vital stem-cell research, on grounds not of morality but of pre-scientific superstition."
Third, the startling, but not surprising, American headline that screamed: Survey: Atheists Know More About Religion Than Believers. The unambiguous headline speaks for itself. The survey results, released by Pew Forum leads to this great article "The Unbelievable Truth: Why America has become a nation of religious know-nothings" capped by humorous pieces of bitter irony: "If you emerge from seminary still believing in God, you haven't been paying attention" and, "Seminary is where God goes to die."
Oh, we almost forgot what Albert Einstein once confessed: "Thus I came... to a deep religiosity, which, however, reached an abrupt end at the age of 12. Through the reading of popular scientific books I soon reached a conviction that much in the stories of the Bible could not be true. Suspicion against every kind of authority grew out of this experience, an attitude which has never left me."
And it was Isaac Asimov who said, "Properly read, the Bible is the most potent force for atheism ever conceived." Surely, who can blame those believers who, deliberately or not, read the Bible improperly, or don't read the Bible at all. Lest they become atheists themselves? LOL.
Then, on 30 September and closer to home, in the Manila Cathedral at that, one Carlos Celdran pulled a stunning stunt that stung not only the sitting prelates of the Catholic church but also the fence-sitters and snorers among the faithful. Originally, Rizal in his novel condemned the Padre Damaso character for all time; a century hence, Celdran damned latter-day Damasos!
Still very much in our midst, these Damasos not only threaten fire and brimstone on those who see the redeeming value and liberating promise of the Reproductive Health (RH) Bill pending in Congress but also deviously aimed excommunication at the President. And what did these Damasos in turn reap? Storms. Lots of little storms.
The public storm of protests and condemnation continues unabated way into what's usually LaNiña'd October. It has not flooded much the streets yet, but, heaven forbid, it will, soon -- as verbalized rains of blogs and comments deluge cyberspace. The weatherman might as well raise the warning signal a notch higher.
Go hide the children and women, er, no... not the women! They're the primary beneficiaries (the whole country a close second) of this RH Bill, and thus, should be allowed to man the frontlines, and defy the Damasos' call of "civil disobedience" purportedly against the RH Bill.
Hmm... the smell and thought of storming the Bastille keeps nagging. Only this time, Bastille is the Church hierarchy. No, not the Church itself -- I love this institution, archaic and near-relic, yet still of so-so service -- for eventual reduction, re-use or recycling. Sustainable development is the new gospel! And you know it makes more sense.
Imagine the poor women of the informal settlers sector, screaming at these Damasos in the (reversed) Marie Antoinette fashion: Let them eat pagpag!
Liberté! Egalité! Fraternité!... este... Rock and roll!
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