![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5ZCZFQ9r2uOWjidxb56B30B23DUWsbNG8ZrtHqmrxdhN3kkAQA_J57PYOPDvd0UWlx0gYwceV2UAf9mzBh-o-G04mc-Dth9bvsItupSrTrWKkrt7yw6y8OcGxR9N731RoBZPhEruFBlnl/s400/mika+waltari.jpg)
Stamp from Finland, illustrating a detective novel by Mika Waltari, starring Inspector Palmu.
What would that scene look like today, with presidents instead of kings and CEOs instead of counts and dukes? While medieval labels like "Robin Hood" no longer apply, the age-old temptation to make deals with the rich and powerful have not gone away.A movie! There's an idea!
I don't know if John Nienstedt, the Archbishop of St. Paul, Minnesota, has succumbed to this temptation, but if you substitute "same sex marriage" for "rights to hunt deer in Sherwood Forest" you'd have enough for a movie.
"What would that scene look like today, with presidents instead of kings and CEOs instead of counts and dukes? While medieval labels like "Robin Hood" no longer apply, the age-old temptation to make deals with the rich and powerful have not gone away. I don't know if John Nienstedt, the Archbishop of St. Paul, Minnesota, has succumbed to this temptation, but if you substitute "same sex marriage" for "rights to hunt deer in Sherwood Forest" you'd have enough for a movie.
"The issue concerns the use of money from anonymous donors to fund the distribution of some 400,000 DVDs promoting a view that the legalization of same-sex marriage is not a civil rights' issue, but a moral one in which Catholics have no choice but to oppose any political candidate who takes another approach. At stake in Minnesota is a constitutional amendment that would deny the right to marry to any same-sex couple, even those who are not Catholic.
"There can be no doubt that Catholic teaching denies the Sacrament of Marriage to same-sex couples and that many currents in contemporary culture undermine the stability of the institution of marriage today. If that was all that Archbishop Nienstedt did, who could complain? The episcopacy is, after all, a "bully pulpit."
But in this incident, as in many other decisions he has made, the archbishop seems to be seated at the table of unnamed donors, whose politics happen to coincide with a partisan agenda.
Since there are such appalling financial needs for Catholic schools and social services in the aftermath of the Great Recession, how can the Church instead accept money to fund a decidedly political indoctrination effort-- right before an election?"ANTHONY M. STEVENS-ARROYO writing for the On Faith column of the Washington Post
" 'This man is leading us in the wrong direction,' on this issue, [Tegeder] said of [archbp] Nienstedt. 'We have to call it for what it is – it's bullying behavior. It's not the work of Jesus Christ.--from "Minn. pastor challenges Nienstedt's DVD campaign," in yesterday's (10-5-10) National Catholic Reporter
It's not the work of Jesus Christ.' "