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EPISODE#245
OC CATHOLIC RADIO: GUEST IS FR ROBERT SPITZER – BIG DECISIONS FACING THE SUPREME COURT

On this episode of OC Catholic Radio, Rick Howick and esteemed guest Fr. Robert Spitzer navigate through a difficult topic that needs to be brought to the light. Currently the U.S. Supreme Court is dealing with some very important issues that should be a concern to all Catholics. Our topic of discussion centers on the Roe vs. Wade decision that came down 49 years ago this week.

What does the future hold regarding the issue of abortion in our country? Tune in for a compassionate, thoughtful and prayerful conversation. Be sure to share this podcast with others.

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 1/20/22

USCCB: SUPREME COURT HAS ‘REDEFINED’ THE MEANING OF ‘SEX’

CNA Staff, Jun 15, 2020 / 05:43 pm (CNA) – The president of the U.S. bishops’ conference on Monday lamented the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in a case that considered whether federal civil rights law considers sexual identity and gender identity to be covered by laws prohibiting employment discrimination based upon sex.

“I am deeply concerned that the U.S. Supreme Court has effectively redefined the legal meaning of ‘sex’ in our nation’s civil rights law. This is an injustice that will have implications in many areas of life,” Archbishop Jose Gomez said in a June 15 statement.

The Supreme Court ruled June 15 that employers cannot fire workers because of their sexual orientation or self-determined gender identity, even while dissenting justices opined the Court was legislating from the bench.

The decision considered a trio of discrimination cases before the Court, two of which involved employees who said they were fired because of their sexual orientation in Bostock v. Clayton County and Altitude Express, Inc. v. Zarda.

A third case, Harris Funeral Homes, Inc. v. EEOC, involved a man who lost his job at a Michigan funeral home after he had gender-transition surgery and returned to work dressed as a woman; the funeral home had sex-specific dress code policies for employees.

The question at issue was whether or not protections against sex discrimination in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act also applied to discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.

On Monday, the Court’s majority ruled that “An employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender violates Title VII.

In November, the U.S. bishops’ conference had asked the Court not to extend Title VII protections to sexual orientation and gender identity, because to do so would “redefine a fundamental element of humanity.”

“Words matter,” the statement from leading U.S. bishops said. “‘Sex’ should not be redefined to include sexual inclinations or conduct, nor to promulgate the view that sexual identity is solely a social construct rather than a natural or biological fact.”

Gomez echoed that sentiment on Monday.

“By erasing the beautiful differences and complementary relationship between man and woman, we ignore the glory of God’s creation and harm the human family, the first building block of society. Our sex, whether we are male or female, is part of God’s plan for creation and for our lives. As Pope Francis has taught with such sensitivity, to live in the truth with God’s intended gifts in our lives requires that we receive our bodily and sexual identity with gratitude from our Creator. No one can find true happiness by pursuing a path that is contrary to God’s plan,” the archbishop said.

“Every human person is made in the image and likeness of God and, without exception, must be treated with dignity, compassion, and respect. Protecting our neighbors from unjust discrimination does not require redefining human nature.”

Critics of the Court’s decision have argued that, in addition to reinforcing the transgender ideology, they could undermine the religious liberty of religious employers and business owners.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, writing for the Court’s majority, acknowledged religious freedom concerns for employers in the Court’s decision. Religious organizations and employers do have certain protections from discrimination lawsuits under the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), his decision said.

However, the religious freedom question would be a matter of future consideration since “none of the employers before us today represent in this Court that compliance with Title VII will infringe their own religious liberties in any way,” Gorsuch wrote.

EPISODE #112
TRENDING WITH TIMMERIE: ABORTION AND FERTILITY IN 2020

Fr. Robert Spitzer of the Magis Center joins Trending with Timmerie.  They’ll discuss abortion in 2020 and what is to be expected from the Supreme Court as the battle over Roe v. Wade continues.  Listen in regarding major changes in fertility both domestically and abroad as Japan faces record low birth rates.  What can Catholics do?  Finally they’ll discuss why the public loves Ricky Gervais’ comments from the Golden Globes.

