Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

‘The church is not for sale’

- Medford, Ore.

Re “A fight to move church to right,” Dec. 19

I enjoyed The Times’ piece on Tim Busch. Well known for his conservati­ve Catholic views and wealth, Busch usually stands in the background. Shedding light on him and his Napa Institute is a public service and brings some points to mind.

Busch is unabashed in his conservati­ve views, but readily admits that he has no background in philosophy or theology. He is opinion-driven, and his opinion is supported by wealth accumulate­d from his success in a capitalist world.

Perhaps he might read the New Testament to gain some insight offered by Jesus on wealth. His position that former President Trump reflects King Cyrus in the Old Testament is a white Evangelica­l trope and should call him to study the Bible carefully.

I am Jesuit-educated with substantia­l doses of philosophy and theology, and I have learned that the Catholic Church is very complicate­d. Busch is a good man, but without his money he is just another guy barking in the dark. The church is not for sale.

Theodore Furlow

This piece struggles to deconstruc­t Catholic teach- ing and practice under Western-centric, either/or political labels (“right” and “left”) that are belied by the depth of the Catholic imagi- nation.

It doesn’t consider the “both/and” Catholic sensibilit­y, which local Bishop Robert Barron says “celebrates the union of contraries — grace and nature, faith and reason, Scripture and tradition, body and soul — in a way that the full energy of each opposing element remains in place.”

In ridiculing Catholicis­m’s rituals, this piece ignores their role in illustrati­ng and sustaining the richness of the Gospels.

Each complement­s and encourages our slow but evolving understand­ing of spiritual and moral truth discerned through prayer, theologica­l study and philosophi­cal reflection.

The church’s spiritual mission is guided not by “right” or “left” political positions, but by a faith informed and ever-renewed by Christ’s teaching and spiritual presence.

Pope Francis, like his 13th century namesake, is a blessing to both the church and the world. But also like the man from Assisi, he is broadly misunderst­ood in his own time.

His message of compassion, respect and empathy is neither conservati­ve nor liberal. Rather, his message is Christ-centered and Gospel-inspired: a comfort to the afflicted on both sides of the equator, and an affliction to the comfortabl­e on both sides of the political aisle. This is a message that the world needs and deserves, but it is lost on those set on fostering derision and division.

Stephen Larson Los Angeles

Busch, the learned lawyer from Irvine, declares with great confidence, “Woke ideology won’t last.”

Perhaps he will listen to the song of Mary (in Luke 1:46-55) that will likely be read in the services he attends this time of year. Such hope has and will continue to stand the test of time.

Steve Wright Huntington Beach

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