What do you call a guy who leaves the priesthood, rejects fundamental
doctrine of the Catholic Church, and propagates egregious falsehoods
about Catholics? If you're the Los Angeles Times, you call him a
"Devout Catholic" -
in your headline.
Un·be·liev·a·ble.
The subject in a fawning article in the Times is James Carroll. A
new documentary film is based on his 2001 book,
Constantine's Sword, an awful work that advances the premise
that anti-Semitism is central to Catholicism and Christianity.
Who is James Carroll? Here's your first hint: He writes for the
Boston Globe. But quite simply, "James Carroll is a professional
anti-Catholic," as author/catechist
Oswald Sobrino has
aptly written. He is an "anti-Catholic Catholic." Even the Times
acknowledges that he "rejects the very roots of [the Church's]
doctrine." Yet this is the Times' idea of a "devout Catholic"?!?
And Carroll's premise that Catholicism is rooted in
anti-Semitism has been roundly discredited. Carroll's terrible
work was addressed over several pages in the excellent book by Philip
Jenkins,
The New Anti-Catholicism: The Last Acceptable Prejudice.
Carroll's book is presented as a modern-day example of anti-Catholic
rhetoric.
Wrote Jenkins (who is not a Catholic himself) (emphasis mine):
Carroll is simply wrong about anti-Semitism being integral to
Catholic Christianity: no direct historical highway leads from the
evangelists to Auschwitz. Just as suspect, therefore is Carroll's
attempt to discredit traditional Christianity by contextualizing
it together with the dreadful crimes of anti-Semitism. He is
overpresenting his case in order to justify a "reform agenda" that
amounts to a blueprint for the annihilation of the Catholic
Church. Much of Carroll's book is devoted to his agenda for a
proposed Third Vatican Council, which would cure the Catholic Church
of the dreadful faults that have made it a "failed and sinful
Church." For all its excellent intentions, its moral fervor,
Carroll's book is a frontal attack on Catholic Christianity, and
this agenda shapes its interpretations on every page. (p. 190)
(Thank you,
Oswald Sobrino!)
(For an online shredding of Carroll's book, see
"Constantine’s Sword: A Review Article," by Robert P. Lockwood.)
The review in the Times also propagates Carroll's (and others')
vicious falsehood that Pope Pius XII "was silent" during World War II as
Jews were massacred. Modern scholar after modern scholar has debunked
this repeatedly.
Righteous Gentiles: How Pius XII And the Catholic Church Saved Half
a Million Jews from the Nazis by Ronald J. Rychlak
The Myth of Hitler's Pope: Pope Pius XII and His Secret War Against
Nazi Germany by David G. Dalin
The Pius War: Responses to the Critics of Pius XII by
William Doino, Joseph Bottum, David G. Dalin
Consensus and Controversy: Defending Pope Pius XII by
Margherita Marchione
Defamation Of Pius XII by Ralph Mcinerny
For an online shredding of the false attacks against Pius XII,
the Catholic League has posted a very extensive list of
books, articles, and research papers.
Check it out here and
here.
Of course, nowhere in the Times' article is there any outside
criticism of Carroll and his work. His outrageous claims are taken as
(gospel) truth.
Anti-Catholic bigotry at the Los Angeles Times? As we've
reported before, it wouldn't be the first time. (See
this,
this,
this, and
this for just a few
examples.)