Daniel Goldhagen
The Weekly Standard published the other day a review of an upcoming book by Daniel Goldhagen, A Moral Reckoning: The Role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust and its Unfulfilled Duty of Repair. The reviewer spends some time pointing out the numerous factual errors in the book. And he notes that Goldhagen has already been corrected about most of them, to no avail:
.... Goldhagen took a first swipe at this material in an unbearably long essay in the New Republic earlier this year, and Ronald Rychlak (author of "Hitler, the War and the Pope") wrote an almost equally long indictment of Goldhagen's allegations in the June/July issue of First Things. As near as I can tell, the only one of the errors Rychlak pointed out that Goldhagen has corrected is his identification of the Danish king as Christian II instead of Christian X. As I say, no one is going to have trouble finding Goldhagen's mistakes. And that's exactly the problem. By writing such an error-filled, anti-Catholic diatribe as "A Moral Reckoning," Goldhagen makes what used to be the extreme of public discourse look like middle ground -- the middle ground that, on any historical question, most of diffident, well-mannered America wants to inhabit.(Thanks Dale.)
2 comments:
The Catholic Church more so than any other group calling itself a church takes tremendous pride in its 2,000 year old holistic and completly integrated bible teachings. Most non-Catholics teach only mere verses and fragments of the bible as stand alone truisms and end up contradicting one or more other verses.
Catholics have not a single case where a teaching is in conflict with any other scripture anywhere in the bible. No one has successfully demonstrated an error in Catholic theology.
But this should not be surprising since Jesus promised us that the Holy Spirit would guide His Church to all truth and that "the gates of hell would not prevail" in any aspect (teaching or failing to release prisoners from hell's bondage viz apostolic absolution and the sacraments of grace).BF
Hold firmly that our faith is identical with that of the ancients. Deny this, and you dissolve the unity of the Church.---- St. Thomas Aquinas
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