Listen to more episodes at www.RadioTrending.com

Booking Timmerie to speak for a pro-woman and pro-life apologetics training to help have simple conversations about abortion that will foster a strong pro-life position.   https://www.radiotrending.com/booktimmerie

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 1/11/20

EPISODE #88
TRENDING WITH TIMMERIE: TOLERANCE – LGBT & RELIGION

“Why is there so much hate for the gay community?” What happened to a good old conversation of contrasting ideas? Tolerance may be preached, but conversations are silenced today. What are we so afraid of?

Middle school age girls suffer as “gender identity” politics infiltrate the school systems. Children face pressure to come out at cisgender or transgender leading to deeper self-esteem issues. Are we becoming apathetic?

Also discussed: free speech on college campuses, Christian leaders sign letter to protect abortion rights on demand, the Supreme Court to hear a case on equal employment surrounding LGBT issues.

Dr. Phillip Chavez of The Men’s Academy joins Trending with Timmerie to discuss this and more.

 

More episodes at www.RadioTrending.com

 

Booking Timmerie to speak in Fall 2019 or 2020 https://www.radiotrending.com/booktimmerie

 

 

Originally broadcast on 5/11/19

WASHINGTON STATE’S SUPREME COURT STRIKES DOWN DEATH PENALTY

SEATTLE (CNS) — The Catholic bishops of Washington state Oct. 11 applauded the unanimous decision of the state Supreme Court striking down the death penalty as unconstitutional.

The court ruled its use is arbitrary and racially biased and converted the sentences for the state’s eight death-row inmates to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Executions have been rare in Washington. Five prisoners have been put to death in recent decades. In 2014, the governor imposed a moratorium blocking its use.

“The bishops have long been on record as opposing capital punishment,” said a statement issued by the Washington State Catholic Conference, the public policy arm of the bishops. “Today’s decision by the Supreme Court indicates a move toward greater justice and greater respect for life at all stages.

“The Catholic Church’s consistent belief is that every human life is sacred from conception until natural death — it is this principle that has energized our efforts for decades to abolish the death penalty,” said Archbishop J. Peter Sartain of Seattle.

In an Oct. 16 statement, the chairman of the U.S. bishops’ domestic policy committee echoed the Washington state bishops in applauding the court’s unanimous ruling. He also reiterated the Catholic Church’s call to end the death penalty.

“In the court’s opinion, the death penalty was deemed ‘invalid because it is imposed in an arbitrary and racially biased manner,'” said Bishop Frank J. Dewane of Venice, Florida, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development. “This echoes one of the reasons to oppose the death penalty that the bishops gave in their 2005 statement ‘A Culture of Life and the Penalty of Death.'”

He noted that Pope Francis in his 2015 address to the joint meeting on Congress in Washington “called for the global abolition of the death penalty” and he quoted from the pope’s words: “I am convinced that this way is the best, since every life is sacred, every human person is endowed with an inalienable dignity, and society can only benefit from the rehabilitation of those convicted of crimes. … (A) just and necessary punishment must never exclude the dimension of hope and the goal of rehabilitation.”

Earlier this year, Washington’s Catholic bishops provided testimony in support of legislation to repeal the death penalty citing the country’s imperfect record in imposing the death penalty, the potential for racial biases and specific instances where innocent people have been executed for crimes they did not commit.

Since 1973, 161 people sentenced to death have been exonerated in the U.S.

In addition to Archbishop Sartain, Washington’s bishops are: Bishop Thomas A. Daly of Spokane; Bishop Joseph J. Tyson of Yakima; and Auxiliary Bishops Eusebio L. Elizondo and Daniel H. Mueggenborg of Seattle.

“This decision will save Washington state taxpayers millions of dollars that would otherwise be wasted,” said an official of Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty.

Hannah Cox, the organization’s national manager, added: “Conservatives in Washington state and across the country increasingly realize the death penalty is a failed government program that does not value life, threatens innocent people, and wastes money.”

The Association of U.S. Catholic Priests said Oct. 16: “In our ministry as Catholic priests in parishes and prisons, we have long shared the concern of the governor (of Washington) and the decision of the justices that the death penalty was racially biased and meted out haphazardly. Our association stands with our bishops in calling for abolition of the death penalty nationwide.”

Association members said they were praying the remaining states in the country “where the death penalty is still imposed will find truth in the decisions of the Washington state justices.” 

They also offered prayers “for those in prison, that they may repent of the actions that put them on death row and commit themselves to using their lives to grow into ever better persons. May the transformation they will pursue help bring peace to their victims and families and enable them to extend Christ-like forgiveness.”

EPISODE #62
TRENDING WITH TIMMERIE: KAVANAUGH & TOUGH CONVERSATIONS

What’s being discussed on Trending? Kavanaugh and the battle over abortion. It really does come down to the abortion debate and the cultural issue of a war between the sexes. Also covered, the movie about serial killer and abortionist Kermit Gosnell. How relevant Our Lady of Fatima’s message is about marriage and family.

Join Fr. Tim Grumbach and Timmerie Millington. Together they tackle difficult passages in the Bible about women. Finally – listen to their personal stories about how to evangelize and where it all begins.

 

 

Originally broadcast on 10/14/18

EPISODE#154
OC CATHOLIC RADIO: GUEST IS DARYL SEQUEIRA

Host Rick Howick interviews guests on a variety of topics. On this week’s program, Rick welcomes back one of our favorite guests, Daryl Sequeira from Servite High School in Anaheim. Daryl is the ‘chair’ of the theology department at Servite.

Our topic of conversation today is the following: the recent addition of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court of the United States.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 10/13/18

 

EPISODE #59
TRENDING WITH CHRIS & TIMMERIE: ABORTION AND TECHNOLOGY

Do you feel confident responding to the pro-abortion arguments against Brett Kavanaugh? People are saying women will die. Is there a right to abortion? On Trending with Chris Mueller and Timmerie Millington, your hosts will discuss taking back control of your devices and parenting in the internet age. Do you have a healthy philosophy for connection? They’ll also discuss the fundamental masculine need to provide as they continue their ponderings on “What you need to know about the inner lives of men” by Shaunti Feldhahn. Listen up and send us your tough questions about human life and sexuality. www.RadioTrending.com

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 9/16/18

CARDINAL CALLS ALL TO PRAY SUPREME COURT WILL MOVE TO PROTECT LIFE IN LAW

WASHINGTON (CNS) — New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life Activities, called July 19 for a national prayer campaign effort that “the change in the U.S. Supreme Court will move our nation closer to the day when every human being is protected in law and welcomed in life.”

“As soon as Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement, pro-abortion groups began lobbying the U.S. Senate to reject any nominee who does not promise to endorse Roe v. Wade,” the cardinal said in a statement.

“While the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops does not support or oppose the confirmation of any presidential nominee,” he said, “we can and should raise grave concerns about a confirmation process which is being grossly distorted by efforts to subject judicial nominees to a litmus test of support for Roe v. Wade. And we must pray.”

He invited all people of goodwill to pray each Friday from Aug. 3 to Sept. 28 in a “Novena for the Legal Protection of Human Life.” The USCCB said “Call to Prayer” materials will be accessible at https://bit.ly/2JBU1MH. Materials include prayers and educational resources and an invitation to fast on Fridays for this intention.

Those wishing to join this nine-week prayer effort can sign up at www.usccb.org/pray to participate in this and subsequent Call to Prayer initiatives via email or text message.

“May Our Lady of Guadalupe intercede for the healing of our nation and our people from decades of abortion on demand,” Cardinal Dolan said.

President Donald Trump announced July 9 that his nominee for the Supreme Court is Judge Brett Kavanaugh, a federal appeals court judge in Washington and a Catholic who once clerked for retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.

In remarks at the White House after his nomination, Kavanaugh said if he is chosen to be on the Supreme Court, he would “keep an open mind in every case” and “always strive to preserve the Constitution of the United States and the American rule of law.”

IF CONFIRMED, KAVANAUGH WILL KEEP CATHOLIC MAJORITY IN SUPREME COURT

WASHINGTON (CNS) — When Brett Kavanaugh took to the podium July 9 at the White House after being introduced as President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, he revealed, among other things, that his Catholic faith is a big part of his life.

He spoke about coaching his daughter’s CYO basketball team, serving the homeless with a priest in the audience who used to be his pastor, following the motto of his Jesuit high school to be “a man for others” and being “part of the vibrant Catholic community in the D.C. area.”

The frank discussion of his Catholicism probably wasn’t shocking for many court-watchers who may already have known that three of the four candidates who were on Trump’s top list of potential nominees — Kavanaugh and Judges Amy Coney Barrett and Thomas Hardiman — are Catholic.

And if Kavanaugh is confirmed by the Senate, he will not only replace retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy, who is Catholic, but he also will join four other Catholic justices already on the bench — Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Sonia Sotomayor.

Judge Neil Gorsuch, who was raised Catholic but now attends an Episcopal church with his family, attended the same Catholic high school as Kavanaugh — Georgetown Prep in Maryland. He filled the vacancy left by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, who was Catholic.

The other justices on the court: Elena Kagan, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer are Jewish.

Francis Beckwith, a professor of philosophy and church-state studies at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, thinks this current mix of religious traditions in the court could have something to do with the emphasis on law in both faiths: canon law in the Catholic Church and the Talmudic law in the Jewish tradition. But he also said the study of law and medicine was something the second generation of Catholic and Jewish immigrants sought as professions.

Richard Garnett, professor and associate dean at Notre Dame Law School, has periodically written about or been interviewed on the topic of Catholics in the nation’s high court for the past decade. He thinks the current influx of Catholics simply reflects that they were suitable candidates for Republican presidents because of the Catholic anti-abortion stance.

Sotomayor, was the exception, appointed by President Barack Obama. In a 2013 interview with The New York Times, she described herself as a “very spiritual person” although she added: “maybe not traditionally religious in terms of Sunday Mass every week, that sort of thing.”

For most of the court’s history, its justices were primarily Protestant, with only a smattering of Catholics.

Garnett outlined the history of Catholics in the court in a 2006 article for Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana.

According to his research, 12 Catholic justices have served on the Supreme Court and one more, Justice Sherman Minton, became Catholic after he left this post. The first Catholic named to the court was Chief Justice Roger Taney, appointed by President Andrew Jackson in 1836. He is principally remembered for writing the Dred Scott decision upholding slavery.

After Taney left the court, another Catholic, Chief Justice Edward White, was not named to the bench for another 30 years. In the early 1900s, White and Justice Joseph McKenna were on the court at the same time. They were followed by Justice Pierce Butler, appointed in 1923, and Justice Frank Murphy, appointed in 1940. The “Catholic seat” then sat empty for seven years until 1956 when Justice William Brennan joined the court.

Scalia overlapped with Brennan for four years and then came the current Catholic justices. Clarence Thomas was raised Catholic and went to Catholic college and the seminary, but at the time of his appointment in 1991, he was not a practicing Catholic. He came back to the church a few years later.

These nominees faced scrutiny for their Catholic faith. President Franklin Roosevelt promised that Murphy would “not let religion stand in his way” which Murphy reiterated in senate hearings saying his faith and vocation were kept “in air-tight compartments.” In Thomas’ hearings, even though he was attending services at an Episcopal church at the time, he was questioned if he would be independent from the pope, since he had attended Catholic schools.

Roberts and Alito also were questioned about their Catholic faith but not extensively grilled on it, which some saw as a victory over anti-Catholicism that had been part of America’s history.

“Catholics bring to the court a greater sensitivity and understanding of the human condition,” said Joshua Sandman, professor of political science at the University of New Haven in Connecticut. He said over the years Catholic judges have not been “chosen specifically for the Supreme Court because they were Catholic. They were chosen because of their capability and ideological preference of the president who selected them. They happened to be Catholic.”

Robert Hume, a political science professor and chair of the department at Fordham University in New York, similarly called it a coincidence that Kavanaugh is Catholic, noting: “It mattered more that he was one of Justice Kennedy’s clerks.”

As far as how Catholics will view Kavanaugh, he said it is difficult to say because of the wide range of Catholic views. He also said it would be ” interesting to see if Judge Kavanaugh’s jurisprudence embraces all of the tenets of Catholic doctrine, or just some of them.”

John Vile, professor of political science and dean of the University Honors College at Middle Tennessee State University, said Kavanaugh’s nomination, like Gorsuch’s, had more to do with being perceived as “social conservative voices.”

He said people often associate Catholics with opposition to abortion, but he noted that Brennan was a strong supporter of Roe v. Wade, the court’s decision legalizing abortion.

Brennan was considered a primary influence in the Supreme Court’s 7-2 Roe decision, although he did not write the majority opinion. A 1993 biography of him says the “Catholic Church hierarchy was livid over Brennan’s vote.”

“Religious identification does not always indicate judicial decisions, especially among justices who value ‘stare decisis,'” Vile said, using the Latin phrase the court uses that means standing by rulings already decided.